From Eat the State: "[Coffee] comes courtesy of the self-congratulatory Thanksgiving, or Equal Exchange, an outfit in Boston which, as its name suggests, claims it has smoothed out the inequitable wrinkles in the coffee trade between the Third World and the First.
The coffee is perhaps consumed at a table made of choice hardwood certified as having been harvested under "sustainable" forest practices. The coffee machine is powered by "green electricity" offered by Working Assets. And who knows? The coffee pot was perhaps acquired with a Nation credit card...For every decision in the liberal day, there's a certificate of good behavior being flaunted by some of the most disgusting corporations on earth.
Which gas station to patronize? Dimly, into the mind of our person of good will, comes the memory that the World Wildlife Fund last year nominated Shell Oil as a company of conscience for its drilling procedures in British Columbia. Buying a car? Don't buy American and feel good about it too. Our person of good conscience may opt for a costly Mitsubishi 4-wheeler, nourished by the recollection that Rainforest Action network last year issued its imprimatur to two Mitsubishi subsidiaries for agreeing not to use old growth timber as material for its packaging and pallets.
There's nothing wrong with rewarding businesses for decent behavior. The trouble is that the hucksterism so rarely gets questioned, and the good behavior consists in promising to mug two old ladies instead of three.
Take Equal Exchange. Here is a non-profit in Massachusetts which makes the very big claim that it is rectifying the iniquities of First/Third World trade in coffee beans. "Feed your soul as well as your body," the outfit's ad proclaims in the New Yorker, raising the battle standard of fairness. They buy "direct" from small farmers, they say, eliminating the middleman.
No, they haven't. They've taken over the function of "conscience" middleman from the ordinary first-world coffee brokers and there's really very little evidence that the Third World growers, as opposed to the soul-fed coffee drinkers at First World tables, do better because Equal Exchange is doing the brokering. They buy from grower co-ops, Equal Exchange boasts. But so do ordinary First World coffee brokers, paying the same prices.
But if Equal Exchange is having little or no impact on conditions of production in the Third World, it certainly is having an effect, a baneful one, on small local businesses across America. Equal Exchange flies a buyer from a First World co-op grocery store on a two week jaunt to Costa Rica, courtesy of the American taxpayer; the group tours the coffee fincas and a good time is had by all. On return, the buyer might expand the coffee rack of Equal Exchange, with bins provided by Equal Exchange. This means less business for the small local roaster, local sales people, and local distributors. Lo and behold, what do we have but the Conscience Industry's equivalent of General Foods or Proctor and Gamble, with the non-profit's executives scarcely paying themselves starvation salaries.
"Sustainable" logging practices, yielding lumber for that virtuous coffee table? Start with the word "sustainable." These days fundraisers and grantwriters string it round each sentence like an adjectival fannypack, bulging with self-congratulation. Mostly, the term is meaningless or a vague expression of hope. In the case of timber, it's a haphazard and often highly debatable designation that amounts to little more than a vague pledge that the timber is not virgin old growth.
Working Assets' offer of "green" power has been an astounding piece of effrontery, since the consumer has not the slightest way of knowing whether the electricity thus provided comes from solar or nuclear, or hydro or coal burning generating stations. The Nation's credit card offers a low interest charge, to be sure, but you'd better not be late with your payments.
Imagine singling out a major oil company as morally in good standing! It's far less rational than pumping Amoco's gas because Johnny Cash stands behind the product. At least that's an aesthetic decision. World Wildlife thus singled out for praise Shell last year, the same oil company in whose interests, absent any bleat of protest by Shell, Nigerian generals hanged Ken Saro Wiwa and his companions. And imagine giving Mitsubishi, as Rainforest Action Network did, the opportunity for this prime destroyer of Asian forests the chance to hang a "good behavior" sign around its neck."