Alanslegal
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2007
- Posts
- 5,238
and most of us have Apple products that are made by (near) slave labour, yet we still buy them!
Though with the UAE airlines they are part of the Government.
But here is where the argument goes in circles.The AWB saga(on known evidence which is of course suspect) it was a case of individuals being naughty,maybe the govt. Agency but not the government.True but even if the gov't is evil, does that make the cap't of that plane evil, what about the FA's? What about other products which we use on a daily basis which are linked to evil organisations? Just thinking about the AWB scandal a few years ago (basically directing money to the enemy), should we now stop eating any wheat product made in Australia as a result?
I have no idea what you differ about
I said it is a moral choice for us all to make. I did leave off the word, individually. Basically it is an individual choice for everyone to decide if they let employment conditions in certain countries determine their behaviour. In the same way that I have invested in gambling despite the moral questions involved and the views of SWMBO. I have made my own individual moral choice.
I certainly did not suggest that we all should put the moral stance of any government as our primary decider. Again that is a question for each individual. Some people do and some don't.
I am sorry but I cannot accept you wish to differ with this position, because it feels fundamentally illogical. Do you really feel that ethical questions are not a matter of individual choice, as I tried to express? (however poorly)
Or maybe you differ over employment in the mining industry. The ABS tells me the whole mining industry employed 135,000 in 2008/09. So BHP and Rio cannot account for hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Sent from my iPhone using Aust Freq Fly app so please excuse the lack of links.
Yes, it was the employment figure I was referring to. I named Rio and BHP as they were the first to come to mind. I am not about to dispute the employment stats of an industry. Sorry for getting it wrong.
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those 'subcontinentals' as you call them are making a lot more money as foreign workers than they ever would in their own country. thats why they do it. they make enough money to buy family housing, food and education for their families.
are you going to stay away from jetstar or qantas who employ foreign cabin crew for less than their Australian counterpart? if not, why not? you can't endorse qantas paying less but not be happy with Qatar paying their staff less...
edited to add that lower wages for foreign staff also apply to most shipping lines, with crew from se Asian nations... so that rules out buying almost any imported goods that are not shipped by air... it also rules out most clothes unless they are made in Australia... and the list goes on...![]()
I know you replied to someone who mentioned the low pay. But for me pay is not the issue. It is more the rape, abuse and torture, really.
You are absolutely right. I think what the undercurrent of my thoughts was that in Arab society much more so than our own there is a foreign subclass whose role is to perform menial tasks beneath the dignity of the locals. I know it's a phenomenon found in plenty of other societies, but at least Australian workers enjoy decent award conditions and I would prefer to support companies that treat their employees fairly. Obviously this is opening up a whole new can of worms (me and my big mouth)...
I'm not really concerned about employment/award conditions, provided they are within the laws of whatever country is involved. But I am concerned about illegal treatment, and immoral abuses of people.
I'm not really concerned about employment/award conditions, provided they are within the laws of whatever country is involved. But I am concerned about illegal treatment, and immoral abuses of people.
According to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees' website, Bhutan toughened its nationalistic policy in the 1980s, forcing tens of thousands of nationals of Nepalese descent to leave the country and turned them into refugees.
Most of those who were forced to leave Bhutan sought asylum in Nepal. As of December 2010, the number of refugees from Bhutan stood at around 76,100, of whom some 74,500 lived in Nepal, UNHCR spokeswoman Yuki Moriya told The Japan Times recently.
"Whenever I hear about Bhutan's GNH, I feel really strange," Moriya said.
Not that I disagree with you, but you would have no problem dealing directly with a company who runs sweatshop style conditions (eg long hours, no breaks, 7 days a week for basically no pay) just because it's "legal" for them to treat their workers like that?
Thre are instances of this in just about every country... even in Australia we have workplace bullying (apprentices spring to mind), unsafe work places, workplaces such as the army where cadets film other cadets engaging in sexual activity and post it on line or have facebook pages promoting homophobic sentiments. We have cab drivers working for a few dollars an hour. Sexual innuendo and harrassment in the owrkplace. The list goes on.
I am not condoning actions of bad employers in any way... just that to pick on isolated incidents and tar all nationals with the same brush is perhaps a bit harsh.
I am sorry but I cannot accept you wish to differ with this position, because it feels fundamentally illogical. Do you really feel that ethical questions are not a matter of individual choice, as I tried to express? (however poorly)
Or maybe you differ over employment in the mining industry. The ABS tells me the whole mining industry employed 135,000 in 2008/09. So BHP and Rio cannot account for hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Nice way to put a couple of hundred thousand people out of work.
Lucky for you, you dont have to accept a single thing....
In my book 135,000 is in fact a hundred of thousands, but again, whatever floats your boat.