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Made In China

Made In China

We want new things and we want them now. Our spending habits put brands on perpetual searches for ways to shorten the time between design, manufacturing, and distribution, and China has stepped up with the technology and the supply chains to meet our needs.

Our consumption habits, then, can only be satisfied by purchasing from China.

Today’s show analyzes the ethical and environmental implications associated with excessive reliance on the “World’s Factory”, as China has affectionately been dubbed. What does manufacturing and lax regulations mean for both the people and the planet, and how can we as consumers do better?

 

Here’s a preview:

[2:00] What the Made In China label means (and doesn’t mean) about a product’s quality

[5:00] A deep dive into Chinese manufacturing: 5 reasons why China has become the “world’s factory”

[7:00] What China’s lower compliance standards mean for people

[10:30] The story of Oregon mother Julie Keith, Halloween decorations, and Sun Yi

[14:00] Chinese manufacturing and environmental pollution

[19:15] Practical action steps for listeners that go beyond “just buy local”

 

Further reading:

 

Resources mentioned:

 

 

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Fellow consumers: we want new things and we want them now. Our consumption habits, then, can only be satisfied by purchasing from China. On this episode of the Sustainable Minimalists podcast: the ethical and environmental implications associated with excessive reliance on the "World's Factory" and how we as consumers can do better.

 

 

One thought on “Made In China

  1. Stephanie, I really appreciate your concerns and thank you for educating me on this issue.
    As far as your daughters preschool costume goes, I think I would buy it AND write a note to the teacher and school expressing your concerns about the origins of inexpensive items made in China. And I might suggest in the letter an alternative for the future such as wearing a white shirt with kacki or denim pants/skirts. My guess is that the teacher not only had no idea but would be happy to do something different in the future that did not support these abhorrent practices. And you would be positive and pro active in your approach rather than complaining.

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The Shopping Conspiracy

Women have been targeted for decades with the message that shopping is recreation. It’s a way to relax and unwind, sure, but recreational shopping also contributes to the climate crisis, supports the worst of shareholder capitalism, and creates an awful lot of unnecessary waste.

Enter Buy Now: The Shopping Conspiracy, a hard-hitting new Netflix documentary that forces viewers to look at our waste-related woes. On today’s show producer Flora Bagenal offers a behind-the-scenes look at the documentary’s creation; she also answers your pressing, post-viewing questions.

A note from Stephanie: This episode was recorded before the Los Angeles wildfires. If you're able, please consider donating to one of these organizations

 

Here’s a preview:

[7:00] People find it hard to look at waste, and yet the film makes us look. A behind-the-scenes examination all those hard-hitting images

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[26:00] Corporate execs must show growth, and corporations are on a treadmill of extracting more and more $$ by pushing unnecessary and redundant products. Is not buying an effective act of resistance?

[30:00] Mindset shifts! Quality is a climate issue, and once you press ‘Buy Now’ you become responsible for the item’s end of life

[36:00] Exactly how to Use. Your. Rage!

 

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