Creative producers understand value as something internal to give, whereas human products and consumers understand value as something external to get.
When people become empowered creators, or producers, they begin to think about the internal gifts they have to share with others.
As long as people are products, they will be obsessed with products.
Being a creator puts people back in touch with their power and purpose, causing them to no longer seek their identity and purpose externally through materialism.
In the context of cold-blooded capitalism, a customer is a disposable commodity just like the products to be sold, which should be used-up and then replaced.
It is absurdly impossible to have good customer service while destroying the economy and community where that customer lives.
Companies who sell cheap disposable goods cannot have a relationship, which is not abusive, with their customers, employees, or a community.
Irresponsible corporations who create and sell disposable goods destroy communities and people's lives.
Selling junk is like passing on a disease, where the seller is the original disease carrier, and every hand that touches the product is infected.
Cheap products destroy the communities where they are built from a social justice, labor, resource and environmental accounting, and then go on to destroy the communities where they are sold.