GoIrish41
Paterfamilius
- Messages
- 9,929
- Reaction score
- 2,119
But what happens when Dockers switches where they make their clothing? What happens when Dockers runs an ad campaign to point out that Hagger uses yarn made by kids?
Like I said, maybe I don't give people enough credit, but I would imagine that like everything else, this would result in an ad war and would make each consumer check and recheck the label. I doubt most would mentally want to do this.
Again, this would be for every purchase you make.
It may be more likely that it would cause the manufacturers to make decisions instead of the consumers.
All I'm talking about transparency in providing information about the conditions under which products are manufactured, perhaps even transparency mandated by government (I know, big government). Maybe tarriffs placed on goods made in countries that do not comply with a this country's set of conditions. Maybe something like this would mean that "better" prices wouldn't so dramatically lean toward goods produced under horrid conditions and we wouldn't be a party to the poor treatment of people making our products. It could mean that companies who operate observing human dignity are not penalized as they are today. It doesn't have to be consumer by consumer, purchase by purchase decisions. It can be part of the American ethic and conditions can be regulated. At a minimum, this would provide an economic incentive for countries who produce goods consumed by Americans to treat their workers better. And maybe, to avoid the "ad wars" it might become more feasible for them to bring some of the jobs back to this country and make the "made in America" label mean something.
Last edited: