Cambridge Edition

Modern horror story

- NARELLE HENSON

Opinion: Dairy, it turns out, is not nearly as dirty as the middle-class women.

I mean that in a purely environmen­tal and ethical sense, by the way. I know it seems shocking, but when you crunch the numbers, test the rivers, and start interviewi­ng people, it is difficult to avoid. All 60 kilograms of me does more harm to the environmen­t, and other humans, than a 450kg cow. I think the supermarke­ts know the secret dangers of middle-class women, and it is why they are phasing out plastic bags (hallelujah). It turns out people like me were going on turtle killing-sprees with those bags. But I discovered the true depth of the middle-class horror story when I became an accidental member of a sort-of protest movement. One moment I was having a play date with another mumand child, the next I was elbow-deep in Tearfund’s Ethical Fashion Guide.

What it all boils down to is that the textile industry is the second biggest polluter on the planet, according to Forbes. It’s right up there with petrochemi­cals, mining, recycling lead batteries and other toxic, dangerous things. You have to keep reading the list to eventually get to agricultur­e.

That means you and I are better off buying another latte than that lingerie if the environmen­t is what we are worried about. But it gets worse. Never, ever has a cow trapped another cow in a factory the light of day forgot and forced her to work like a slave. But we have done that with our own sort. We women, whom Harvard claims make most of the purchasing decisions in a home, have turned a blind eye when horrid human beings have stolen vital documents from vulnerable people and so kept them contained like animals in airless, artless rooms to stitch up a skirt. Or a blouse. All the while, of course, they’re docking pay for any breaks until the debt incurred outweighs the money earned for working. Cows don’t do that sort of thing. How they keep coming out of all this looking relatively clean, while we seem soiled, is a mystery to me. It ought to be the other way around. Dairy gets called dirty, middle-class women don’t (for environmen­tal and ethical reasons anyway). But the slogans don’t tell the full story. The simple fact is that average women are literally littering the world with waste every time we whip out our wallets in a clothing store. Well, not quite every clothing store. That’s what the Ethical Fashion Guide is about. It turns out some stores won’t buy things unless the people involved in production are cared for, as well as the places things are made in.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand