Recognition that cheap prices often depend on rendering invisible the labor, exploitation, and environmental damage hidden in supply chains.
Sor Juana broke silences that powerful institutions wanted to maintain, speaking truth about gender, knowledge, and power. She recognized that invisibility serves injustice. In ethical consumption, the parallel is stark: low prices depend on rendering invisible the workers, their conditions, and the environmental costs of production. Fast fashion, electronics, and agricultural products often seem cheap only because the true costs—paid by underpaid workers, exploited communities, and damaged ecosystems—are hidden from consumers' view. Ethical consumption requires refusing this convenience of invisibility. It means insisting on knowing who made our clothes, what they were paid, and under what conditions they worked. Sor Juana's courage in speaking what was hidden teaches us that ethical consumption requires us to see and name the hidden costs embedded in every cheap product, bringing light to systems that depend on obscurity.
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