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Phil Knight is a BIG FAT IDIOT

Do you believe in

Well, have you ever purchased a pair of Nike shoes?

Did you think that they'd make you "cool"?

Did you think that because you had the right shoes that you'd be a better athlete, or get more dates?

What is your problem anyway?

Why would anyone in their right mind buy these products?

News Flash!


Nike is just a brand name. That's all it is.
Here are some other things you should know about Nike.

ABOUT NIKE

: Founded in 1964, Nike has become the world's largest 
distributor of sports shoes.
 It accomplished its remarkable profitability by developing
 a strategy that shifted 
 rewards away from those who actually make the shoes, to 
 those who promote and market them.
 There are two key elements in this strategy:
      1. Disconnect the corporation from its production 
side by contracting out all manufacturing.
      2. Create a marketing empire. The idea is not simply
 to sell a shoe (which after all only costs about $1.20 per 
 shoe in direct labor cost) , but to sell a "lifestyle 
 choice", an image of "hip", up to date, always in fashion 
 and worn by "the best".  
 
Well you can sell a sneaker for just so much money…but 
A Dream!…well the sky's the limit!

 Consequently:

 · Nike's U.S. workforce is approximately 9,000. They are
  the marketers.

 · Nike's Asian contracted workforce is approximately 
500,000.  They are the producers.

 · Nike's CEO Phillip Knight is the sixth richest man in
 America.

 · To match Mr. Knight's annual salary, a young Chinese 
 woman would have to work nine hour a day,
 six days a week………………….for fifteen Centuries!

 · Nike currently spends over $650 million on marketing -
 more than twice the wages of  all 500,000
 workers in Asia.

 . Andre Agassi, and Tiger Woods alone would cover the 
 annual labor costs of 115,000 workers in Indonesia.

 Country Hopping

   Nike first moved its production operations to South 
 Korea and Taiwan. But when workers began organizing in 
 those countries, pressuring their respective governments
 to raise minimum wages,Nike began moving out.Their current
 countries of choice are China, Vietnam, and Indonesia which
 produce about 80% of Nike's shoes, these countries have 
 repressive regimes and laws which prohibit formation of 
 free trade unions.

 
 Working Conditions

 About 80  percent of the workforce is composed of young 
 women ranging in age from 15 to 28. Entry level wages 
 range from $l.50 per day (Vietnam) to $2.50 per day (China
 and Indonesia). In Vietnam, the cost of three simple meals 
 a day is $2.20. Only through forced overtime are workers 
 able to sustain themselves and their families. This over
 time may reach as much a 600 hours a year. That equals 
 about 3 months of eight hour shifts!

 
 Don't They All Do That?

 Yes. But Nike is the worst abuser. In Vietnam, the average
 Nike worker receives $47.00 a month; Reebok pays $67.00, 
 Coca Cola pays $80.00, and the State Sewing Factory #10 
 pays $90.00 a month. Bata, a Canadian firm, pays its 
 workers more than twice as much as Nike. In addition, unli
 ke others, Nike does not allow independent monitoring of 
 its factories.

 
 "Aren't  these workers glad to have a chance to work in 
 these factories?"  
                            
 Yes---at first. Surprisingly (or perhaps not!) there is a
 high turnover rate. Nearly 75% of the workers fail to comp
 lete one full year of work. This situation has resulted in
 a new policy at a number of Chinese factories. It's called 
 bonded labor. They now require a deposit equal to one 
 month's wagesbefore beginning work. The deposit will be 
 returned only upon completion of one year's employment. 
 Those who quit during the 6 month probation period will 
 also trigger a month's loss of wagesfrom the fellow worker
 who introduced them to the factory and served as guarantor, 
 often a relative or friend.

 A cruder example, reported by Anita Chin, an Australian 
 sociologist, is to be found at "a Taiwanese-managed joint-
 venture factory [which] employs more than a hundred guards
 for 2,700 workers, one of whom died in an escape attempt.
 

 Much of the material in this fact sheet can be obtained 
 from Campaign for Labor Rights 

 http://www.compugraph.com/cir   as well as http:/www.saigon
 .com/~nike/index.html

Email: happy130@hotmail.com