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Not intended toward anyone, just one of such threads.
I think you should be very careful about blaming the West for all of the Third World's ills, that's a simplistic approach to a massively complex topic.
I also think this is such a knotty subject for the Lounge, and berating or hectoring people about it, no matter how strongly you feel, just comes off badly. Anyone who spends any amount of time around here should know that about problems of sweat shop labour, the complexities of buying or boycotting, and that Lounge members do their best to buy ethically - either through buying vintage , looking at the 'made in' label, or buying from factories that are known to pay a living wage.
It should go without saying that if you are investing in the artisan aspect of jackets, clothes, shoes etc, you should be concerned about how and where they are made.
I should add that in recent years, Scottish churches have gone out their way to issue statements asking people not to boycott Indian or Pakistani products because the potential impact on the workers would be even worse than the conditions they would otherwise face ie unemployment, homelessness.
I think you should be very careful about blaming the West for all of the Third World's ills, that's a simplistic approach to a massively complex topic.
I also think this is such a knotty subject for the Lounge, and berating or hectoring people about it, no matter how strongly you feel, just comes off badly. Anyone who spends any amount of time around here should know that about problems of sweat shop labour, the complexities of buying or boycotting, and that Lounge members do their best to buy ethically - either through buying vintage , looking at the 'made in' label, or buying from factories that are known to pay a living wage.
It should go without saying that if you are investing in the artisan aspect of jackets, clothes, shoes etc, you should be concerned about how and where they are made.
I should add that in recent years, Scottish churches have gone out their way to issue statements asking people not to boycott Indian or Pakistani products because the potential impact on the workers would be even worse than the conditions they would otherwise face ie unemployment, homelessness.
Yeah, let's not forget that jobs are created in those places and that the US alone gives billions in aid to said countries as well.
It gets tiring hearing this sort of blame foisted upon the evil white westerner. It even gets tiring here having to contend with that.
Getting awfully close to the line where TFL will have to close this down - the topic was always lending itself towards a shutdown.
Probably best to stop before the hosts have to escort us out.
what is considered sweatshop?
to me if the owner of the factory making way too much money compared to the wage they pay to the employees in a way it is borderline slavery,
but not if the factory is just a normal business in a foreign land where everyone earning proportional money at the end, even when it is 'nothing'/ 'impossible to live from' when converted back to Euro or USD.
now if big international brands decide to use OEM factories rather than setting up their own, and making tons of profit just by slapping on their brand and maintaining the same price range to keep their image and market segment even though the production cost is now much lower,
do you consider this OEM factory a sweatshop? just because they accept much lower price to produce the same stuff? while they get a normal profit in their own living standard and economy.
just an example in another situation:
a tourist visit a 3rd world tropical island for a vacation, decide to get a massage, and the masseur in the end charges an incredibly cheap fee for his/her effort, the tourist thinks it is impossible/ inhuman to pay such small amount of money to a person who spend 2 hrs working, and way over tipped the masseur, the tourist feel good and generous (and still thinking it is a good bargain way cheaper than in their homeland), the masseur stunned in disbelief, do you think the tourist do the right thing?
I live in a country where there still are kids sometime even in their school uniform begging on the street at some traffic light crossings, in our capital city there are kids who offer their service as third passenger in a car so the car can pass through some roads at peak hours, having a job for them is a blessing so they can afford to save to buy snack/ toys / clothes / new shoes or whatever treat their parents not able to give them like more fortunate children. it is inevitable in a desperate condition.Well noted!
The masseur/ masseuse is not ( I hope) below 15 yo and surely not working in a ( poluting) tannery or (sweat infested) leather tailer shop....I do hope again...
Its not the " job" its the condition about " the job"
Happy to give jobs..but decent and to adults but NOT to kids.
Well said. Sometimes it feels like a, "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation..Another aspect to the ethical shopping conundrum is environmental impact in temrs of airmiles. If I buy locally, there's less transport, less of a carbon footprint, all that. Reminds me of the fur debate I saw once, where it was pointed out that most faux fur is actually a petroleum by product, and so has other implications. Very quickly when you start to think about these things, you reach a point where you just have to try to do your best with what you have, and hope you do some good along the way.