1. Mass Produced Cheap Clothing Means We'll All End Up Dressing The Same
It's the ultimate annoyance. You're walking down the high street feeling good about yourself wearing your "fashionable" clothes. Not to worry, the fools around you will never know that you didn't spend top money for your threads. Then you notice one guy wearing the same jumper as you. You throw him a glance and the horror on his face tells the story. Never mind, it's probably just a one off. S**t! You see another one and another one and another...you get the picture. Your day is ruined. Of course I'm talking about Primark or "Primarni" as it is more affectionately known. Most people have shopped there at least once in their life. The clothes don't last and they're not made to a high standard, but we still go back for more. The shopping experience itself is one of the worst you can live through. Stacks of clothes and no room to move because of the people packed in like sardines, acting like monsters. It's the ultimate "First World Problem". As our new reliance on mass produced cheap clothing becomes greater, there is a direct effect on third world countries where Primark's products are sourced and created. The working conditions within these sweatshops have made the news numerous times recently. Notably in April this year, when a factory in Bangladesh collapsed, killing 300 people. A factory directly responsible for making Primark clothing. But, as always, we turn a blind eye to this sort of news and continue in our millions to shop at these bargain huts. It will come back to haunt us in the end as everybody will wear the same item of clothing; individual fashion no longer necessary. This item will be a beige onesie.
Former film student who once wrote a Sci-Fi script that will never see the light of day. Because If you read it, you would kill yourself, knowing that you'll never read a script as good as it ever again...I think that's why my tutor killed himself after he read it anyway.
@carlbennett88 only if you want to