Some More News - SMN: They Literally Don't Make Things Like They Used To

Episode Date: September 20, 2023

Hi. In today's episode, we look at Planned Obsolescence, the resulting mountains of e-waste, and why companies don't want you to be able to fix their crummy products. Sources: https://docs.google.com.../document/d/1FQR6d3vksFP5Mq4KhbAWRBkg_7Vj9cfTrfGJNrK7VdE/edit?usp=sharing Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Some More News and Even More News audio podcasts: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews If you want to take ownership of your health, try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 Free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. Go to https://drinkAG1.com/MORENEWS.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Everyone shush up. Shh, shh, we're doing the news now. Yes, you in the back shush as well, thank you. Okay, breaking news, breaking news, here's some more of it. Planned obsolescence is a thing. That's the news. Look, I'm sorry I was so short with you earlier, but have you noticed that more of your clothes
Starting point is 00:00:24 are getting worn out and getting holes in them more quickly? Or do you ever run out of ink in your printer and see the price of a fresh ink cartridge is around the same cost of a new printer? Do you ever wonder why your refrigerator died after 10 years of freezing Halo Top ice cream, but your hot grandma's 1930s ass fridge still keeps Doc Fudgem's Coco Whipple Dick iced milk cold.
Starting point is 00:00:45 That's planned obsolescence. And I know that sounds very low stakes, but please rest assured that the episode won't just be me griping about how they don't make stuff like they used to. That said, they don't make stuff like they used to. And there's a larger implication to that, and a reason, and that is planned obsolescence.
Starting point is 00:01:07 It's P.O. baby, pure P.O. Which is like B.O. in that it stinks for everybody except the person responsible for it. Also, like farts. The problem of plannedanned Obsolescence Heck yes, the title means that we're doing an episode now about a thing that we're all aware of, perhaps consider annoying, but don't really think about enough. Or maybe you do think about it. I don't know what's in your heart. Not until my saw gets here in the mail. So planned obsolescence is
Starting point is 00:01:43 a business strategy that deliberately ensures that a product will break, become useless or obsolete within a specific time period so it can guarantee that consumers will need replacements. This keeps demand steady so people will become repeat customers. If you've ever bought a smartphone, this probably sounds terribly familiar to you. More on that later.
Starting point is 00:02:04 But that's the short definition. For the longer definition, just keep watching, I guess. I mean, look at the time bar at the bottom of the video. We've got a few notes. So while the business aspect of creating demand has been around since the invention of commerce, the earliest modern aspect of planned obsolescence can be traced back to 1925.
Starting point is 00:02:27 It also happens to be the most insidious conspiracy brain version ever, because prior to that year, incandescent light bulbs had a lifespan of up to 2,500 hours, or like 104 days of continuous use. And that's the average. There's currently a light bulb that's still working after being turned on in 1901.
Starting point is 00:02:48 The invention was incredibly efficient. So efficient in fact, that the light bulb companies weren't making enough money. After all, with that system, customers just needed a new light bulb around four times per year. And that's assuming they had it on all the time, perhaps to ward off ghost owls,
Starting point is 00:03:07 which I'm told is a big problem in New England and some parts of Canada. Anyway, light bulbs, too good, need money. So an international cartel of industry leaders was formed to, big quotes, fix that great product into a less great and more lucrative one. The Phoebus cartel was made up of incandescent
Starting point is 00:03:29 light bulb companies throughout the world, including subsidiaries of General Electric that plotted together to shorten the lifespan of the light bulb. And they succeeded. Hooray! Success! They all agreed to unimprove their products
Starting point is 00:03:47 to the point that any light bulb they sold, regardless of company or country of origin, lasted only 1,000 hours. The cartel would even regularly send samples to a neutral lab to ensure that their products didn't exceed the agreed and artificial limit and would pay fines if they dared to make a better bulb. Those restrictions were okay by them, of course, since sales from the cartel increased
Starting point is 00:04:14 from 335 million to 420 million units between 1926 and 1930. Of course, the cartel would loosen its grip when the members' host countries got into a bit of a spat around 1939 to 1945. Look it up. It's an event. Ask Ken Burns about it.
Starting point is 00:04:34 He'll point in the right direction. But the point, which I really can't stress enough and I'm struggling to get to, is that incandescent light bulbs were purposefully manufactured to be less good so that people would have to spend more money on them. And for at least 75 years, we just accepted that until LED bulbs became popularized. We were just grifted by an entire industry for decades. Dare I say, gasp.
Starting point is 00:05:07 What's next? Oil companies covering up climate data? Hey everyone, it's Cody from the future. Just wanted to pop in here to note that the light bulb cartel story, while widely reported, has also been disputed. And a 1951 report from the Monopolies and Restrictive Practices Commission
Starting point is 00:05:24 claimed that the 1000 hour limit was to balance lifespan versus wattage, at least according to representatives of these companies who still issued fines for going over this limit. So why do that? If it's just for being more efficient, why issue the fines? Also in that same report,
Starting point is 00:05:41 they refer to the guidelines as seemingly arbitrary and they state, when asked whether it would not be possible to market a type of lamp with a longer life in order to test whether the public in fact like it, their reply was to the effect that this was a matter on which the public could not judge and which ought to be left entirely to the manufacturer.
Starting point is 00:06:03 So anyway, according to the bulb companies, they're totally innocent, debunked. Point is, still seems a little sus, which is a phrase that came back in style in the future. Also, tomorrow's lotto numbers are 69, 69, 69, 69. That sounds fake. Okay, back to the show. Speaking of lighting bulbs, just prior to Global Spat 2,
Starting point is 00:06:27 American businessmen got a light bulb over their head, imagery I just invented to mean an idea, and added a new tool of planned obsolescence called creative waste. Creative waste would implant the idea in consumers that buying and replacing old and broken goods was better than fixing or upgrading them. This idea was already enticing to consumers
Starting point is 00:06:50 as WW2 provided a stronger middle class that would have no problem just using their extra disposable income to replace their current retail goods with newer models. As a result, this would bolster a stronger economy and create larger, sexier landfills. So bulgy. Later on, Creative Waste would go on to become the name of a grindcore band. I assume. Ah, there they are. Anyway, this idea was used in conjunction with a method dubbed
Starting point is 00:07:22 Consumer Engineering by early 20th century advertiser, Ernest Elmo Calkins. Consumer engineering is essentially creating artificial demand for products in a near endless cycle of buying replacements just because they're new, rather than using what they already bought for as long as possible. Essentially, it's enticing consumers into buying newer versions of products that they originally purchased because of their small and often arbitrary changes.
Starting point is 00:07:49 Stuff like a slimmer PlayStation, a different trim on a Honda Accord, two extra Zoom Air units on a Nike Pegasus shoe, extra sour corn-scented lures on your boar trap, or of course, a new hat. She's just a regular Malibu Stacy with a stupid cheap hat. She still embodies all the awful stereotypes she did before. But she's got a new hat. The Simpsons of course, definitely knows a thing or two about consumer engineering. So Creative Waste and Consumer Engineering
Starting point is 00:08:22 synergy bone with enough greed splooge to conceive and give a sloppy gooey plop birth to the current planned obsolescence concept that we know of today. Yes, that sounded gross, but it should because the idea itself is gross too. One deep V-necked version of this strategy comes in the form of fast fashion.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Fast fashion is common practice by the majority of clothing brands to make their clothes out of cheaper material so they wear out more quickly, while simultaneously coming up with new trends and clothing lines to get consumers to ditch their unsightly worn down genital coverings to get the latest off the shoulder dress
Starting point is 00:09:00 for the fall season, or wide legged jeans to prevent your calves from choking or whatever the hell fuck you flip flops are. What are they? I don't know, fuck you. For centuries, how we dressed was associated with social status. So the affordability and marketing
Starting point is 00:09:17 of these fast fashion clothing items made us want to get the latest looks to appear cooler, more attractive and in the now at a too good to be true price because, in fact, it is. In the past, if you needed a new jacket, you used to go to a tailor, get measured, choose a material, and have it made. Then for decades, instead of going to a tailor for a jacket, we went to department stores and bought things that were mass produced. By the 80s and 90s, we had tons of options in stores to choose from.
Starting point is 00:09:46 And now, many of us just kind of go online, click add to cart, and buy a product without ever seeing it in person. In order to speed up manufacturing, companies have to either hire more people, alter how the product is made, or both. But they also have to keep prices low enough for consumers to keep buying.
Starting point is 00:10:03 So they may start swapping materials like cotton or silk for a cheaper synthetic material, or rely on a more basic stitching pattern that maybe just doesn't hold as well. Fast fashion is sometimes literally new hat. Speaking of buying items for social status, since the 1920s, the auto industry has been a huge fan of planned obsolescence.
Starting point is 00:10:26 And that's kind of wild when you think about it. A $30,000 car should be one of those things you hold onto for a while, you know? But back in the day, the then CEO of General Motors, Alfred P. Sloan, noticed that children's bicycles came in different colors and shapes, causing children to beg their parents for a new bike. Sloan decided to take that mentality and apply it to cars,
Starting point is 00:10:49 allegedly saying, "'The changes in the new model should be so novel and attractive as to create demand and a certain amount of dissatisfaction with past models compared with the new one.'" He also allegedly said afterward, "'Now gimme that kid's bike!' Then immediately ate it, tires and all,
Starting point is 00:11:08 which is impressive and horrifying and true, ate the bike." I mean, look at him. He's got bike eater face. Anyway, the auto industry cranked up this strategy in the 1940s and 50s as the middle class rose, creating different trim levels at different prices while also changing the design and style of the same model each year.
Starting point is 00:11:30 Due to this strategy, the length of car ownership dropped from five years in 1934 to just two years by 1955. That's according to the General Motors head of design at the time, Harley J. Earl, who then said, "'When it is one year, we will have a perfect score.'" That was the ultimate goal, to sell you the same car over and over every year. Maybe with a new spoiler, additional airbags,
Starting point is 00:11:56 and or navigation system, but it's overall still the same goddamn car. Again, new hat meme. So cars, fashion, light bulbs, this is all Farm League shit. After all, long after the invention of these industries, we got an exciting new way to thoroughly fleece consumers. On January 24th, Apple computer will introduce Macintosh. Oh yeah, so revolutionary. You smash that screen, but then buy a smaller one,
Starting point is 00:12:33 put it in your pocket, carry it around, stare at it for hours every single day, but no, smash the screen. Go nuts. After all, it's probably pretty easy to repair. Unlike Apple's phones, tech is of course, one of the biggest offenders of planned obsolescence. In 2017, iPhone users discovered that their older phones
Starting point is 00:12:53 ran slower after the latest Apple iOS update. Apple acknowledged that this was intentional, but claimed they did it so the battery on those older phones wouldn't be too taxed and shut down. Apple had to shell out $113 million for a class action lawsuit that accused the company of intentionally throttling the batteries of older phones. In 2020, Apple also settled
Starting point is 00:13:15 in another multi-state class action battery gate lawsuit for $500 million and didn't have to admit fault. As of August, 2023, Apple just started to pay out that money money giving millions of people up to $90 to pay for one ninth of a new iPhone, I guess. Now to be fair and balanced and corporate and a little exhausted about Apple, as tech systems and the internet grow and get more advanced,
Starting point is 00:13:43 then of course older tech shouldn't be expected to keep up. For example, older 3G phones just plain won't work as well as more and more 5G towers are being built. Plus, batteries do indeed wear out over time. Sure. But blindsiding your previous customers with an operating system that they knew would hinder performance or even shut down a device that was only on the market for two years is, in my opinion, bad. And Apple, of course,
Starting point is 00:14:13 isn't the only tech company normalizing the constant upgrading to newer products and finding fun ways to squeeze their customers. But I would argue they've kind of become the worst. Remember when you could just open up one of those Power Macs and swap out whatever you please? Not so much anymore. It's all proprietary parts for a purposefully unique design. Also, you're going to have to pay seven fucking thousand dollars for it. Plus 400 bucks if you want wheels that don't lock in place. I'm sure for locking wheels, it's a meager $300 extra. Oh yeah, look, so now available locking wheels for just $700 or, you know, just buy a tower PC
Starting point is 00:14:58 for the same 700 bucks and get more or less the same thing. But it won't look like a spaceship. To be clear, the $700 you would be spending on the non-spaceship looking tower PC was originally only for the other computer's wheels. I would argue that 80% of Apple products are now just grifts aimed at very rich and unfulfilled people. After all, you don't have to get Apple computers.
Starting point is 00:15:25 While these industries are intentionally making their products lower in quality or more disposable, we as consumers still have a choice, right? We can mend our clothing. We could buy a replacement battery for our weak, sluggish electronics and install it ourselves or have a tech-savvy friend do it. We could take our car to an independent mechanic
Starting point is 00:15:45 or a body shop to tune it up or add some amenities, whether Exhibit pimps it up or not. Is that enough setup? You know I'm building towards something for after the ad break, right? Not the Exhibit part. That was just a fun 2004 reference for me, even though I preferred the episodes
Starting point is 00:16:00 when Chameleon Air hosted. So no, you can't fix your own stuff. Spoilers for after the break, which we are now going to do for yummy ads. For yummy, yummy stuff. Yummy ads for yummy stuff. Not at all weird to do ads in this video about consumerism. It's not weird to do ads at any time.
Starting point is 00:16:18 You love it and eat it. Eat the ads. Open wide, fleshy! What's up, my hot salads? It is me. People are always asking me, Hey Cody, how did you get such a beautiful throat? It's true.
Starting point is 00:16:34 The inside of my neck is like a silken shoot, a true velveteen hole. The answer is that I take care of my throat. For starters, when I need to take vitamins, I drink AG1 instead of throat damaging pills. AG1 is a nutritional supplement packed with 75 vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and other whole food sourced ingredients.
Starting point is 00:16:55 It's perfect for when you're on the go and don't have time for full meals, or maybe you just want to give your throat a fun prize. Cheers to my throat. Oh, hi-ya! Kapow! Right down the lustrous hatchet goes. Everyone says this about my hatch, that it's lustrous.
Starting point is 00:17:26 I gave AG1 a try first for these ads. And now I drink AG1 during every shoot because it ensures I'm getting nutrition during busy work days without damaging my moneymaker. My throat moneymaker, that is. God. If you want to take ownership of your health, try AG1 and get a free one year supply of vitamin D
Starting point is 00:17:45 and five free AG1 travel packs with your first purchase. Go to drinkag1.com slash more news. That's drinkag1.com slash more news. Check it out. After all, you're hearing this from my throat and you love my throat. You all love my throat. You all love my throat. You all love my throat. You all love my throat.
Starting point is 00:18:05 You all love my throat. Oh God. I don't know what I'm doing. Hey, hope you liked those ads and they filled your consumer tum tums. Are you good? Everything okay at home? Well, nothing I can do about that.
Starting point is 00:18:21 We are back and we were talking about planned obsolescence and how it's a strategy to keep consumers consuming through marketing of superficial features and using lower quality materials so consumers purchase replacements regularly. But surely if something you buy is broken, if you're hard pressed and don't wanna buy a new one, you can just get it fixed, right?
Starting point is 00:18:41 Especially if you know a guy who knows a guy who knows a gal who can do it cheaper than the right? Especially if you know a guy who knows a guy who knows a gal who can do it cheaper than the manufacturer or free if you have cocaine. Well, that is becoming less and less of a thing. The repairing part, I mean, cocaine is doing fine. Let's go back to our fruit named tech overlords. You know the ones, good enough. So in the last segment, we discussed how in 2016,
Starting point is 00:19:05 the battery on older iPhones couldn't handle an operating system update, even though some of those older phones came out less than two years prior to the update. So here's a question. Why can't we just like replace the battery ourselves? Most electronics feature this groundbreaking feature of batteries that go in and out.
Starting point is 00:19:25 If this 90s era discrete vibrating device can take a couple of double A's and a few V's, why are our modern phones so limited? Or what about some other small issue? Couldn't you just do a little DIY and save you a trip to the Genius Bar? It's your phone after all. Well, no. In fact, French investigators, a little DIY and save you a trip to the Genius Bar. It's your phone after all.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Well, no. In fact, French investigators, hopefully including at least one of these guys, found out that Apple made it incredibly hard to fix and replace parts of an iPhone without taking it to an Apple accredited repair shop. A lot of this is due to the parts pairing or serialization of Apple's phones.
Starting point is 00:20:06 This links a phone's serial number with the serial number of an internal part so that the phone notices whether its screen, battery or a sensor has been replaced. So if you, let's say, wanted to replace a broken screen from your iPhone with a working screen from another iPhone, it won't work. The phone will realize the serial numbers don't match
Starting point is 00:20:28 and stay shut off or blast you with notifications telling you that your screen isn't verified. Imagine any other product you bought yelling at you like that. That's like if you bought a steak that was genetically modified to scream if you tried to cook it without A1 sauce. I fucking bought you, phone.
Starting point is 00:20:47 You do what I say. Anyway, as part of a French anti-garbage law foreshadowing, any action that limits a consumer's right to repair their own device or that would subsequently discriminate against independent repair shops is illegal. While the country is pressuring Apple to alter their behavior,
Starting point is 00:21:06 they're being backed up by the rest of the European Union, who not only want Apple to make repairing their devices a more accessible option for consumers, but also require all smartphones to have replaceable batteries by 2027. Good idea. One point to the French. Viva la batterie!
Starting point is 00:21:25 For people following the show, we're now at 14 points for France, 26 points for Oklahoma, 3 points for Antarctica, and of course 0 points for New Zealand. Obviously, no other countries or landmasses are in the race. So Apple's response to all of these customer complaints and pressure from government bodies was to start the Apple Self Service Repair Program, which would provide consumers with the parts and tools to do common repairs themselves. That's not quite what we asked for,
Starting point is 00:21:53 but it is something, I guess. Let's take a look at how much it would cost for you to replace your iPhone 14 Pro Max yourself through this service. So you can go back to taking cute pictures of squirrels, pissing on gravestones for your Instagram or whatever it is you freaks do. Angry birds?
Starting point is 00:22:11 I don't know. The regular toolkit costs $49 to rent for seven days. For this unreasonable service, that sounds reasonable since it would cost up to $99 for Apple themselves to replace the battery for you. However, when you go for the $49 rent and fix option, they'll reportedly put a whopping $1,200 hold on your credit card if you don't return the combined 79-pound toolkit within the seven-day period. Bear in mind that the $49 doesn't include the actual Apple parts for the repair,
Starting point is 00:22:48 which in this example would be just under $202 before taxes and shipping, provided you didn't trade anything in. Now you better hope that you don't lose one of those tools or that you damage any of the Apple parts while you try to repair them, as Apple is strongly against you reaching out to get a third party part on the quick and cheap.
Starting point is 00:23:10 What with that whole parts pairing thing. But in the kindness of their hearts and gorging money loins, they have technically made it easier to repair their products under their weird terms. This incredibly frustrating process was obviously made by design, so you have no choice but to go to Apple accredited shops
Starting point is 00:23:30 or to Apple themselves to get your phone's battery replaced, a service which has just recently gone up in price. But it's not just phones. Apple makes all kinds of small pieces of shit. AirPod batteries can't be replaced because they're sealed inside. There's no putting this AirPod back together. And that's why they're essentially expensive,
Starting point is 00:23:52 disposable electronics. Apple's AirPods are even more disposable with their batteries effectiveness, lasting an average of two years and being absolutely impossible to replace. Again, to be fair and balanced and corporate and excruciatingly more exhausted about Apple, there are very few earbuds that can be easily refurbished.
Starting point is 00:24:10 But the overall point is that Apple, that revolutionary company going against the grain, very clearly chose to make a disposable product among all their other impossible to repair products designed so that they can make as much money from you as humanly possible. So this is a MacBook Pro that the Apple store said would cost $1,200 to fix and wasn't worth doing. All right, let's take a look and see if that's true. See the pin that's sticking out? Okay. So that pin is actually most likely the pin for the backlight. And as you can see, it's probably not making contact because it's bent outwards. And got my set of tweezers over here and i'm just going to try to push that back into
Starting point is 00:24:48 the slot and try to get it back into its groove as you can see we've got an apple and we have a light so it's it fixed yeah now that took you like one and a half minutes maybe so if i walked in off the street with this problem what would you charge charge for the repair you just did? If somebody wanted me to just bend the pin back, I wouldn't charge them for that. I would say, I'm going to rework your original cable. That may not last long term, but here, it's free. If they wanted us to replace the cable, depending on the model, anywhere from $75 to $150, depending on the difficulty of opening that model. Think different.
Starting point is 00:25:23 Think $700 wheels. So yeah, if you've ever owned an Apple product, this isn't really a big revelation to you, but it really can't be understated how egregious this one company is about controlling everything about their product for the sole purpose of squeezing their customers out of a ridiculous amount of money. They are the poster children for planned obsolescence. I haven't even mentioned their ridiculous addiction to perpetually changing and removing their ports. One more way they ensure that you have to keep buying dumb little dongles
Starting point is 00:25:53 or update your hardware every few years. Of course, some good news about that coming up. And while it's subjective, I would argue that the result of all of this is a serious fall from quality over the last two decades. Apple used to be associated with artists both big and struggling. Indie and big budget films were once edited
Starting point is 00:26:12 on their Final Cut Pro software, which has since been downgraded into a cheap consumer app. For that reason, filmmakers who still use that software often use outdated versions of it. Final Cut Pro has of course devolved into a subscription based model, which is similar for Adobe and scores of other software products.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Subscription models are clearly the evolution of planned obsolescence and actually something we're planning to do an episode about in the future. In general though, the world of tech has been a boon to companies looking for ways to shove planned obsolescence into their products and look no further, as we briefly discussed earlier, than the auto industry. Older cars can be taken to any mechanic for basic repair
Starting point is 00:26:57 and they could order special parts if necessary. But as more technology is being implemented into a car's design, whether it's computerized systems or materials to provide better gas mileage, it's making car repair more expensive and specialized. Your regular third-party mechanic can't help you anymore, not because they aren't skilled, but because auto manufacturers are gatekeeping vital information and data. This creates a reliance for consumers to take their damaged vehicles to a manufacturer rather than an independent mechanic, making repairs cost more and pushing work away from those independent mechanics.
Starting point is 00:27:31 This especially applies to electric vehicles. Granted, they don't need oil changes or tune-ups and they're breaking technologies overall better than gas-powered cars. So on paper, they require less maintenance and repair, but EV companies, especially Tesla, are bravely proving that wrong. See, if your Tesla car needs a repair,
Starting point is 00:27:51 taking it to an independent mechanic, either A, likely won't work because the mechanic has no idea how to fix your issues, or B, will violate your warranty if your car gets damaged by non-authorized technicians. This means that you have to take your car to Tesla to get it fixed, and there aren't enough technicians to meet that demand.
Starting point is 00:28:11 This is a problem that extends for owners of electric vehicles as well as a whole, but especially for Tesla owners, since they score poorly both in quality and reliability in 2022. And that is just, that's certainly a fact. Interesting, concerning, laugh cry emoji. Dare I say, Tesla is quickly becoming the apple of cars.
Starting point is 00:28:33 You know, like in the way where they're designed to look slick and futuristic while failing the most basic functions. You shouldn't have to troubleshoot your fucking door handles, Elon. Go tweet about the juice some more. That'll get the advertisers back. Anyway, self-driving will certainly
Starting point is 00:28:47 make this repair issue worse, but that's a whole other episode that we are literally working on right now. And it's not just big city tech idiots feeling this hurt. This type of repair restriction impacts our small town farm idiots too. For decades, farmers had been at odds with John Deere over their tractors.
Starting point is 00:29:06 The company has been in the agricultural business since 1836 and currently holds 53% of the market share on all tractors sold in the US. So they've been in the biz ever since modern agriculture grew its first crop of corn to make the first disgusting dollop of corn cream, which yes, is still under this desk, and yes, is starting to grow something that whispers. Sure, I could mop it, but it's hard,
Starting point is 00:29:33 and I don't want to offend it or anger it. Farmers have been frustrated because their modern tractors are run by software and technology that only John Deere technicians are able to address and fix. And boy, are they milking non-dairy farmers out of every cent they earn. Farms today use a tremendous amount of technology. Deere makes claims that you only really have the license to use their software. And for someone to say they own the software pretty much takes away the whole viability of the entire tractor or piece of equipment. Much like those film editors using
Starting point is 00:30:09 outdated software, so too do farmers pay top dollar for 40-year-old tractors that, while inflated in price, would still be cheaper while being sturdy and easier to independently fix. As for John Deere, what incentive is there for them to make their tractors more accessible for farmers to fix? Per Bloomberg, John Deere's company filings in 2020 showed that parts and services made three to six times more profit for them than selling new machines. My goodness. If a company makes more money fixing their product than from the product itself, I feel like that should be considered a bad company, right? And yet this is a viable and common business strategy. Companies that not only perpetually
Starting point is 00:30:53 and unnecessarily update their products and design them to be less durable, but also secure a monopoly around repairing that product. And besides the obvious fact, which I keep reminding you about, that this is all designed to squeeze us out of obscene amounts of money, there's also a less tangible loss to all of this.
Starting point is 00:31:12 Think about a farmer getting up, milking the chickens, plowing the barn, eating his dog, and so on. A life that's fundamentally designed to be self-reliant, salt of the earth, dog-fearing, et cetera. And these people have to then bring their tractor into some fancy dealership whenever it breaks, even if it was free of charge. For a lot of people, there's a principle to this.
Starting point is 00:31:33 Everyone from hobbyists to doom preppers to non-weirdos have stuff that they simply like to do by themselves for themselves, that they want to be able to do themselves. A good farmer likely prides themselves on their ability to fix anything right there on the job. Just like how I can disassemble and repair this desk in under two minutes when there's not corn cream everywhere.
Starting point is 00:31:57 Computer geeks love opening up their gaming rigs. Car perverts can't wait to build their own Pontiac Firenuts. Commune living cultists and hippies make their own clothing, and so on. We like being able to do stuff in case there's a power outage or emergency, or we get bird boxed or whatever. It's really important to be able to fix stuff or build,
Starting point is 00:32:18 to hunt or fish or garden. It's good that we can rely on others in a society. That's good in this case for $700 computer wheels. But we also like being self-reliant. We should be self-reliant, but self-reliance is also antithetical to everything corporations want. It is the opposite of this current model of capitalism.
Starting point is 00:32:40 There is, of course, one other problem to this whole planned obsolescence grift, because with all these consumers buying and buying and buying it all has to go somewhere. And I'll give you a hint. It's a smelly ever growing somewhere. So let's do some more ads for stuff before coming back and presumably starting a fight club where we all live
Starting point is 00:33:05 in a single dilapidated house maybe? That's where this anti-consumerism stuff is headed, right? With a Pixies concert at the end? That'd be cool. We're certainly gonna form some kind of cult. So stay tuned to find out which kind. Hey there, what are you doing? You watching an ad right now, bro?
Starting point is 00:33:25 That's like two minutes that you could be spending with your hamster. You love your hamster, even though your hamster isn't capable of feeling that love back. It's basically a fluffy brick. But listen, why not save some time and check out the Some More News Patreon? That's patreon.com slash some more news.
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Starting point is 00:34:00 There's even a tier where you can hang out with the Some More News crew through the wonders of video communication technology. So check it out, cut the ads out of your life and support us at patreon.com slash some more news. Your hamster has no soul. Once again, that's patreon.com slash some more news. Maybe it does, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:34:18 I'm not God. And we're back. The answer was a doomsday UFO cult. We are forming a doomsday UFO cult. Please purchase the appropriate footwear. It's shoes without bottoms. Don't need to protect the bottoms of your feet in space. That's just cosmic facts. But now it's time to give you the big unpredictable reveal
Starting point is 00:34:44 of what happens to all of the products that we buy, throw out and buy again. Are you ready for the big reveal of what happens to all the stuff we buy and throw away and buy again over and over and over and over and over again? It's trash, it's garbage, junk, litter, rubbish, waste, refuse, scrap, goo, scrappy goo, scrappy doo, and according to the Mothman in my cryptid
Starting point is 00:35:08 teaches you the word of the day calendar, oddments. Thank you, Mothman. May you continue to expand our vocabularies and terrorize the people of West Virginia in peace. In fact, let's do a Mothman cult instead. That's a great idea actually, sorry. So yeah, we're gonna do a Mothman cult instead.
Starting point is 00:35:24 Please return your footwear. Okay, we produce, I'm doing the episode, sorry. So yeah, we're gonna do a Mothman called instead. Please return your footwear. Okay, we produce, I'm doing the episode now. We're back, we're back in it. We produce 50 million tons of electronic waste each year. And greenhouse gas emissions from e-waste have increased 53% from 2014 to 2020. E-waste isn't just the fastest growing waste contributor globally,
Starting point is 00:35:43 but only 17% of it is properly collected. The majority of this waste can contain mercury, lead, and other items that are toxic to humans if it's absorbed into the land and groundwater. But good news, if Americans raise up too much of a fuss, it can always be shipped to poorer countries. Problem solved. Problem poorly solved.
Starting point is 00:36:07 The 80,000 people that live near the Agbogblashi dump in Ghana are subjected to conditions that saw a meteoric rise in skin ailments and chronic respiratory diseases due to the particulates in the air from the dump and also having their food compromised due to their cattle grazing on soil that is contaminated with e-waste chemicals.
Starting point is 00:36:26 These issues aren't just in Agbogblashi, but in other poorer areas of Africa too. Oh, and Asia. Since there are no legal limits to how much e-waste can be exported to Africa or Asia, these companies just do that. It's a toxic relationship. Not the time, monkey! Er, whatever, it's fine. So why aren't we recycling it?
Starting point is 00:36:48 Same reason we don't recycle anything. Tech companies make it really hard for their products to be dismantled for parts to be sorted and recycled. I mean, it apparently takes a 79 pound toolkit to just remove an iPhone battery. So taking these items apart in general requires some time and effort. Electronic recycling company Total Reclaim is the largest electronics recycler in the northwestern United States,
Starting point is 00:37:10 and they still struggle with the task. Between 2010 and 2015, Total Reclaim had 170 employees go through 40 million pounds of e-waste to get at lithium-ion batteries and reusable materials, but just dumped the rest of it in Hong Kong in spite of promising vendors that they wouldn't export their mercury loaded trash overseas. Also, why didn't they make their logo
Starting point is 00:37:34 look like the Total Recall logo? That's an easy win. What the fuck? Even when e-waste is recycled, there are still the issues of finding safe ways to dispose of unusable materials containing cadmium, which has been linked to skeletal deformities in animals, lead, which can poison soil and groundwater,
Starting point is 00:37:53 and mercury, which can damage a person's organs when they're exposed. Combined, they make a single toxic Avenger, but separate, just a bunch of sick people. Also combined, just a bunch of sick people. Also combined, just a bunch of sick people. So while there is an opportunity to create a circular economy with the metals found in e-waste to be used in future products,
Starting point is 00:38:13 it still can't keep up with how often we dispose of our products due to this whole planned obsolescence dilly. Whether it's the companies kneecapping their products so you need to throw them out more frequently, or the e-waste companies receiving these broken products and looking for space to hold them, it's actively poisoning people for profit. And it's not just from e-waste.
Starting point is 00:38:34 Let's not forget the other stuff we throw out, especially fast fashion. All in all, pollution is of course an entirely different beast with a lot of different causes to look at. But when climate change is such a growing threat and one of the most obvious things we can do is look for sustainable practices,
Starting point is 00:38:52 it's pretty fucking breathtaking how these companies are actively working against sustainability in order to make some extra money. And the thing of it all is, when you really explore the root of this problem, you inevitably have to conclude that these companies aren't necessarily doing it because they want to be doing it.
Starting point is 00:39:10 In fact, you could argue that in the current system we have, they don't have another option. And this is where we travel into the dark heart of the matter, the insidious underworkings implanted into the very fabric of our society. Whatever your food preference or tastes, Instant Pot can make family meals happen
Starting point is 00:39:29 with the simple push of a button. Absolutely chilling stuff. Also, we should probably explain, that was an ad for the Instant Pot, or Insta Pot if you're nasty. If you own one, you probably love it. It appeared on the market in 2010 with great reviews and decent sales,
Starting point is 00:39:45 but really exploded in popularity during the pandemic in 2020, when people were stuck at home and had the time and energy to actually cook and exist like a human. Hey, we did a video about that. Media websites were riddled with articles and recipes specifically centered around Instapot.
Starting point is 00:40:01 You could even make dog food in it, or according to this article, decontaminate your N95 COVID mask. It garnered a consumer positive reputation as a sturdy, reliable, quality-made product. And now its parent company is filing for bankruptcy. Record scratch, spit take, reverse jizz. What? Why would such a good and reliable product go broke?
Starting point is 00:40:26 Because it was too well-made. Seriously, according to market research, sales for Instapot and multi-cookers as a whole have gone down since Instapot's peak of popularity in 2020 with the latest numbers showing multi-cooker sales going down 20% from April 2022 to, 2023. Not because people lost interest, they just already owned one. They made a good thing, people bought that thing,
Starting point is 00:40:53 and now they don't need to buy it anymore. And so this company was effectively punished for not designing a product that would fall apart in a few years. I'm not sure if you noticed this, but all the other companies we mentioned, Apple, John Deere, Tesla, fast fashion clothing companies, they're all still in business.
Starting point is 00:41:12 And in fact, very successful because that's how the system was designed. Our capitalist system demands constant growth over and over again to keep business going and to appease shareholders. So it's better for companies to make inferior products so that they have somewhere to grow from later, but not too much too soon.
Starting point is 00:41:32 Endless growth, baby, yeah! And you can see it everywhere. It's why we see endless movie sequels, reboots, remakes, and franchise tie-in TV shows that are lower in quality and rush through production year after year. It's why fast food chains keep introducing new food items, then taking them away and then bringing them back. It's why video games put out DLC and pre-order editions.
Starting point is 00:41:54 It's why there's a new Call of Duty every damn year. It's why companies lay off giant swaths of workers, either due to new growth initiatives or because they fear losing growth in an upcoming recession. There comes a point where everything has a consumer limit but our current capitalist system won't allow that. And because of that, consumers end up paying for it
Starting point is 00:42:15 over and over and over again and our garbage grows and grows. Buy and grow and buy and grow and buy and grow. Yeah, sorry. It's late stage capitalism again. Ah, we'll get you one of these days. These episodes are like murder mysteries where one of the characters is Jason Voorhees.
Starting point is 00:42:34 Oh, what could it be? And so there's a much larger conversation to be had here where planned obsolescence is just a symptom of a larger problem. But in terms of this specific issue, there is at least steady momentum in developing more and more right to repair laws throughout the world. Remember when I mentioned France's anti-waste law earlier?
Starting point is 00:42:54 Well, that helped spark a movement toward the entire EU pushing for right to repair laws to reduce waste, including initiatives for companies to offer repairs for their products for 10 years, making all smartphone batteries easily replaceable by consumers by 2027, and a single universal charger for all mobile devices by 2024,
Starting point is 00:43:15 so you don't have to buy another adapter or cable or dongle to add to your USB cable bird nest that you have in that one drawer. You know the one. I think the ghost owls sleep in that. Anyway, that's who to thank for the new iPhone 15, which is 8% lighter than the previous one. Oh boy, so different.
Starting point is 00:43:36 That's who to thank for them reverting back to USB-C. As for here in the States, not so much going on. Regarding John Deere, farmers are celebrating a win after the company agreed to provide access to its diagnostic tools, manuals, product service demos, training, and seminars to farmers. But this gesture isn't legally binding, and John Deere agreed to share these things
Starting point is 00:44:00 provided that the American Farm Bureau Federation doesn't support any right to repair legislation on a federal or state level. So that's pretty much it for America. While even Canada is making progress, not enough people here seem to care enough, which is weird because this isn't a divisive thing. In fact, it's one of the few bipartisan issues we have left.
Starting point is 00:44:24 Red or blue, 84% of Americans support right to repair. Because again, this affects both roughneck, hardworking types like a Nick Offerman character and left-leaning hippies that wanna save the planet like a Nick Offerman character. On a state and federal level, several initiatives for right to repair laws have been introduced by representatives on the right and the level, several initiatives for right to repair laws have been introduced by
Starting point is 00:44:45 representatives on the right and the left, especially for farm equipment, automobiles, and electronics. Earlier this year, a Republican-led Democrat-supported Right to Equitable and Professional Auto Industry Repair Act, or the Repair Act, was introduced to Congress. Hell, even the unabashedly conservative National Review and the elitist liberal Huffington Post both support this type of legislation. It's a popular movement that any politician can glom onto to get support regardless of party affiliation. However, while there is bipartisan support, that doesn't mean there aren't any bad actors or lazy ones. In 2021, Joe Biden was praised for putting out an executive order for the FTC to crack down on companies imposing restrictions
Starting point is 00:45:30 on independent repair shops and DIY repairs. Then in 2023, he said, oh, except cars though, because they could be hacked. Joe Biden, hacking expert. But when I say that this is a bipartisan issue that not enough people care about, the truth is that this is something that not enough people on the left care about.
Starting point is 00:45:52 It's not because the left or liberals are a bunch of rich elitists who live in a big city, but rather, oh, it's kind of that actually. Right to repair laws are primarily seen as a rural concern, and in fact are one of the big ways that right-wing farmland types are furious with corporations. And if you're a pinko lefty soy fucker, you might want to see that as an opportunity. After all, as I already mentioned, this show often points to capitalism as a heavily flawed system in need of reform, and for moderate or right-leaning people,
Starting point is 00:46:25 this is one of the most visible examples of that flawed system. So we should talk about it more. If only because it's an actual reasonable olive branch, we can extend to right-leaning folks that doesn't involve like throwing trans people under the bus. It's a way to meet in the middle
Starting point is 00:46:42 without compromising anything, without betraying or ignoring our marginalized brothers and sisters. And it's a universally accessible entry point to a larger conversation that needs to be had, whether it's for the environment or self-reliance or just the money of it all. Everyone wants this to change.
Starting point is 00:47:01 And so maybe we should open it up, dick around inside and fix it, you know? And by opening it up and fixing it, we'll see all the guts and learn what the larger problem is like a tractor or a human body, which reminds me actually, why can't we perform surgery on ourselves either? All right, that is just one more way this capitalist healthcare doctor system is,
Starting point is 00:47:25 I'm sorry, wait, I'm being told that I've gone a step too far. Okay, okay, dialing it back, dialing it back. I'll save it for the cult. So, you know, keep an eye out for when my cult drops, although full disclosure, there will be problems with it. So I'll have to start another cult a few months later. No refunds, just buy into the new cult.
Starting point is 00:48:01 Shoddyism. It's when you giving me the money. What's up fuckos? How you doing fuckos? Thanks for watching the video. Make sure to like it if you can and if you're not upset that I called you fuckos. Also, subscribe to the channel if you haven't yet.
Starting point is 00:48:24 We really appreciate it. And if you do, you're not one of the fuckos. You know what? No one's a fucko. Hey everybody. Thanks so much for watching friends. Like and subscribe. And check out our podcast. It's called Even More News.
Starting point is 00:48:38 And you can listen to this show as a podcast if you want. It's called Some More News. It's where the podcasts are downloaded and heard. It's on the websites. Speaking of websites, check out our patreon.com slash some more news where you can get early episodes, ad-free stuff. You can
Starting point is 00:48:53 get secret shoddyism. That's too loud. It's okay for the end tag. Something about shoddyism. I got distracted, so I don't remember what bit we were really doing. But make sure to check out our Patreon. And we also have merch.
Starting point is 00:49:11 We got stuff on merch. Wormbo's on it. We've got other phrases and things on it. The Wormcomer character from like five years ago is on a shirt. And maybe we'll have some shoddyism stuff. All praise Glabagool, the patron saint of shoddyism. Yeah?
Starting point is 00:49:37 Yeah. Yeah? Yeah. Hi folks, if you're listening to my voice right now, that means you're into learning new things. Like, for example, how to build a tiny house for at least 12 pet toads. You're not content to let the world's critical insights pass you by. Like, for example, the fact that toads need way, way, way more space than you would think.
Starting point is 00:50:02 Yes, that's right. And I think that an inquisitive person such as yourself should definitely check out the Jordan Harbinger Show, which features in-depth interviews with some of the world's most fascinating minds like Bill Nye, Terry Crews, and Annie Duke. They've also got Feedback Friday episodes to respond to listener questions
Starting point is 00:50:21 about everything from asking for a raise at work to helping a family member escape a cult. A toad cult? Who's to say? Anyway, the Jordan Harbinger Show is a great compliment to this podcast. Here you might hear the latest news about America's toxic food system. On the Jordan Harbinger Show, you can listen to a Skeptical Sunday segment about why some foods that are available in the U.S. are banned in other parts of the world. Whether Jordan is conducting an interview or giving advice to a listener, you'll find something useful that you can apply to your own life in every single episode of the Jordan Harbinger Show. That could mean learning how to ask advice the right way, or it could just be discovering a slight mindset tweak that changes how you see the world.
Starting point is 00:51:03 could just be discovering a slight mindset tweak that changes how you see the world. Search for the Jordan Harbinger Show. That's H-A-R-B as in boy, I-N as in Nancy, G-E-R as in really got to read the Wikipedia page on toads through to the end next time. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Good day. Have you ever heard that story that Napoleon used the Egyptian Sphinx for target practice and shot its nose off? Or maybe you've heard that a French astrologer named Nostradamus correctly predicted nearly 500 years of human history. Or maybe someone told you that the legendary blues guitarist Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads in
Starting point is 00:51:55 Mississippi. These stories are what I like to call historical myths. Great little tales that may or may not have any basis in historical fact. On Our Fake History, we explore these historical myths and try to determine what's fact, what's fiction, and what is such a good story it simply must be told. If you dig stories about death-obsessed emperors, lost civilizations, desperate sieges, voodoo black magic, and famous historical figures you thought you knew, then Our Fake History might just be your new favorite podcast. If you dig it, then subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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