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In reply to the discussion: Are you going to change your buying practices because of the Bangladesh building collapse? [View all]Posteritatis
(18,807 posts)38. It's not like the label is a terribly good indicator these days
A shirt whose fabric, buttons, etc were all made under sweatshop conditions can still wind up with a "made in USA" label somewhere on it if the actual stitching together of the pieces was done in the right place. The labels themselves aren't that trustworthy; you have to go digging into the background of each individual company if you want to really see what's up with their practices, especially since plenty of those companies are aware that people are getting skeptical of how they're doing business.
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Are you going to change your buying practices because of the Bangladesh building collapse? [View all]
cali
Apr 2013
OP
Same here. People just have to bear with me wearing the same clothes, washed until threadbare.
freshwest
Apr 2013
#85
Buy less clothing, and anything else I don't need, that is made by masses of people slaving away.
reformist2
Apr 2013
#7
Cali, if you have a little time, it's just a matter of practise and I would also
Ecumenist
May 2013
#95
yeah, who wan't to exert an extra bit of effort to avoid buying things steeped in the death of
cali
Apr 2013
#22
You're saying that reading the label on a garment is too onerous a chore for you?
MADem
Apr 2013
#28
Certainly--but it's a start. The poster expresses an unwillingness to do even that small thing.
MADem
Apr 2013
#45
because people dying for your cheap trolly clothes, is just dandy with you, right honeypoo?
cali
Apr 2013
#21
Made the change many years ago. We buy very few clothes. Mr. Brickbat works in a blue-collar job
Brickbat
Apr 2013
#23
People who consume first-world-made stuff by preference are part of the problem, I think.
Donald Ian Rankin
Apr 2013
#31
Americans don't want to pay the price of giving someone a living wage for ANYTHING
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#50
but the cost of most consumer goods is much higher everywhere else in the civilized world
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#78
"it's exceedingly difficult to know if an article made in a poor country..." all of a sudden you
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#80
so you never buy underwear or socks? interesting the number of people here claiming that.
cali
Apr 2013
#42
exactly- half the food we consume is picked and processed in dangerous and unhealthy conditions!
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#83
A billboard picture of burning girls jumping out of windows placed in front of Walmart...
L0oniX
Apr 2013
#39
I think it comes down to whether you care more about the US standard of living or take a global
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#90