I think the world can easily manage a radical drop in consumerism. — Tom Storm
But the relationship between consumerism and industrialism (production) is reciprocal: a radical drop in consumption means less production; less production means fewer jobs, fewer incomes, fewer meals, fewer everything, — BC
Minimalism is growing in scope. It's generally secular and tends to eschew consumerism and owning lots of objects. I have been an informal and not very focused minimalist for many years. I am currently working to get rid of my car - I lived without heating and cooling for many years and own few appliances. — Tom Storm
The upshot, as far as I can tell, is that we are totally screwed. — BC
It's all just part of neoliberal capitalism — Judaka
then I believe that I'm correct in saying [u]it's[/u] irrelevant — Judaka
We don't just buy fancy shoes, we buy respect, for status, to present an image, to be attractive, stylish, and so on. — Judaka
I don't think consumer culture is a problem, or that it's causing any of these issues that are being talked about. — Judaka
We're inundated with different products, there's no basis in consumer culture for opposing change — Judaka
I'm not sure "neoliberal" describes capitalism; I see it most often used to describe conservative political policy with respect to regulation, government-sponsored social assistance programs, taxation, unionization and similar matters. I'm 100% anti-neoliberal politics. Capitalism is capitalism whether we're talking about companies making toilet bowels or fast fashion. — BC
Sorry, I'm not quite sure what it's is referring to. — BC
Opposing change or promoting change? — BC
This is something doctors don't talk about much, but after an extended period of taking these drugs, many people find it impossible to discontinue the drugs. That's why drug manufacturers prefer products like antidepressants to antibiotics — BC
China is the best example — Judaka
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