Prioritizing systemic change and community movements over the impossible pursuit of perfect individual ethical consumption.
Sor Juana understood that individual intellectual development, while valuable, ultimately serves larger purposes. Similarly, ethical consumption must move beyond individual purity-seeking toward systemic transformation. The culture of ethical consumption often emphasizes personal virtue—buying the right products, maintaining consistent principles—in ways that paradoxically serve corporate interests by narrowing justice to individual consumer choice. This can become moralistic, exhausting, and ultimately ineffective. Sor Juana would argue for collective action: supporting policy change, joining consumer and worker coalitions, amplifying movements led by exploited communities, building alternative systems. Individual consumption choices matter when they're part of coordinated action; they become performative when isolated. You cannot ethically consume your way out of systemic problems. Ethical consumption, in this framework, means being part of movements for living wages, supply chain transparency, Indigenous land rights, and corporate accountability. It means accepting that you cannot personally solve these problems and redirecting perfectionism toward collective power. Your individual choices matter as expressions of solidarity with movements, not as proof of your virtue. This approach, grounded in Sor Juana's insistence on justice, transforms consumption from personal morality into political participation.
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