This Vending Machine Sold T-Shirts For Only 2 Euros, But Nobody Wanted To Buy Them
A non-profit named Fashion Revolution has created a wonderful social experiment that has challenged people to reconsider how they shop for their clothes. A vending machine they set up in Berlin offers passers-by shirts for only 2 Euro (roughly $2.19), but there was an unexpected catch… they first had to watch a video about the exploited sweatshop laborers that make cheap clothes possible.
The video was released on April 24th or Fashion Revolution Day. This day commemorates the collapse of the Rana Plaza in Bangladesh in 2013, which killed more than 1,000 garment workers who had been making clothing for American brands in an unsafe work environment. The workers at such factories are often underage, and most are also underpaid and overworked since the labor laws there are practically non-existent. Fashion Revolution wants to encourage people to start asking questions about the morality of their clothes, like where they were made and under what conditions they were made.
More info: fashionrevolution.org | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram (h/t: aplus)
This vending machine in Berlin offered to sell t-shirts for only 2 Euros
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Seems like a bargain, right?
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However, nobody was buying them…
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ADVERTISEMENTThe machine showed who was behind the cheap clothing we buy:
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Often-underage workers work as many as 16 hours a day…
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…for as little as 13 cents an hour
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vending-machine-social-experiment-2-euro-t-shirt-fashion-revolution-7
ADVERTISEMENTDo you still want to buy this 2 EUR t-shirt?
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Of course, most people decided to donate to their cause instead of going through with the purchase
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Here’s the full video:
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There is a beast with heart of cold stone that dashes like lightning, shreds flesh from bone. // Bewitched by this beast, I fell to my knees. My mouth babbled madness and mumbled soft pleas. // I stared down the ravenous, gnashing dark maw of a cute cuddly kitten with yarn in its paw
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Dovas
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There is a beast with heart of cold stone that dashes like lightning, shreds flesh from bone. // Bewitched by this beast, I fell to my knees. My mouth babbled madness and mumbled soft pleas. // I stared down the ravenous, gnashing dark maw of a cute cuddly kitten with yarn in its paw
same poor employers, just the company earn more money for them
Load More Replies...That's the thing, buying more expensive clothing IN NO WAY guarantees against bad labor practices.
Your €50 costs peanuts to make. They company you buy it off exploits you and the workers for easy profit. Only the company wins.
Right? Shoes aren't worth $100+ per pair. They cost less than $2 to make, probably way less. They charge as much as they think can.
Probably the same people. Isn't it sad? Whe pay for brands and rarely for fabric quality.
So when no one buys the 2 euro shirts there isn't a need for poor Nanisha to work in a sweat shop so she loses her 0.13$ a day job & starves
But if all people started to care about what they buy then companies would have to come up with a more ethical strategy.
Load More Replies...The problem reside in goverments that allow this kind of underemployment. Clothing companies do like any other, reduce costs.
Nice thought, but nonsense. People can't afford this any longer.
more efficient strategies for gaining more money... from our 2 euros that we donated Nanisha probably gets only 50c and no job tomorrow ...
No. When big companies stop monopolising countries like this their economies will be more localised and sustainable.
Those people donate the money to those woman so they can better themselves and get better jobs!
This is the 'free market' art work, hey? Somebody's making a lot of money, so all is well in the world.
The problem is, that people still has that argument, and keep buying stuff at primarkt. That is not hoe we are going to change the world!
I had the same thought, but then I realized, the company can pocket a tad bit less to even the wages. They'll still make bank.
you choose to buy it these people still have jobs
Load More Replies...I know I would of these people all probably went to h and m after. Same thing.
then apparently you would be supporting cheap labor and poor conditions...but the non profit already has by purchasing the cheap shirts.
same poor employers, just the company earn more money for them
Load More Replies...That's the thing, buying more expensive clothing IN NO WAY guarantees against bad labor practices.
Your €50 costs peanuts to make. They company you buy it off exploits you and the workers for easy profit. Only the company wins.
Right? Shoes aren't worth $100+ per pair. They cost less than $2 to make, probably way less. They charge as much as they think can.
Probably the same people. Isn't it sad? Whe pay for brands and rarely for fabric quality.
So when no one buys the 2 euro shirts there isn't a need for poor Nanisha to work in a sweat shop so she loses her 0.13$ a day job & starves
But if all people started to care about what they buy then companies would have to come up with a more ethical strategy.
Load More Replies...The problem reside in goverments that allow this kind of underemployment. Clothing companies do like any other, reduce costs.
Nice thought, but nonsense. People can't afford this any longer.
more efficient strategies for gaining more money... from our 2 euros that we donated Nanisha probably gets only 50c and no job tomorrow ...
No. When big companies stop monopolising countries like this their economies will be more localised and sustainable.
Those people donate the money to those woman so they can better themselves and get better jobs!
This is the 'free market' art work, hey? Somebody's making a lot of money, so all is well in the world.
The problem is, that people still has that argument, and keep buying stuff at primarkt. That is not hoe we are going to change the world!
I had the same thought, but then I realized, the company can pocket a tad bit less to even the wages. They'll still make bank.
you choose to buy it these people still have jobs
Load More Replies...I know I would of these people all probably went to h and m after. Same thing.
then apparently you would be supporting cheap labor and poor conditions...but the non profit already has by purchasing the cheap shirts.










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