red wrote:but.. if green and blacks is fair trade.. then buying green and blacks is still an ok thing to do. The fact it is owned by a larger company that makes other stuff makes what difference? if that larger company is doing something bad itself.. then I get the point.. but if you want them to change, if the only argument is that they are big could make a difference, then lobby them, vote with your purse.. only buy fair trade etc. why would it have been ok to buy G&Bs when they were separate?
if you go down the 'by connection' route.. then it is dangerous ground.. I mean,I could stop buying chocolate.. but the co-op still sell it.. if i buy something else from the co-op am i implicated still?
if the whole world only bought fair trade.. then the likes of cadbury would have to change their actions.. surely?
I am not totally convinced it is the right thing to do to stop buying products from these poorer countries all of a sudden.. perhaps more appropriate to continue buying, but buy fair trade.. or other groups that ensure workers are treated fairly.
That is one side of the argument....the other is that by buying a hugely commercially important fairtrade brand Cadburys are having their cake and eating it. And as they own the brand which has the lions share of fair trade (and organic) sales they have no motivation whatsoever to do anything about their slavery chocolate. By buying G&Bs a consumer is directly giving money to Cadburys who, although they are the biggest confectioner in the world, do nothing about the forced child labour employed on a vast scale in the cocoa industry. Buying G&Bs will not give them motivation to change that, if fairtrade consumers move away from G&Bs because of it´s ties to Cadburys, it does.
Your slippery slope argument has some merit, in an ideal world we shouldn´t buy anything from anyone, who has anything to do with exploitative practices. That would be my goal. But I appreciate that this is not as easy for some people to achieve as it is others, so you have to do what you can. Afterall, this discussion is about chocolate, a non-vital (not very health enhancing!) luxury item.....how much complicity in bonded labour is tolerable for something so trivial? I would argue not one jot.
I understand you like chocolate, who doesn´t, I understand you like G&B´s chocolate (me too! - except the cherry and dark choc which gives me headaches!). I understand that ethical decisions are easier to make the less they affect our "quality" of life, so giving up chocolate might be harder than say buying only recycled loo roll.
This is why I love ish - ordinary conversations turn into thought provoking debate. The last time I really got into one of these, I gave up loo roll. I think the only conclusion I can come to with this one is the personal decision to give up buying chocolate......lets see how long I last!