To quote myself here, there have been some on this thread who have talked about all the reasons why it's not good to buy from stores with bad conditions, which is what I was agreeing with in this quote. I also stated I don't always live by my own principals. I wish I could say I always lived up to my own standards, but I'm not perfect, but I do try to be honest.crabber wrote:Congrats on your adoptions (Did I say that already)!
I agree with that too. But I don't always do it.I try to educate stores, so every once in a while I'll go in to see if they've made any changes, and sometimes I'm just too big of a softy to leave them and I don't stick by my own principals. I rescued two the other day, and one is not doing very well at all. I thought I'd learned my lesson about rescues, but apparently not.
Even though sometimes I buckle at seeing crabs that need rescuing I never buy my supplies, or make big purchases from stores with poor conditions. Competition is the motivator for any kind of business in a capitalist economy. I am well aware of this, and I do reward stores with good conditions at every opportunity. We do need to look at the big picture, absolutely.
I've always loved that Margret Mead quote. I used to have it on my office cube at work. Some of us because of our personalities are born activists, some are accidental activists, which the Mead quote is referring to. In my mind it's talking about the momentum that is gathered by like minded individuals who are all doing what they feel is right, what they feel is their responsibility. I feel like no matter where we all fall in this debate, that this quote still includes all of us.