When shopping at the mall most of us make our
decisions on what we by based on how cute it is and how well it fits.
Should we be doing more than basing our decision off of just that?
Although, before now I have been guilty of basing my buying decision on how
something looks, after reading these two readings I believe we should all take
a second look at the garments that we purchase. Are there garments
organic? Was this garment made in a sweatshop or was pesticide used on the
cotton used to make this garment? By asking ourselves these simple questions we
could be helping our environment.
I do believe the fashion industry is guilty of
hurting our environment. The industry does not directly tell you exactly
what to buy or what not to buy. However, the industry does not discourage
people from purchasing items that have negatively affected our environment. For
example, before reading the Fashioning Sustainability article I had no idea how
much energy went in to making jeans much less laundering them on a regular
basis. The fashion industry also keeps styles changing very quickly. This
makes for lots of clothing going to waste. If the fashion industry
encouraged people to recycle their old clothing we would not have to send over
1.2 million tons of clothing to landfills each year. The energy used to
produce and launder our clothing along with the pollution from waste clothing
is a huge factor to global warming which was discussed in the ESMA
article.
I am definitely in full support of the article A
Tale of Two T-Shirts. I think that if we are choosing to buy something that is
harming our environment we should have to pay more for it to help give back to
our environment. Organic items or items that are more sustainable are
usually more expensive anyways. It is not fair that an environmentally
friendly person has to pay more to help the environment when the average person
is paying less and hurting the environment. We only have one earth to
live on and we must not take advantage of it. If raising the price of a
cotton t-shirt can change someone’s mind about buying it then I definitely
think we should take advantage of that.
My challenge to you is this, next time you are shopping don't base your
decision solely off of how cute or stylish the item is. Think about how
and where the product was actually made and if it could have had a poor impact
on our environment.