Sorry, I know we are not supposed to promote, but I just have to say: SAS make the. best. shoes. period. Mine are more comfy than sneakers. Glad to hear that they are still in business. I bought a bunch from them a few years ago, but my cache is running low. I’ll have to look them up again.
They are still around - I was just shopping last weekend to get spare for mine (all 5+ years old and worn constantly). They’ve even started carrying some that aren’t completely hideous (not, of course, in my size; 12W gets fugly or nothing).
I was the youngest person in the store who was neither an employee nor escorting an elderly parent, however.
Questionable ethics: children. Consider how many natural resources that child will use for his/her life, and the impact on the environment. In all seriousness, I’ve actually read that the best thing you can do for the environment long term is NOT HAVE KIDS (advice we did not take, naturally).
Too late; you’re already going to hell for buying decaf, fair trade or not. Might as well top it off with a laser constructed from blood diamonds and capacitors.
What’s the deal with including chocolate in the thread title?
Right. While the “sheltered workshop” model can certainly be abused, it does have a valuable purpose. In a strict minimum-wage-always-applies system, workers who can’t work fast enough to produce that value to an employer would simply have no chance of ever finding work, since hiring them would cause an immediate and ongoing net loss to the business. The special exemptions to the minimum wage system allow some of these people to make at least some money. Also, since these positions tend to be specifically reserved for people with disabilities, there is less of an incentive for management to fire “odd” people and replace them with their poker buddies like you see in many “regular” work environments.
Seriously, is there a problem with decaf? I (perhaps naively) assumed that they use some chemicals to get the caffeine out of the coffee, which they then sell to companies making cola or NoDoz or whatever. If the caffeine-extraction process is so bad for the environment or workers or whatever, wouldn’t buying a Coca Cola be ethically questionable?
(Well, okay, maybe Coca Cola is ethically questionable for other reasons, too.)