Being a human product, versus a producer, makes people feel powerless as ultimately disposable commodities.
Human products see the world as a grand carnival of products.
People who work in corporations, like those working on assembly-lines, are not producers — they are products.
We see the world as we are, and also as we are treated and seen by others, and by our environmental situation.
When people are treated as creators versus products, materialism diminishes.
A culture that raises and grooms people to be human resource products in a marketplace cultivates non-individuals who experience life through materialism.
Modern capitalist consumer-life commoditizes people and "educates" them to become human products.
When people are treated like a product, they become obsessed with materialism.
The folly of endless consumerism sends us on a wild goose-chase for happiness through materialism.
Real value come from nature and human resources, both of which we already possess.