| August 21, 2017 | MercatorNet |
The sweatshirt that lasts 30 years.
Choosing quality over quantity.
Would you buy a sweatshirt that guaranteed you 30 years of wear? Does such a sweatshirt even exist? You might be surprised to find that it does. The 30 Year Sweatshirt offers a repair service for thirty years after purchase, meaning that come the final days of July 2047 you might want to calendar in any final repairs.
The company is not alone in focusing on traditional, long-lasting well-built goods, rather than disposable, ‘made to break’, throw-away products. Quality, well-made goods are normally somewhat pricier – but they will last. Apparently they are also on the rise.
Zack Sears is a design director at Kickstarter who co-founded his own New York-based watch brand Throne. He recently commented to The Telegraph:
"I think it’s a trend across manufacturing. It’s less about mass scale, you can put a little bit more time and money into niche markets as consumers are becoming more educated."
Throwaway technology and badly built appliances seem to have increased dramatically over the last 50 years. After our washing machine recently broke after only three years, we got told that that was a reasonable period for it to have lastest (it was not a cheap brand!). We have had similiar issues with having multiple kettles replaced. This mentality is in contrast to my father’s early working years when he has often commented that the toaster repair man was the busiest man in his building.
It is surprising that so many companies still have a throw-away design mentality, while seemingly voicing increased concern for the environment. In the end money talks, I guess. Many even also suggest that “overpopulation” in country’s with the lightest environmental footprints is the thing that needs to change. Perhaps also, addicted to materialism as so many of us are, we actually enjoy making a steady stream of purchases.
In an effort to both combat materialism and better protect the environment, maybe we could start with making more thought-out, quality purchasing decisions where we can afford to. It would also be lovely to be able to trust appliances again. The 30 year sweatshirt anyone?
August 21, 2017
On the same-sex marriage front in Australia, the latest news is that one homophobic poster was been sighted in laneway in the Melbourne CBD. “Hurtful filth”, says the leader of the Opposition, Bill Shorten. Several articles have suggested that predictions of an avalanche of hate in the upcoming campaign for the plebiscite on same-sex marriage are coming true.
A reality check, though, suggests that the LGBT elephant is hysterical over a very small mouse. One poster in one laneway does not constitute an avalanche.
However, it does indicate how passionate the debate will be. Australia is the only big country in the Anglosphere which has not legalised same-sex marriage. If the electorate votes No, it will send a signal to the rest of the world that the LGBTQI juggernaut can be stopped. So I would urge all Australians to cast their vote.
Legalisation comes with consequences. One of them could be polygamy. This is derided by supporters of same-sex marriage – but a recently published book by an American academic says that it is the next logical step. Read all about it here.
Michael Cook
Editor
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