Wouldn’t it be swell if the studios and networks felt the same way about their own runaway production? Apple‘s chief Tim Cook took on his Bad Apple critics in interviews this week — one airing tonight on Rock Center With Brian Williams (see the video below)
and the other with Bloomberg Businessweek. Now Cook is claiming a line of Apple’s Mac computers will be manufactured in the U.S. in 2013. Certainly the Cupertino company has met with terrible press recently on at least two fronts — those Chinese worker walkouts over allegations of oppressive Foxconn working conditions on the new iPhone 5, and The New York Times exposé about Apple using creative accounting and legal loopholes to deprive U.S. and California government coffers of billions in badly needed corporate tax dollars while the fiscal cliff looms. When Williams asked Cook why Apple isn’t a made-in-America company, Cook mentally stripped the iPhone 5 and pointed out how much of it is actually made in America. ”And we’ve been working for years on doing more and more in the United States. Next year, we will do one of our existing Mac lines in the United States… Honestly, it’s not so much about price, it’s about the skills, et cetera. Over time, there are skills that are associated with manufacturing that have left the U.S. Not necessarily people, but the education system stopped producing them.” Cook reiterated his plans to hire U.S. manufacturing partners for domestically made Macs in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek. ”We could have quickly maybe done just assembly, but it’s broader because we wanted to do something more substantial. So we’ll literally invest over $100 million… We have a responsibility to create jobs. I don’t think we have a responsibility to create a certain kind of job, but I think we do have a responsibility to create jobs … This is our home market, and I take all of those very seriously—jobs, education, giving back, the environment.”
Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


This is promising… as long as the U.S. border is secured and these proposed new jobs don’t go to immigrants willing to work for peanuts.
So you propose to only hire Native Americans for these supposed new jobs?
What an f’ing liar. The political landscape is changing and they’re just posturing.
Apple makes computer parts in the U.S- this would now include manufacturing again. Not a big deal.There are Mac computers now with assembled in Ca in them. Other people are bringing back Manufacturing to the US. If it wasn’t good for them- they wouldn’t do it
He’s not lying. The material costs and profit margin makes labor costs relatively inconsequential. The main problem for them is throughput, how many devices can they make? That’s largely a function of educated staff availability. That’s what has held them back, and I’m glad to see they are investing locally.
“Over time, there are skills that are associated with manufacturing that have left the U.S. Not necessarily people, but the education system stopped producing them.”
Because of the above statement, I will NEVER buy another Apple product, nor should any American who is sick and tired of our nation’s stagnant economy. I wish I had the money to broadcast Cook’s statement from sea-to-shining-sea, so that all of my countrymen could hear the lies that big men tell. F-You, liar.
Yeah because Apple is the only evil company not paying taxes because of loopholes.
Report some news, not some bias BS.
Of course he is a liar. How the hell is it not for money? Production overseas is CHEAP because of the HORRIBLE environment that America has to grow manufacturing jobs. China has a better environment for that and most people beinifit from it… worldwide. Cheaper apple products. Its fine, but they will and probably know they will loose money for investing in American jobs, as sad as it is.
I hope they loose that money in my direction.
What obvious lies. it’s not about “skills,” it’s about going places where you can pay slave labor wages.
Yes, the remark about US workers not having the skills is incorrect, Tim Cook is lying. US manufacturing workers have the skills, Apple and other manufacturing companies just don’t want to pay them more than $10 or so an hour, and they don’t want to train them if they do lack the skills. You can make $14 an hour as a manager at McDonald’s. There’s a recent article in the NY Times about all this, it’s called Skills Don’t Pay the Bills by Adam Davidson (I don’t think Deadline allows links in the comments).
You say that as a bad thing…. Imagine them paying California’s minimum wages. Everything would be like 500 dollars more expensive.
And this is a deterrent to isheep how exactly? They already buy the most overpriced overhyped products available (short of some mediocre blinged out hip-hop bubbly), if the idrones tell them “this is our shiniest and bestest ithing ever” they will lap it up like zombies.
You do sound a bit obsessed. Reminder: technology should not affect your blood pressure. Calm down.