Requiring visible accountability from companies about labor conditions, sourcing, and environmental practices as a form of consumer-driven justice.
Sor Juana's life embodied the fight for transparency in systems that sought to silence her—she wrote in defense of her right to know and be known. In ethical consumption, justice through transparency means actively demanding that companies disclose their supply chains, labor wages, and environmental footprints. This is not passive consumption but an assertive claim that justice requires visibility. By choosing to support only brands willing to answer questions about their practices, you align with Sor Juana's principle that knowledge is the foundation of justice. This approach recognizes that hidden exploitation enables injustice; transparency creates accountability. Your purchasing decisions become acts of epistemological rebellion, insisting that those who profit from production must reveal their methods and shoulder responsibility for their impacts.
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