5 Reasons Why Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing
The other day Treehugger.com posted an article corporate fat cats love ethical consumerism, taking issue with the idea that “every time you spend a dollar, you are casting a vote.”
The article drew a lot of praise, but it also evoked a lot of skepticism—including one tweet that exclaimed that “our votes don’t count, where we spend our money does.” 
In a time when a congressional vote can be bought off with large donations of money, nothing is more powerful than the consumer. Treehugger.com breaks down this idea of voting with your money into five principles that make it different from voting:
1. The More Money You Have, The More Votes You’d Get
2. The Consumer Mindset is a Short-term Mindset
3. Regulation Will Not Come About Through Shopping
4. We Can’t Shop Our Way to Less Consumption
5. We Are All Hypocrites

5 Reasons Why Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing

The other day Treehugger.com posted an article corporate fat cats love ethical consumerism, taking issue with the idea that “every time you spend a dollar, you are casting a vote.”

The article drew a lot of praise, but it also evoked a lot of skepticism—including one tweet that exclaimed that “our votes don’t count, where we spend our money does.” 

In a time when a congressional vote can be bought off with large donations of money, nothing is more powerful than the consumer. Treehugger.com breaks down this idea of voting with your money into five principles that make it different from voting:

1. The More Money You Have, The More Votes You’d Get

2. The Consumer Mindset is a Short-term Mindset

3. Regulation Will Not Come About Through Shopping

4. We Can’t Shop Our Way to Less Consumption

5. We Are All Hypocrites

5 Reasons Why Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing
The other day Treehugger.com posted an article corporate fat cats love ethical consumerism, taking issue with the idea that “every time you spend a dollar, you are casting a vote.”
The article drew a lot of praise, but it also evoked a lot of skepticism—including one tweet that exclaimed that “our votes don’t count, where we spend our money does.” 
In a time when a congressional vote can be bought off with large donations of money, nothing is more powerful than the consumer. Treehugger.com breaks down this idea of voting with your money into five principles that make it different from voting:
1. The More Money You Have, The More Votes You’d Get
2. The Consumer Mindset is a Short-term Mindset
3. Regulation Will Not Come About Through Shopping
4. We Can’t Shop Our Way to Less Consumption
5. We Are All Hypocrites

5 Reasons Why Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing

The other day Treehugger.com posted an article corporate fat cats love ethical consumerism, taking issue with the idea that “every time you spend a dollar, you are casting a vote.”

The article drew a lot of praise, but it also evoked a lot of skepticism—including one tweet that exclaimed that “our votes don’t count, where we spend our money does.” 

In a time when a congressional vote can be bought off with large donations of money, nothing is more powerful than the consumer. Treehugger.com breaks down this idea of voting with your money into five principles that make it different from voting:

1. The More Money You Have, The More Votes You’d Get

2. The Consumer Mindset is a Short-term Mindset

3. Regulation Will Not Come About Through Shopping

4. We Can’t Shop Our Way to Less Consumption

5. We Are All Hypocrites

Posted 3 months ago & Filed under consumer, money, vote, politics,

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