Being against something doesn't mean that we act consequently if it belongs to our benefit or convenience. (including me) That's what I am recognising since 40 years (I'm 62). It happens every day in our life. Buying cheap shirts, knowing it's made from children, buying chocolate, knowing the cacao beens are harvested from children slaves, buying IPhones and EVs, knowing the battery components are diggered out under unhuman conditions, buying cheap gas, knowing about the wars with hundreds of thousands of so called colleteral damages and so on and so on. Living in a "developed country" always means you are living on others costs. The way to reduce it, is to reduce your way of life. Being conscious and decide how far you wanna go for it. It's always your decision allone.

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I do not live in a developed country, but I felt everything you said. As developing countries, we have a responsibility as well to help create a world we want to be part of.