• xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    It’s cool as long as we get phones though, right? Apple in particular is in the middle of a shitstrom for using conflict sourced materials…

    (Obviously, it’s not cool - but we need to aware of where the funding that keeps these shitheels in power comes from)

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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      6 months ago

      Apple in particular in terms of legal issues at the moment, but, and I have said this in other threads and no one seems to say otherwise, I am guessing that minerals from the DRC end up in everyone’s hardware. Apple doesn’t have anything so unique that it needs those conflict minerals and no one else does. Even if they don’t directly, how do you ensure every step on the supply chain to produce the hardware doesn’t use them?

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        Yea, I wanted to highlight that Apple is currently under scrutiny but it’s likely all the phone manufacturers (including Chinese ones which theoretically have access to domestic mining) along with battery manufacturers and computer manufacturers… basically everything from your Tesla to your toaster to your server blade rely on some amount of rare earth minerals - and it’s likely that laundered conflict minerals are in pretty much every modern device.

      • livus@kbin.social
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        6 months ago

        Minerals from the DRC are being mined in govt-backed mines supported by Russian mercenaries.

        The Rwanda-funder M23 however are invading DRC over the border, stealing them and then on-selling from Rwanda.

        So’it’s a whole extra can of worms.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          6 months ago

          Right, but who are they selling them to is my point. Just Apple and their supply chain? That is the part I’m doubting.

  • sik0fewl@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    It’s amazing that economic interests can take precedence over humanity

    It would be amazing if it was not the norm.

  • livus@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    This guy is a hero. When people hear there was rape in war a lot of them don’t really understand what that entails.

    In his Nobel lecture, he talked about the first patients admitted to the hospital. One had been raped and shot in her genitals; another was an 18-month-old baby horrifically injured by rape.

    “The macabre violence knew no limit,” he said at the time. That violence has never stopped. Every day, between five and seven new survivors of rape come through the doors of the hospital.