|
|
|
|
|
by learnstats2
2008 days ago
|
|
The reason I ask the question is that I understand differently: 1. We don't know if these workers (or other workers) are pursuing this in court. Legal and illegal pursuit are not mutually exclusive, at all. 2. If the factory owner is not paying wages because they are already bankrupt, there is nothing that the legal system could reasonably do about that. 3. The workers would not have recourse to claim funds from Apple: I'm not aware that they would even in any country with a "good" legal system. It strikes me as a long stretch to reach "bad/corrupt legal system" as a conclusion. |
|
2. If I had assumed this to possibly be the case, I could not have reasonably made the argument. I am assuming this is a case of fraud and therefore it should be theoretically subject to legal recourse. If it's possible for the workers to cause 7 million dollars worth of property damage, it should've been possible to liquidate some of that equipment to pay the workers.
3. The company responsible for paying the salaries is not Apple.
> It strikes me as a long stretch to reach "bad/corrupt legal system" as a conclusion.
Your parent and multiple siblings interpreted my comment correctly.