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Ethical Shopping Challenge

Writer: IvyIvy

So having decided to take on the ethical shopping challenge for July I eagerly began looking up many of my favorite stores on my handy new app – the Better World Shopper.


Turns out most of them would have done very poorly in school, scoring mostly Ds and Cs.
I can’t say I am completely surprised since in my pursuit of more ethical buying thus far I have focused my attention mainly on shifting to and from certain products and not looked too closely at the stores where I bought them.

Now that I am looking at the stores it is not a pretty picture.


This app, which is of course just a starting point in understanding, uses 20 years of data culled from public and private sources to create the grades which take in account a company’s overall social and environmental responsibility.
And my stores just plain suck at it.
The commitment for July is to only shop at places with a grade of B or higher.
Unfortunately for me not a lot of stores I know, not a lot of stores near me, not a lot of stores I can even recognize earned that grade.
So what does that mean?

I think it means for me July will be different in two ways.


One I probably will be buying less stuff.
I won’t be going on Amazon (which unsurprisingly gets a D) to order a cute toy for my kids for no reason, I won’t be zipping to Target (D+) to grab some extra cups for a party or to Kohls (D-) for new socks because mine have holes.
These purchases would have been easy and relatively inexpensive before.
Maybe not always necessary (except the socks!).
So maybe I will live a little simpler.
Which is good.
I can always use a reminder of how easily and impulsively I spend and being committed to ethical buying will certainly accomplish that because it is not easy and can rarely be accomplished on impulse.
The second change will be learning. Because I probably cannot go a month without buying anything at all I will have to learn more about what stores support the values of human dignity and environmental sustainability that I believe in.
Maybe I could, if I really tried and got headphones to block out my kids, go a month without buying any nonfood items, but I think missing this second piece of the puzzle would be a shame.

I want to learn more about where to go to vote with my dollar.


indicates that shallow or cursory knowledge is not enough for lasting or impactful change so the more I learn, the more we learn, the more it will affect all areas of our consumer lives, the more we can be effective advocates and the more the world can shift from broken to whole.
So maybe I will buy a toy for my kids this month.
Maybe I’ll try and find a toy store near me that
… maybe we’ll scout out some consignment shops and second hand stores that specialize in things that I used to get at my D and C stores.
In any case come August I will be a more informed ethical consumer.

A month of ethical consuming is not everything, but it is something.


It can be a start, a next step on a journey started long ago, a resumption of a cause put down for a time or a simple extension of a life already being lived.
Whatever it is – will you sign the pledge?

Some helpful links -



http://theartofsimple.net/shopping/ - ethical shopping guide with links

 
 
 

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