The consumer blames the company saying,
"If the company does something evil, it's not my action as I'm not directly doing the evil, I'm just buying the product."
while the companies have their own rightful position,
"We're not doing evil, we're simply giving people what they want. If we were doing something evil, do you think anyone would actually support us? The consumers fund the action, we just do our job and build it for them."
Ethically, they both push themselves into a gray area so that nothing gets done and everyone feel comfortable. But our lives are not without consequence, what we choose to do will ultimately effect the lives of other people.
Alot of Christians would probably go off the deep end if someone claimed they were a Christian and had investments in the porn industry. Making money off such a thing seems unpalatable to them. But at the same time, I am of the opinion that a lot of the same people would have no problem buying a product that was created with materials acquired through unspeakable evils in the name of quick profit on an open market gone wrong - just as long as they don't have to hear about it.
Free markets are an excellent means to a better economy and world, but unless we actively take part in the process as consumers, choosing not only which products are cheapest or give us the features we want, but also respect life - then we are also investors in evil. Instead of gaining money directly (which many would criticize) we side-step the issue by simply "saving money" or "getting more bang for the buck" (which many would applaud). In either case however, whether you're directly buying shares, or buying stuff, you're making an investment in that company and all they stand for, and hence putting your stamp of approval on what they do - so far as you are aware. Whether high society deems it as appropriate should hardly be important, it's whether you deem it as appropriate.
It's important to remember that any truly free economy is an anarchy, governed simply by what people are willing to buy and sell. As we are aware, the anarchy is good in that we don't have a government owned economy like in communism - we are free to create, buy and sell as we please in a truly free economy (OK, so maybe we live in only a PARTIALLY free economy). But it also has a weakness, if others choose to take advantage of other people to get ahead in a free economy, and no one does anything about it. They will generally get away with it.
You can side-step it all you want. I'm not asking or expecting people to be the shining symbols of morality, but the consequences of those actions will be the same independent of what light they throw on it. For that matter, you can't say "we can do nothing for we're just a drop in a bucket", because the masses of stock holders that own these companies are also drops in a bucket. Remember, a share-holder owns a piece of the company, but shares none of responsibility for it's actions.
So if our choices are good, then it will be good, if they will be evil, then it will be evil. If the market as a whole is efficient at creating a better world, we will have one, if not, we won't. There is nothing saying that people create an efficient market, as there are plenty of examples of mass stupidity controlling what we buy and sell - so hey, maybe.
We're also used to thinking in terms of "not on my shores"; but economically, such systems are winning a place on the market for a reason. Slavery, murder and forced labor are cheap easy ways to make money. What could be easier then aiming a gun at a group of people and tell them to collect money for you or die? If such systems are economically favorable and people are willing to support the goods, then as a force it should grow on the open market.
If long hours and nill wages work to produce an economic boon in China and the market agrees to buy the products, then in order to compete, we must give Americans long hours and nill wages. If murder, rape and forced labor produce even cheaper gains and people are willing to buy it, then someone will generally be around willing to do it - both here and abroad. Unless we're all blessed as fortunate sons and daughters, the world we buy into is the world we will live in. And even then, we just put perfume over the muck we've dug ourselves into.
Once again, I'm not saying that I'm the shining star of morality. No one really can be in the current state of affairs, but unless we slow this train down, we'll never stop it and turn it around. And there is no point jumping on the morality train by claiming you're just a consumer - if you're buying the product and you think it will sell good, you may as well invest in the product and make money off it at the same time. But do make sure that what you choose to do fits with "you" and not with what society says is OK or not - because no matter the situation, we're always the ones responsible for our own actions, independent of who or what acts like it takes responsibility.
Peanut wrote:1) Talking about things is nice but action is better. This would be one way to actively and symbolically fight this problem.
2) While we cannot be held morally accountable for purchasing these items when we had no knowledge of what was going on, now that we know and are calling for action it seems to me that we should do something to pay for our ignorance in the past. So selling those nice Nintendo Wii's, Nintendo DS, Laptops, etc and then giving that money to help fight against this would be a great way to at least attempt to "atone" for our ignorance. Besides, material goods are just temporary and the real treasures are stored up in heaven so what's stopping us all?
So, whose with me?
" wrote:Why don't we just all go live in grass huts and do nothing but pray all day every day.
Outside of the pray all day aspect, I've thought of doing that a few times. I've considered just "selling it all" and telling society to jump into it's pit of news-agnst driven despair that it seems to love. My biggest problem arises in that doing so would also take me away from people, so I couldn't ever form relationships or love others. Without love, the rest is meaningless and I wouldn't last a month with no company but my own imagination (been there, tried that, doing my therapy as we speak). The second issue is adaptation, we'd really have to figure out how to live and adapt in a completely new environment, entirely alien to the one we grew up in. But hey, if I ever evolve the concept into something better, mayhaps I have two new crazies who may one day jump on my boat of insanity.
Also, one other thing that will probably be a problem. I'm not rich enough to buy clothing made outside of China, and I don't know how to make my own, so unless either of you do, we're going to have to move to Oregon because that's the only state where public nudity is a protected right under free speech. Winter will be... interesting.