A lot of manufacturing is still actually done in the EU, unlike the USA. I can buy all basics for example (clothes, food, kitchenware, cleaning supplies, shoes, etc) in Finland also made in Finland.
You could definitely buy a lot European, though I know from my line of work (sustainability consultant for (mostly retail) companies), that a lot of supply chains run to China.
My state already engages in brutal necessary resource extraction from our neighbors, while selling their own resources back to them for much more than we pay or “invest,” domestically and abroad, like the rest of the global West. Just because some residents get more where they reside doesn’t mean those states aren’t directly and indirectly engaged in the same practices.
As I asked in the other thread, also: who pays the price for this quality of life?
Depending where you shop, no one really.
A lot of manufacturing is still actually done in the EU, unlike the USA. I can buy all basics for example (clothes, food, kitchenware, cleaning supplies, shoes, etc) in Finland also made in Finland.
You could definitely buy a lot European, though I know from my line of work (sustainability consultant for (mostly retail) companies), that a lot of supply chains run to China.
The raw materials? The damage to the body from working those jobs? I’m sorry it’s just not realistic.
Our own Trump, Musk etc.
We don’t have them (yet).
Our global South and Asian neighbors? Migrant workers? Our impoverished working class?
Jealous 😛😊? You shouldn’t be, copy us instead.
My state already engages in brutal necessary resource extraction from our neighbors, while selling their own resources back to them for much more than we pay or “invest,” domestically and abroad, like the rest of the global West. Just because some residents get more where they reside doesn’t mean those states aren’t directly and indirectly engaged in the same practices.