I do too, but I realize that there is also economic reality to deal with.I don't fucking care about the market I care about the wellbeing of human beings.
So leave Nike alone for paying low wages. The workers agreed to accept them.So what?
Of course it's not always fair. Life is not fair, but that's tough.This is my biggest problem with libertarians: they use the market to excuse the outrageous and abhorrent behaviour of corporations! Fuck the market! Fuck it up the ass!
They're not in business to do that, they're in business to make money. Furthermore, unskilled workers with low productivity in ANY economy are not going to have high wages or working conditions; fact.Nothing stopping them from providing a safe and human work environment along with living wages for the workers.
In a mass demonstration, or what? These things can turn pretty violent, with both sides having to share the blame.There are many more examples besides Nike, and it was already a known fact that american corporations aren't exactly known for their kind behaviour overseas. Consider that union activity at Colombian CocaCola bottling site have been met with terror tactics. At least 129 union activists in Colombia have been murdered.
Again, you fail to realize that prosperity doesn't fall right out of the sky. The low productivity of third-world labor merits the low wages and sub-standard working conditions. This is a part of economic development; we had to go through, they have to go through it.Bangladeshi workers make shirts for Walmart at 9 cents an hour. Honduras workers suffer in horrible sweatshop environments for Walmart. Salvadoran Kathie Lee Gifford workers and a union organizer have received death threats. Ann Taylor workers face miserable sweatshop conditions in China. The list goes on and on, and it still continues to this day, when any of these companies could put a stop to it.
I should also point out that in 1950, Japan was a source for cheap labor the way many other Asian countries are now, and now it's a world leader (even in recession).
Well, you've erected a nice wall of ignorance here. I've proven that American corporations on average pay employees comparatively well in developing countries, I've pointed out the outstanding rates of growth (and conversely, wages and income) in these countries, and I've shown that living conditions are infinitely worse in countries that reject globalization entirely, like North Korea (per capita income is only about $1000 in this country; it is ten times this in the globalized South Korea). All you have pointed out is that there are abuses that occur, which I never denied, while failing to prove that the net impact of globalization on third world countries is in fact negative, and also failing to produce a viable alternative. I'm through with this shit.And it still seems to be bullshit