Not a poll

Apr. 15th, 2005 03:37 pm
radegund: (blue-pansy)
[personal profile] radegund
Well, I'm back, and slowly catching up (on all fronts). There's been a lot happening in my online world since last I wandered through. Those of you who've been going through hard times recently, I'm thinking of you. Those whose lives are going well, I'm very happy for you.

A passing question on [livejournal.com profile] glitzfrau's journal a few days ago caught my mind. "What do you boycott?" she asked her flatmate. So now I want to know too. An LJ poll would be an annoying string of text boxes, so I'm just asking questions. Answer in a comment, if you're so inclined (I've given some of my answers after each question).

Consumer ethics
[Let "ethics" mean whatever you mean by it; I think of it mainly in ecological and political terms.]

1. What do you absolutely avoid buying (brands, categories of product, etc.)?
Nestle. Nike. Coke. Sad-hen eggs.* Flesh. Produce from Israel (except that a couple of times a year I get the stuff home and realise that I didn't check, in which case I eat it). Tobacco. Fast food.

2. What do you buy reluctantly if a more ethical alternative would be inconvenient to find or wait for?
Free-range eggs if there are no organic ones and I really want an omelette. Non-eco-friendly cleaning/washing products (household and personal) if I'm on holiday and the local shops don't stock the good stuff; otherwise it can wait until I get into town. Non-biodegradable rubbish bags.

3. What do you buy from time to time, guiltily?
Brands from which Nestle benefits (e.g. Buitoni, Perrier, San Pellegrino). Barry's or Lyon's tea (by negotiation with [livejournal.com profile] niallm, we alternate these with fair-trade tea). Organic produce in supermarkets, where they generally package the bejaysus out of it so that you know you're getting the premium article. Non-organic produce in supermarkets (but in the case of bananas I choose fair-trade over organic).

4. What do you aspire to avoid buying if/when you muster the willpower?
Non-fair-trade chocolate (I'm getting there, but hot chocolate in restaurants is my downfall). Standard-issue menstrual blood-soakers** - I hope to try the DivaCup soon, and if I don't like it, to switch to eco-friendly tampons and pads. Plane tickets from non-unionised airlines. Clothes containing fibres derived from petroleum.

5. What battles in this arena do you choose not to fight for the moment?
I drive a car (and feel faintly smug that we've put less than half the average annual mileage on the clock since we've owned it). I fly. I use biodegradable disposable nappies rather than cloth ones, and at the moment I send them to landfill rather than investigating the feasibility of using a wormery to process them (I know they'd completely clog up the compost bin). I use kitchen-roll (but I compost most of it). I eat bananas, drink berry smoothies in winter and otherwise violate the principle of consuming local produce in season. I am very ill-informed about all but the most high-profile issues in ethical consumption.

OK, your turn!

* By "sad-hen" I mean "not free-range or organic" ... um, in case that's not clear.
** The phrase sanitary protection has always seemed to me to carry the vague implication that periods are (a) dirty and (b) perilous. Sod that.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-04-17 09:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jinxremoving.livejournal.com
twinings is owned by wittington investments who get a negative rating for animal testing, factory farming and "other animal rights". i don't know the details. of course, i'm sipping their new cherry & cinnamon tea right now, and it's delish.

i thought of a bunch more things i Just Don't Do: walkers crisps, amazon (the sole exception being a yearly wishlist purchase for the bloke who hosts my website), starbucks, fast food chains ...

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