455: J. B. MacKinnon, part 2: What happens when you pay for quality?
Our world values cheap and disposable—in food and doof packaging, furniture, cars, and near the top of the list, clothes, especially fast fashion. The world is paying for it in the sense of overfilled landfills, plastic disrupting endocrine systems of animals including us, oil wells everywhere, garbage patches in the ocean, and so on.
I see us paying the price. We’re always craving. Stuff always breaks. We feel compelled to buy new phones when the old ones should have kept working. We’re obese from snacking. We’re twisted up inside polluting while trying to convince ourselves we’re not.
J. B. MacKinnon’s new book The Day the World Stops Shopping examines this part of our culture and for this podcast he committed to go against that trend by buying a quality pair of jeans from a place he knew the sourcing, labor practices, and everything else, the opposite of fast fashion. He also paid significantly more for them.
Was the premium worth it? Should you do the same? What can we learn from his experience?
We talk about these questions and he experience from many perspectives.