Am I also underestimating the amount of work it takes to engage in ethical builderism? Let’s say that an alien species landed their huge spaceship on Earth and started living openly among us. Maybe in your town there would be a restaurant that refused to employ or serve aliens. If you thought that the restaurant owner was behaving unethically… would it be easier to put together a boycott… or open a restaurant that employed and served aliens as well as humans?
You’re underestimating the amount of work it takes to put a boycott (or a bunch of boycotts all based on the same premise) together.
Am I also underestimating the amount of work it takes to engage in ethical builderism? Let’s say that an alien species landed their huge spaceship on Earth and started living openly among us. Maybe in your town there would be a restaurant that refused to employ or serve aliens. If you thought that the restaurant owner was behaving unethically… would it be easier to put together a boycott… or open a restaurant that employed and served aliens as well as humans?
So what will you do when men with guns come to take you away?
I’m not quite sure what your question has to do with ethical consumerism vs ethical builderism.
My question has to do with this quote of yours upthread: