It's not the responsability of corporations to inprove working conditions. Corporations exist to make money, that's it. No one is saying corporations are moral, nor are they immoral, they are amoral.born-again-atheist wrote:Wrong, again. An improvement in third world conditions is easy to accomplish, but the companies are not improving them, they're getting cheap labour. They're not elevating the standards, they're going where it's cheaper. Financial motivation, not a moral one. Corporations are doing nothing good because it is nowhere in their intentions. It's all about making money.
Ban Ronald McDonald?
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
It is the responsibility for corporations to improve conditions for workers when they're imploying a significant portion of the population AND attempting to stop them from unionising.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
born-again-atheist wrote:Wrong, again. An improvement in third world conditions is easy to accomplish,

They are doing both. You said yourself that companies were paying $1.20 instead of 30 cents. So, that's quadrupling the salary, and paying workers 240% of the national average. That's a big improvement.born-again-atheist wrote: but the companies are not improving them, they're getting cheap labour.
They are doing both.born-again-atheist wrote:
They're not elevating the standards, they're going where it's cheaper.
Regardless of their motivation, the result is that workers are getting jobs, better working conditions, and higher wages, than they would be without the Western companies there.born-again-atheist wrote:
Financial motivation, not a moral one.
You're confusing intentions with results, a common mishap. If you "intend" only to line your pockets, but also create jobs and increase wages for workers, it's still a good result and better than if you had not started your business there in the first place.born-again-atheist wrote:
Corporations are doing nothing good because it is nowhere in their intentions. It's all about making money.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
And, the western companies are improving conditions over what the workers, like Indian workers, were traditionally getting from their employers there.born-again-atheist wrote:It is the responsibility for corporations to improve conditions for workers when they're imploying a significant portion of the population AND attempting to stop them from unionising.
You will need to specify what exactly they need to do to make you happy, I think. You want them, as you already said, to pay them at least 25 times the average annual wage - we know that, because you said that western companies need to pay Indian workers what western companies pay European and American employees. Anything else? Or, are you just going to bitch about western companies, no matter what they do, because you hate them?
Is there any sort of improvement, besides boatloads of money for little or no work, that you need them to do?
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
Coito ergo sum wrote:This was on the news over the weekend:
http://www.slashfood.com/2010/03/29/act ... tirement/2
This kind of thing just gets me riled up. I have no problem with "activists" stating their opinion, writing articles and books, boycotting what they don't like, and trying to persuade, in the marketplace of ideas, that something like Ronald McDonald is bad. However, inevitably, these pukes try to force their demented "do as I say" mentality down everyone's throats via legislation. They want an outright ban.
They want to make it illegal for McDonald's to use their clown mascot to advertise their product. I mean... WTF? You just knew this road was going to be traveled when we sat back and let these freaks make Joe Camel illegal...
Fuck.
I agree with you on this one.
Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
You actually haven't been reading any of my posts at all. I've said it time and time again, that they're not helping these people, they're making money. You keep saying how these companies are helping the third world when they're not. The 'improvements' are beneath what the company can afford to give them and still make a substantial profit, there is nothing moral about their actions.Coito ergo sum wrote:And, the western companies are improving conditions over what the workers, like Indian workers, were traditionally getting from their employers there.born-again-atheist wrote:It is the responsibility for corporations to improve conditions for workers when they're imploying a significant portion of the population AND attempting to stop them from unionising.
You will need to specify what exactly they need to do to make you happy, I think. You want them, as you already said, to pay them at least 25 times the average annual wage - we know that, because you said that western companies need to pay Indian workers what western companies pay European and American employees. Anything else? Or, are you just going to bitch about western companies, no matter what they do, because you hate them?
Is there any sort of improvement, besides boatloads of money for little or no work, that you need them to do?
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
Actually, I read them every night, they help me get to sleep.born-again-atheist wrote:You actually haven't been reading any of my posts at all.
You saying time and time again doesn't make it true. Western companies pay considerably more than domestic businesses do for the same jobs.born-again-atheist wrote:I've said it time and time again, that they're not helping these people, they're making money.
You keep saying how these companies are not helping the third world when they are.born-again-atheist wrote:You keep saying how these companies are helping the third world when they're not.
Businesses exist to make money, no shit Sherlock.born-again-atheist wrote:The 'improvements' are beneath what the company can afford to give them and still make a substantial profit, there is nothing moral about their actions.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
When said government is using a wad of tax money to finance medical insurance for its citizens, healthy eating becomes more or less a matter of public interest.Coito ergo sum wrote:You seem to be taking it as a given that it is appropriate for the government to be concerned with the fat, salt and sugar intake of its free citizens....AshtonBlack wrote:No...... McD use Ronald to sell more shit. Fine. Not a problem. But the advertisements for them were (at least in Britain) aimed squarely at the pre-teen demographic, eg Saturday Morning TV. Over here now, research into the issue has been unclear and contested (surprise surprise, by Advertisers), but from the Ofcom report here:Coito ergo sum wrote:LOL!AshtonBlack wrote:No don't ban, that would be a free speech issue. Just ban advertising aimed at kids, including product placement in films and TV. Not all that hard.
If McD's didn't target that demographic, it wouldn't use Ronald, that's for fucking sure.
"just ban advertising aimed at kids" - like clowns?
http://www.ofcom.org.uk/research/tv/rep ... od_ads/#36
TV has a "modest" effect on HFSS (High Fat Salt Sugar) product's attractiveness on a child's choice.
and for the record, I am all for general health insurance. If I lived in the US, I'd likely be dead or a complete cripple.
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That's twice in the last few days. Are you sure you don't have a fever?NineOneFour wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:This was on the news over the weekend:
http://www.slashfood.com/2010/03/29/act ... tirement/2
This kind of thing just gets me riled up. I have no problem with "activists" stating their opinion, writing articles and books, boycotting what they don't like, and trying to persuade, in the marketplace of ideas, that something like Ronald McDonald is bad. However, inevitably, these pukes try to force their demented "do as I say" mentality down everyone's throats via legislation. They want an outright ban.
They want to make it illegal for McDonald's to use their clown mascot to advertise their product. I mean... WTF? You just knew this road was going to be traveled when we sat back and let these freaks make Joe Camel illegal...
Fuck.
I agree with you on this one.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
Just because they could conceivably, or even probably, do more does not mean that what they are doing isn't helping. You, yourself, said that they were paying 4 times what the workers would be able to get without them ($1.20 vs. 30 cents). That is helping. It may not be what you have determined in your own estimation to be sufficient or as much as they could do, but it is still an increase over what was available previously.born-again-atheist wrote:You actually haven't been reading any of my posts at all. I've said it time and time again, that they're not helping these people, they're making money. You keep saying how these companies are helping the third world when they're not. The 'improvements' are beneath what the company can afford to give them and still make a substantial profit, there is nothing moral about their actions.Coito ergo sum wrote:And, the western companies are improving conditions over what the workers, like Indian workers, were traditionally getting from their employers there.born-again-atheist wrote:It is the responsibility for corporations to improve conditions for workers when they're imploying a significant portion of the population AND attempting to stop them from unionising.
You will need to specify what exactly they need to do to make you happy, I think. You want them, as you already said, to pay them at least 25 times the average annual wage - we know that, because you said that western companies need to pay Indian workers what western companies pay European and American employees. Anything else? Or, are you just going to bitch about western companies, no matter what they do, because you hate them?
Is there any sort of improvement, besides boatloads of money for little or no work, that you need them to do?
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
And, this is one of the things that opponents of national health care systems have been suggesting and objecting to. That once the government is paying for something, then they will exert control over our personal lives. This objection was generally poo-pooed by national health care proponents as alarmist and mythical. However, plainly, as you say, it is absolutely true. The government will try to control what we eat, drink and smoke under the rubric of health care. So, that just leaves the ability to enjoy a cigar up to the persuasiveness of the cigar lobby, and the ability to eat hot dogs and hamburgers up to the persuasiveness of those industries, and the ability to drink alcoholic beverages up to the persuasiveness of the alchohol lobby. Our diets will be down to politics.Svartalf wrote:When said government is using a wad of tax money to finance medical insurance for its citizens, healthy eating becomes more or less a matter of public interest.Coito ergo sum wrote:You seem to be taking it as a given that it is appropriate for the government to be concerned with the fat, salt and sugar intake of its free citizens....AshtonBlack wrote:No...... McD use Ronald to sell more shit. Fine. Not a problem. But the advertisements for them were (at least in Britain) aimed squarely at the pre-teen demographic, eg Saturday Morning TV. Over here now, research into the issue has been unclear and contested (surprise surprise, by Advertisers), but from the Ofcom report here:Coito ergo sum wrote:LOL!AshtonBlack wrote:No don't ban, that would be a free speech issue. Just ban advertising aimed at kids, including product placement in films and TV. Not all that hard.
If McD's didn't target that demographic, it wouldn't use Ronald, that's for fucking sure.
"just ban advertising aimed at kids" - like clowns?
http://www.ofcom.org.uk/research/tv/rep ... od_ads/#36
TV has a "modest" effect on HFSS (High Fat Salt Sugar) product's attractiveness on a child's choice.
Doubtful. The statistics don't bear you out on that.Svartalf wrote:
and for the record, I am all for general health insurance. If I lived in the US, I'd likely be dead or a complete cripple.
Last edited by Coito ergo sum on Mon Apr 19, 2010 5:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
what stats? Given the kind of health problems I've had since birth (terminal preemie, abnormally low lung function ever since, incapacitating asthma, allergies...) with my host of preexisting conditions, I could never get private insurance, and I can't live half normally without being pumped full of corticoids, antihistaminics and bronchodilators... Unless you can get me a job in a major corp with top health coverage (and I never managed to secure that kind of employment here), I have a fair assessment that living in the US is hell for a guy in my kind of medical situation.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
<Major, but important snip>Coito ergo sum wrote:mandelson wrote:
... and for the record, I am all for general health insurance. If I lived in the US, I'd likely be dead or a complete cripple.
Er, I think you might find that mandelson didn't say this as it actually involves complete clauses, punctuation and sentence structure.

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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
You wouldn't have needed it. As a child, you would have been covered by a government provided health care system such as Medicaid and SCHIP. SCHIP covers uninsured children whose parents don't qualify for Medicaid because they make too much money. So, all the things you had at birth would be covered.Svartalf wrote:what stats? Given the kind of health problems I've had since birth (terminal preemie, abnormally low lung function ever since, incapacitating asthma, allergies...) with my host of preexisting conditions, I could never get private insurance,
If you don't have an employer that provides health insurance (60% of Americans are covered through employer provided insurance), and you make too much for Medicaid, then your preexisting conditions would allow you to get insurance through State sponsored "risk pools." You'd just look up the available resource in your state and enroll. You'd have to pay for it, but technically you'd be making more than the Medicaid cutoff for an employer that doesn't provide health insurance. You would be able to get coverage.Svartalf wrote: and I can't live half normally without being pumped full of corticoids, antihistaminics and bronchodilators... Unless you can get me a job in a major corp with top health coverage (and I never managed to secure that kind of employment here), I have a fair assessment that living in the US is hell for a guy in my kind of medical situation.
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Re: Ban Ronald McDonald?
And, being voted on any day in the county next door to me...
Ban the Happy Meal (listen to the music on the HappyMeal.com website...
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Ban the Happy Meal (listen to the music on the HappyMeal.com website...

Lawmakers want to ban happy meal toys to curb obesity in California
March 24, 12:25 PM
San Diego County Political Buzz Examiner
Kimberly Dvorak
The ink hasn’t even dried on the new trillion-dollar entitlement health care bill and already lawmakers are gearing up with new legislation to curb societies ills. One lawmaker in California is moving to have toys banned in fast food happy meals.
The proposed law comes from Santa Clara Board of Supervisors, Ken Yeager. “Fast food restaurants spend hundreds of millions of dollars per year to tempt children into eating unhealthy,” he said.
Yeager points to the one in three children in California who are obese as the reason to regulate restaurants and hopefully guide parents to make better decisions about nutritious meals for kids.
"We're finding out more and more that if you're obese as a child, you're going to have health problems your entire life," said Yeager. "Ten out of 12 meals that are associated with the promotional toys are the high-caloric, high-fat and high-sodium meals.”
In other words, we know what’s best for your children. Because one third of children in California are pudgy, two-thirds will have to pay the price, according to Yeager. Most parents choose fast food because it’s a treat or cheaper and the toy is just a bonus, says Maggie Thompson a parent of two children.
Supervisor Yeager says his public health ordinance banning fast-food toy incentives may draw a challenge from the California Restaurant Association, but that it would legally fall under the health and safety codes.
However, Jot Condie, the CEO of the California Restaurant Association says this new proposed ban on toys is overreaching. “When the state is operating in the red are they really going to take on another legal challenge? This is ultimately a parent’s decision.”
If this legislation passes, it would be the first time in the nation that lawmakers regulate how restaurants package meals geared toward children. The Santa Clara board will vote on the ordinance next month.

Atheists have always argued that this world is all that we have, and that our duty is to one another to make the very most and best of it. ~Christopher Hitchens~
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