•  novibe   ( @novibe@lemmy.ml ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    5
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    It doesn’t matter if they are “bad” or not bro. The issue is the system. And it’s not a matter of morality. I don’t give a fuck if it’s “evil” or “good”. Even in a perfect capitalist world where all companies were “fair”something, we would still be destroying the planet with climate change and exploiting the labour of people in the third-world.

    And who cares about “perfect”? I only care about meaningful change that helps not destroy the planet. Buying a fairphone is not it.

    The only thing that will help is a fucking revolution. So the BEST thing any of us can do is to radicalise those around us and organize.

    • The only thing that will help is a fucking revolution. So the BEST thing any of us can do is to radicalise those around us and organize.

      First you need to know what kind of a system you’d want. Second, revolution is a big big goal. Small steps.

      I only care about meaningful change that helps not destroy the planet. Buying a fairphone is not it.

      And buying Apple is? Fairphone is trying to do something good. Their entire goal is to try to do good. Apple is just out here making fat stacks with “good” being more stacks. They pretend they’re pro-privacy, pro-climate, pro-whatever, but it’s all bullshit.

      CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

    • I think that is a useless mental model. It doesn’t help you make decisions except those that lead to revolution. The person you’re replying to is trying to point that out. If I want to buy a phone, which should I buy? Your rhetoric says “whichever one will lead to revolution”, which really isn’t helpful.

      •  novibe   ( @novibe@lemmy.ml ) 
        link
        fedilink
        English
        18 months ago

        I don’t think you understood me. What I mean is “which product do I consume under capitalism” is a useless question. No consumption under capitalism will lead to a better world. Buying from fairphone or apple will make 0 difference to what actually matters.

        Revolution is not a state of consumption. And surviving under capitalism won’t make revolution less likely either. So it’s a false dichotomy. Buying apple instead of fairphone won’t make a revolution less likely.