It's lovely to know you're buying a garment designed and made with care, and
without sweatshop labour.
Not exact matches
@Readin, On consideration, slavery is still on the political spectrum, albeit on a different axis of theft (of human resources), where the extreme would be slavery on one end, moving over to various forms of cruel peonage, then to
sweatshops, then to low pay dead end jobs with wage theft, the same
without wage theft, the same with benefits, and so on up, the opposite side being no theft at all so that a given laborer is paid their fair share.
Similarly, the U.S. enjoys the fruits of cheap labor with very little regulations
without having to work in
sweatshops themselves, and the trade between the two is generally seen as a net benefit for both.
Fashioning themselves the «United Students Against
Sweatshops» (it's okay to laugh at that), these kids have taken TFA to task for being «the man» — and for turning teaching into
sweatshop - like work by allowing some selected recruits to enter the classroom
without slogging through the entirety of traditional teacher prep.
Without today's increasingly active craft - oriented community, products that we take for granted, such as numerous utilitarian objects built from handmade tools, rather than via machine or
sweatshop, would have disappeared.
Certified fair trade and
sweatshop - free, and made from cotton
without pesticides, bleaches, or fertilizers, these boxer briefs are a truly ethical choice.