Posted on 11/23/2016 2:19:40 PM PST by nickcarraway
Vegan wallets? I get a lot of e-mail at work mostly requests for coverage of an event or someone wanting to be mentioned in my Standing O column, or spam (not the canned variety).
The other day, I received one that touted quality vegan wallets yes, quality vegan wallets. I queried this one too. What exactly does that mean?
Is the wallet made out of plastic or a similar man-made material?
Did the maker of the wallet not eat meat?
Or was the material ethically taken from a free-range cow that wanted to give of itself for the sake of fashion?
I jest it is basically made from pleather, (a fancy name for vinyl) or natural fibers such as cotton or wool, (but only if the sheep are consenting).
I have nothing against vegans some of my family and best friends are, and I sometimes go vegan for days at a time but that is not what caught my attention. It was the price: $110 for one model!
Sorry but I have to do this. What?
Were talking about $110 for a wallet composed of man-made or ethically gathered material that is 56 inches long and about 34 inches wide, with a zipper or two and a few compartments. You have got to be out of your mind!
You can go to any Dollar Tree store and pick one up made of the finest quality plastic or canvas for about $5 or $6 that will do the job just as well.
Why so expensive? And do the ethically correct folks know that man-made materials such as pleather destroy the environment with the chemicals used and the process (oil, lots of oil)? Or that sheep are not always cooperative about getting hair cuts? Sure if you give them a latte and have Paul Mitchell take a little off the bottom, shag it up a bit, and give them a nice fade, they might sit still for a bit, but generally a really big woolly ram aint gonna like the treatment.
Ill admit many years ago, when I had a whole lot of disposable income (no kids, two salaries), I indulged in the latest fashion trends namely Anne Klein purses made out of impregnated leather (a fancy name for plastic in the 80s). I had one in every color, and paid upwards of $100 each. By the way, I still have two of them today. Those bags had at least leather trim we lived in the age of plastic cards, big salaries, and no respect for the environment at all. Besides those bags lasted a whole lot longer then my Faded Glory jeans.
But $110 for a wallet?
Not for Nuthin, I am all for the ethical treatment of animals, plants, and the environment, but lets be real here, the materials used are readily available, not expensive, and certainly not worth the cost. In fact, all these designers need to tone down their prices, because as it stands right now, with the way our economy is going, the only people that can afford those prices are in the very exclusive 1 percent circle and we all know, that circle is getting smaller every day.
Dollar Tree here I come.
As a staunch liberal she should buy that vegan wallet to support the cause and be a good little earth saver.
But ... but ... but, Joanna.
How they gonna get the money they must have to “Save the ERF”?
Saw on tv some airhead prattling about selling shoes made by hand in some turd world country. Uh, no, not hand made but dollar store plastic flip flops sent to some foreign country so poor women can glue on plastic flowers and ribbon. US cost $165.
Douglas Adams of “Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy” was ahead of his time.
Hitchhiker’s Guide (Original) Talking Beef
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=niOm01dEzzI
The cows are going to die of something or other.
Vinyl is an oil product.
That’s bad, right?
I’m so confused...
http://boyslife.org/hobbies-projects/projects/35660/make-a-duct-tape-wallet/
Free, if you can borrow your neighbors 100 MPH tape, or approved equal.
I don’t buy products made from animals where I can avoid it. That said, I think the whole vegan shoes, wallets, purses, etc. just allows vendors to over price their stuff when they sell to silly vegans who don’t look beyond their noses.
I can get plenty of man-made fabric wallets, shoes, and clothes at stores like Walmart, Target, and various regular, online sellers. I’m not paying $110 for a plastic wallet. I contribute to a few animal activist causes and I’d certainly have to do less of that if I spent big money for everyday ‘vegan’ items.
I’m willing to pay a higher price for unique, hand made items, but usually that’s not the case unless you’re buying directly from the craftsman.
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