I’m not disagreeing with your take there. I have no policy ideas to offer myself.
My issue is with the agonizingly bad take of “buying breakfast at the cafe down the road is exactly as exploitative as soliciting (possibly) trafficked people for sex in the Phillipines.”
That is true. It is nearly impossible to purchase anything under the current system without someone having been exploited unjustly along the way. That doesn’t mean that all such purchases are equally exploiting or that they all must be seen and treated exactly the same way (which under false equivalency arguments, tends to mean “do nothing at all, status quo is fine”).
I’m not disagreeing with your take there. I have no policy ideas to offer myself.
My issue is with the agonizingly bad take of “buying breakfast at the cafe down the road is exactly as exploitative as soliciting (possibly) trafficked people for sex in the Phillipines.”
Keep in mind that buying breakfast is connected to exploitation as well.
Children as young as eight picked coffee beans on farms supplying Starbucks and Nespresso
That is true. It is nearly impossible to purchase anything under the current system without someone having been exploited unjustly along the way. That doesn’t mean that all such purchases are equally exploiting or that they all must be seen and treated exactly the same way (which under false equivalency arguments, tends to mean “do nothing at all, status quo is fine”).