THIS IS MY CRACK: Internet Printing Press in "Good Enough" Markets

__ Is it possible that Guiyu, China, has just as many noble reuse jobs (reuse of boards at the chip level) as it does "primitive wire burning" jobs?


__ Is it possible that more of the -e-scrap in Guiyu comes from huge Chinese cities than from imports? (metro Shenzhen-Guangzhou-HongKong has the population of JAPAN)


__ Is it possible that most of the scrap in Agbogbloshie, Ghana, comes from twice-reused goods, and not straight out of sea containers?


__ Is it possible that the Basel Convention, in Annex IX B1110, explicitly makes import of display devices for re-manufacturing and reuse legal?


__ Is it possible that Indonesia has huge, contract-manufacturing factories with hundreds of employees refurbishing PCs and displays for white-box sales to places like India and Egypt?


__ Is it possible that the Arab Spring or green revolution would never have happened without USA and European exports of cell phones and monitors for repair and reuse?


__ Is it possible that none of the E-Stewards recyclers is even coming close to the NGO's goals of supplying those markets with "fully functional, tested working" equipment?


__ Is it possible that innocent Geeks of Color, techs in Jakarta, Cairo, Lima and Nairobi, are being racially profiled as "criminal enterprises" because they prefer to work on Stuff thrown out by rich neighborhoods, rather than poor?

A journalist like Michael Rey, Nichole Young, Solly Granatstein, Ben Elgin, Brian Grow, Terri Gross, Scott Pelley, or John Stossel (all of whom have done "gotcha" stories on e-waste recycling) hasn't really done their job if they don't check these boxes, i.e., at least ASK the questions.  When they do visit the alleged ewaste import sites and ask these questions of the alleged "criminals", reporters tend to produce more nuanced stories, like those written by Ingrid Lobet, Tom Knudson, Adam Minter, Klaus Neimann, Alyssa Danigellis and Brian X. Chen.

Journalists aren't experts, and they cannot succumb to the temptation of posing as experts.  What they can do is apply Socratic Method to a dispute or exaggerated claim.  The latter, claims by "recyclers" who were actually exporting most of their equipment, seemed like an easy thing to test without going very deep into the developing world.  But they should have asked one of the 3 billion people earning $3K per year how they are getting online and communicating, before printing "80% waste" baloney.

A journalist is not an expert in repair, technology, or reuse.  But what about understanding the very roots of journalism itself?  Can't a journalist be an expert in literature and journalism?

What about Ben Franklin, and the printing press?  Would the journalists have asked the question if someone in London accused Franklin of being a criminal exporter?  He was accused of being a criminal by the Crown.  When he was buying used printing presses from London surplus and upgrades, buying leaded font letters out of use in Kensington or Birmingham, he was buying something toxic... something with lead in it.

And he was using it to communicate ideas.   You don't have to be a technician or a geek to write this story, and report on it correctly.   What is happening now in the internet is what I'm doing right now... blogging... producing... writing... communicating... it's about ideas, and they are the same kind of ideas that Journalism and literature themselves were founded on.   Some journalists have given themselves the excuse of "not technical" to explain a trade which mirrors not the history of science, but the history of publication.

File:AlicesAdventuresInWonderlandTitlePage.jpgIt's Sunday.... follow me down the rabbit hole.
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Why does England have such a rich history of literature?

Because England had printing presses.

We focus on the brilliance of writers like Dickens, and the traditions carried into the West by Hawthorne, Poe, and Twain.  But without an affordable printing press, or affordable paper mills, the ideas in Twain's head would be gone into the carbon.

The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (there's a resurgence of readership because it's free on the Kindle) is in part the story of an entrepreneur in the printing and publishing business, who goes back and forth to England and makes deals on surplus printing equipment until he can buy brand new.

In the past, if you want to have a nation with no history of literature, you needed two things:

No printing presses or paper.

An authoritarian, censorship regime.

Today, you still need the latter.  But to squelch modern distribution of ideas by radicals like Franklin, you need a ban on affordable computers... i.e. a prohibition on "e-waste".

Gee, where do you see the fewest affordable used computer sales, and the fewest bloggers?  How about in nations that ban the importation of computers "less than 3 years from date of manufacture" (read:  Impossibly expensive)?  How about in regimes that seize tested working pentium 4s at the port?

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How about Jim Puckett of BAN applauding Egypt for this policy at an Interpol Meeting in 2010?

I'm sitting in the audience, having recently visited my friend in Egypt who had seen 3 containerloads of working Pentium 4s and monitors seized in Alexandria, costing him and his Palestinian brother about $80,000 just before the "busy season".   We'd been quietly discussing how Egypt's dictator Mubarak seemed unable to make a transition despite his advancing age.   Months later, it was like Neil Young's Ohio in Tahir Square, and the Arab Spring was ablaze in green.

And here was Jim Puckett, standing in front of a group of EPA and Europol and Interpol investigators, with a slide of Egypt's Rule against imports of computers (that's 3 years after manufacture, i.e. from the date it's still on the Foxconn assembly line in China, hasn't even been sold or distributed to the USA and the clock is ticking - on display devices that work for 20 years).  And he's getting applause.

And people think I'm weird and a bad communicator and that I'm in some kind of pissing match with BAN.

- - - -

All right then, I'll go to hell.  The USA press has barely risen to see how messed up this poster child campaign is.  It's sick.  It's totally and absolutely outrageous.

It's outrageous, immoral, and wrong.  But not only will BAN not admit it, they are working to shut my business down here in Vermont, and to censor my blog.  They are attacking my sources, saying that the Indonesia refurbishing factory was DIRECT QUOTE  "Poisoning People".  It wasn't just that they are liars. They help the dictators cast their nets in the fields for the runaway Kunta Kintes and Jims and Black Benjamin Franklins.  This will stunt journalism and literature in the developing world, the same as a ban on trade of used print type and presses would have stopped Thomas Paine, the Adams Brothers, and the Franklins in the colonies.

These brown writers would have composed great works.   The environmental movement, including Grist and Treehugger and others, is going out on their horses, sightseeing.  They print the pictures of brown children whose parents at tinkering and refurbishing factories are being noosed on trees.

I tried being friends with BAN, provided them a lot of information over five years, taught them a lot about the trade.  But it wasn't enough to get them to lay off of Samsung Corning when they converted from mined lead silica to recycling CRT cullet, and it wasn't enough for them to stop the executioner in Semarang Indonesia where the Printing Press of the Arab Spring - the computer display - was being affordably manufactured.   No one is asking the questions at the top of this blog... when they do, when journalists and reporters start asking those questions, when their eyes "adjust to the dark" skin of the geeks, they may feel a shiver...

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Conclusion:   This is a war on information, not a cover-up of toxic ewaste.  Look at how my own blog has been attacked by SOPA-emulating NGOs and do gooders.  I use photos posted by non-profits which are allegedly showing a "pollution crime", and put them in very small one-inch squares to critique what they allege to show evidence of.  They notify Google of a violation of Fair Use.
 In United States copyright law, fair use is a doctrine that permits limited use of copyrighted material without acquiring permission from the rights holders. Examples of fair use include commentary, criticism, news reporting, research, teaching, library archiving and scholarship. It provides for the legal, unlicensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. The term fair use originated in the United States.

Greenpeace and BAN have had google yank photos of burning monitors... a single burning monitor on a barren landscape.  They yank photos of black Africans unloading sea containers - even when the Africans themselves are the ones accused.

Pelley and Pucket circle a major city:  Hong Kong
Using a Greenpeace photo to defend the person IN THE PHOTO, whose purchase has been misrepresented, who has been labelled a "criminal" by Europol and Interpol, has been attacked and my blog ranking has suffered.

But ask yourself, as a journalist, when someone like me uses a photo of a black man accused of committing a crime to prove the man innocent of the crime... if THAT is not Fair Use, then what is?  An NGO, or even a photographer like Pieter Hugo, has their photos pulled from this blog (see gaping absense of photo)... is it because I'm profiting from the photo?  Obviously and clearly not.

This is journalism, journalism under attack by SOPA, down and dirty, in the trenches, photos of Africans falsely accused of "primitive" recycling as they get the only internet "printing press" they can ever afford.  Africans accused by dictatorships of "e-waste" crimes when they have spent tens of thousands of dollars to fly and buy, to pick out only the best from European WEEE collections.  The fact they spent money is written as evidence of an e-waste "organized crime", and even respected trade journalists like Henry Lienweber or Jerry Powell fall for it and report the "criminal" headline without a single interview of a single one of the accused.

I tried to defend them with my own photos, but also with photos from the accuser.  And that's being yanked from fair use.

Wake up, reporters.  There is a crime occurring.  You just haven't figured out who the criminals are yet.  They are posing as environmentalists, and they are slandering factory owners who takeback their own product for reuse and refurbishment.   It's an outrage and I have not been loud enough or written nearly enough about it.  Make no mistake, I'm going Terminator, I'm going Huck Finn, and my dream is to be the guy on the right side who stood up to billionaires like Michael Dell and Wendy Neu and make them be honest about Geeks of Color who are caught in the crossfire of their extended copyright and planned obsolescence industrial complex.

I get high on this.  Standing up for wrongfully accused geeks, who represent the opposite of the resource curse, the people I dreamed my African Peace Corps students would grow up to become, tinkerers and value adding a whole cell phone tower and internet cafe infrastructure from Western Wastes... THIS IS MY CRACK.

New Allegations by Basel Action Network vs. Indonesia


As regular readers know, I believe the biggest environmental outrage of the decade was Basel Action Network's accusation in 2010 of a large scale computer monitor takeback and refurbishing factory (PT Imtech of Semarang, Indoenesia) of being a "hazardous waste" polluter.   BAN refused to ever acknowledge that the factory was permitted, ISO9000, ISO14001, had put glass-to-glass washing equipment for incidental breakage, and was providing sustainable recycling and reuse jobs in the tsunami-ravaged nation.

I don't have any details about the accusation made late yesterday against the Netherlands and other exporters of "e-waste" to Jakarta.  It may or may not be  one of the Indonesian Techs we interviewed on camera.

We do know for sure that BAN has falsely accused people in the past, and has a pattern of not admitting it or explaining themselves.  BAN made false statements about the 2010 rejection (BAN said in writing that the Indonesian government had opened the containers and discovered hazardous waste, but the Indonesian government said that they were "notified" by BAN that the containers has HW and returned them unopened).  We got independent verification from Port of Boston officials (where the 2010 containers were returned) that the seals on the containers had not been opened.

We cannot defend anyone involved in today's case, as we have done no more business in Indonesia.   Perhaps the "e-waste" is hazardous, I really don't know.



Here is video and slides of a factory I do know was in Jakarta, where todays containers were seized.  They refurbished computers into like-new condition and sold them in Libya, Egypt, Tunisia, Iran and other nations which were hungry for affordable internet.  When we visited, they were refurbishing 5,000 computer devices per DAY and employed hundreds of people.  Yes, that's 5,000 units per DAY.

I approached BAN about a Compromise two years ago... hoped that BAN would look at these pictures and perhaps feel a little remorse, and be a little gentler about the concept of Fair Trade Recycling.   Jim was civil, but said his hands were tied, as he believed that the export SHOULD be made illegal, even if it was not, event if no pollution resulted.  His theory was that rich people will always abuse poor people, and stopping the trade between rich nations and poor would result in poor nations "leapfrogging" into better technology.   While he admitted it wasn't actually illegal under Basel Convention, that for consistency he had to oppose it because he objected to that part of the Basel Convention (Annex IX).

BAN's solution to me was that Basel Convention Annex IX B1110 (which makes this activity LEGAL) should be amended by a Basel Ban Amendment (so that even if legal now, it would become illegal), and that the factory should buy worn out stuff from poor countries instead of the 3 year old equipment they like to refurbish from rich countries.  Then BAN said that they would meet the demand for internet by selling "tested working" and "fully functional" computers from E-Stewards, eliminating the need for refurbishing jobs in Indonesia.  We wonder how close to 5,000 working units per day their E-Steward shredding companies have come.

So in the past the NGO has committed fraud.  In the past the NGO created a hoax that the computers at the dump in Ghana were recently imported (no evidence of that).  We'll see whether their history of false accusations is even brought up by Treehugger, Grist, Huffington Post or Good.

The European and American press are cowards for not uncovering the money that goes from planned obsolescence interests into this shady, reckless, racist organization in Seattle whose job it is to chase reuse entrepreneurs out of the closet.  This Seattle NGO organization does nothing for the environment.   The biggest shame of the environmental movement is that they continue to circulate the accusations and stories and never lift a finger to investigate the truth about the people who have committed no crime except to be geeks of a different color.

Basel Action Networks press release is below.  Maybe this time they are right.  A broken clock does that twice per day.  If the formula is to accuse every geek of color who buys surplus property from rich nations a polluter, they may eventually get one... because they have millions of people to profile.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
113 Containers of Toxic Waste Arrives at Indonesian Port
Groups Call for Ratification of Basel Ban and Crackdown on Global Dumping
Jakarta, Indonesia, February 3 2012 – On the heels of massive quantities of toxic wastes arriving at the Jakarta Tanjung Priok Port last week, environmental groups led by Indonesia Toxics-Free Network, the Basel Action Network, Ban Toxics, and BaliFokus condemned the illegal trade and urged world governments that have not already done so to ratify the Basel Ban Amendment and to enforce the Basel Convention as a matter of urgency. 
Officials at the Jakarta port were able to intercept and seize the illegal shipments which originated from the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. Customs officials from the two countries have already begun investigating the companies and the individuals involved in the case may yet be prosecuted.  However for every shipment caught it is feared many more go unnoticed.
"We were lucky to have caught this one shipment, which begs the bigger question, how many shipments are getting through under the noses of our port officials?" asked Yuyun Ismawati, founder of the Indonesia Toxics-Free Network. "In Indonesia we have regulations on illegal toxic waste traffic based on the Basel Convention, but there needs to be better national enforcement and international cooperation to implement the law."
The environmental groups also call on all governments that have not already done so to ratify the Basel Ban Amendment. Last October 2011, the Basel Convention on the Control of the Transboundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal passed a critical decision to ensure that only 17 more ratifications are needed to allow the Basel Ban Amendment to enter into force. The Basel Ban Amendment prohibits and makes it a crime to export toxic wastes from developed to developing countries for any reason whatsoever.
"The Basel Ban places the responsibility of policing this crime not only on the importing country, such as Indonesia, but more importantly on the developed nations as well," explains Jim Puckett, Executive Director of the Basel Action Network. "The UK and Dutch port authorities missed this shipment, and thus it is clear that there needs to be greater responsibility on the shoulders of exporting countries to police unscrupulous actors that avoid costs of proper waste management by exporting toxic waste."
Increasing toxic waste generation in developed countries, increasing costs of managing pollutants, combined with high poverty and lax implementation of environmental laws drive toxic wastes from rich to poorer countries.
The generation of electronic waste or e-waste, included in this illegal shipment, amounts to about 50 million metric tons generated annually, and is increasing rapidly. Unfortunately e-waste is toxic waste containing such toxins as lead and cadmium, and thus disposal is creating major risks for public health and environment in importing countries.
"We are reaching the tipping point of the poisons that society is spewing out, and the ports and customs are the frontiers of that fight," said Richard Gutierrez, Executive Director of Ban Toxics in the Philippines. "Governments can not handle this problem single-handedly. There has to be better coordination and implementation of international and national laws. If not, developing countries like Indonesia will become the dumping grounds for the world’s toxic wastes."
For more information contact:
Yuyun Ismawati
Indonesia Toxics-Free Network/BaliFokus
Jim Puckett
Basel Action Network
telephone: +1 206 652 5555
Richard Gutierrez
Ban Toxics!

    206 1st Ave South Suite 410 | Seattle, WA 98104 US


    "Winning" the War on Diversity, Alabama Style


    Howdy, I growed up in Arkansas, and am always keeping an eye out on our state ranking. Alabama has usually kept out of the fray in the fight between 49th and 50th rank between Mississippi and Arkansas.  But, as The Economist observes, a new Immigration Law in Alabama may succeed where teenage pregnancy and ignorance has failed.  FTA

    ALABAMA’S immigration law, boasted Micky Hammon, an Alabama legislator and one of its co-authors, “attacks every aspect of an illegal immigrant’s life. They will not stay in Alabama…This bill is designed to make it difficult for them to live here so they will deport themselves.” It is not, however, designed to introduce visiting executives from Mercedes-Benz, which employs thousands at its factory in the state, to the pleasures of Alabama’s jails. But that is what happened to Detlev Hager, who was caught in November driving in Tuscaloosa with only German ID on him.
    The article describes how the Alabama legislator "shrewdly included a severability clause, ensuring that if a court strikes down or prohibits one part of the law, the rest remains in effect."  My God, it's Brilliant!
    ...Mr Hammon’s fond hope—that illegal immigrants will leave—seems to have come true. Anecdotal reports suggest that thousands of Latinos, legal as well as illegal, have left Alabama. Farmers complain of rotting crops and building companies of rising costs, both because there are too few workers. Samuel Addy, an economist at the University of Alabama, estimates the law’s total cost—taking into account productivity declines, increased enforcement cost, and declines in aggregate consumer spending and tax revenue since so many workers have left—in the billions.
    The Chicago Tribune reports Addy's estimated cost to Alabama at $10.8 billion.  This is similar to the outcome expected from another "good theory", about e-waste recycling, championed by a group of shredding companies in support of the Green Thompson anti-export bill.  Their idea is that if we eliminate exchange of goods and services, the USA will create jobs.  

    The idea may or may not have a certain local merit (if you work at a shredding company in California).  But shredding money generally doesn't increase payroll.   Like the anti-immigration bill in Alabama, the economic theory won't pass the straight-face test on its economic merits.  But it nevertheless finds political fuel from the basest American instincts, as it becomes tinged with the latent passions of jealousy and racism.  Some people think that money coming into their state is not the answer - that their boats will only rise if they vote other peoples' boats to sink.

    The theory is, if you stop trading with 83% of the world, and in particular the 3 billion people who are getting online internet at ten times the rate of the developing world, using used display units and other "non-obsolete" surplus which doesn't obey "Moore's law" of obsolescence, USA jobs will result.  All you have to do is turn $100 billion dollars of repairable IT equipment upgraded every year into $1 billion dollars of scrap.  Sit back and watch as the jobs arrive faster than Alabama White Collar Cotton Pickers.

    55872223

    It's an old lesson, retold from a letter in 1865, written by a former slave to his former Tennessee slave owner (republished on the web this week, e.g. Huffington Post).

    It's a lesson Alabama is re-learning, as the immigrants walk away from the fields and leave crops to rot.  It's a lesson Basel Action Network brought to us when they wrote letters to Malaysia objecting to Samsung Corning using USA CRT cathode ray tube cullet to make new recycled CRTs... Malaysia decided they could get all the CRT cullet they needed from Japan and Korea, thanks much.  And it's a lesson BAN brought to us again when BAN attacked contract manufacturing factories.  Remember, those are the "big secret factories" which upgrade CRT displays by the thousands per day for affordable use in the mideast and Africa (CRTs withstand heat better than LCDs).  The factories are still there, and still buying... they just are not buying from the USA.  Thanks.   That's going to create more jobs here in Vermont when I turn the $200K we used to get from reuse into -minus -$30K in CRT glass cullet.

    There is something in Jourdan Anderson's letter to confederate Colonel P.H. Anderson, which seems to repeat itself in the history of trade between immigrants in Alabama and Geeks of Color in overseas refurbishing and recycling markets...

    Say howdy to George Carter, and thank him for taking the pistol from you when you were shooting at me.
    From your old servant,
    Jourdon Anderson.


    Fair Trade Recycling: Networks of Tinkerers

    I have a lot of deadlines pressing, and a lot of 80% finished stuff in the DRAFTS folder, so I'll be spending less time in the next week competing for the latest and most cutting edge developments on electronics scrap export policy, surplus property policy, e-waste, digital divide, and Fair Trade Recycling.  We do have a big WR3A Announcement coming down the pike in the next 2 weeks, so stay tuned.

    Tinkered Printing Press
    Meanwhile, we try to be a resource for university and college students who are studying the past and present about trade in "e-waste" and surplus property.  We have an exciting new Master's Thesis student here in Middlebury for 6 months, who traveled from Paul Cezanne University in France just to study "E-Waste" with WR3A.

    Many of these students come from other nations, and it's obvious to many of them that transfer of surplus technology is a transfer of wealth.  We never seem to see that simple idea in any UN, EU, or even EPA documentation.  It's as if our culture has become so obsessive-compulsive about food spoilage in the refrigerators that we are banning sale of food to starving nations unless we have proof it won't spoil.  If you give food to a starving child, you better have done your paperwork.


    The "hyperbole of harm" accusations by groups like Basel Action Network have made donations and trade almost "radioactive" for donors.  Who is hurt?  Poor people, democracy, and the environment.  

    My "hypothesis" that "tinkering" (see Japan, a Network of Tinkerers, Y. Takahashi, 2000) is the opposite of the "resource curse", that repair and refurbishing (or "Yankee Ingenuity") is a form of "value added" which has been critical to the most successful international development stories... it can probably be documented here in the USA when Yankees bought manufacturing practices and "surplus from upgrades" from England (c.f. Benjamin Franklin autobiography, on printing technology).


    So again for the academics, here is some light reading about how Japan went from resource-starved and military complex into becoming the kingpin for technology two decades later.  This is happening in real time in India, Indonesia, and China - just to  name three of the five largest countries in the world, two of them the top Muslim population and largest democracies.

    A Network of Tinkerers:
    The Advent of the Radio and Television Receiver Industry in Japan
    Yuzo Takahashi
    Technology and Culture
    Vol. 41, No. 3 (Jul., 2000), pp. 460-484
    (article consists of 25 pages)
    Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25147538
    A Network of Tinkerers: The Advent of the Radio and Television Receiver Industry in Japan