Shifting ethical consumption focus from personal moral perfection to systemic change through solidarity and collective action.
Sor Juana's greatest power came not from isolated virtue but from her willingness to advocate publicly, to build intellectual community, and to challenge systems collectively. Applied to ethical consumption, this concept rejects the trap of individual moral purity—the impossible standard where you must be a perfect consumer or are complicit. Instead, it emphasizes collective responsibility: joining consumer movements, supporting transparency legislation, demanding corporate accountability, and recognizing that individual choices matter most when linked to systemic change. No individual can perfectly navigate exploitative systems alone; the burden of perfect consumption is designed to silence rather than empower. True ethical consumption happens when consumers organize, when they demand that companies change rather than only changing personal choices, when they work for regulations that make ethical consumption the default rather than the difficult choice. Sor Juana would argue for the power of collective voice over individual virtue, recognizing that justice requires systemic action, solidarity, and sustained pressure for change.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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