The Ugly Truth About Luxury Perfumes I Lancôme & Aerin Beauty

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • Perfumes are amazing, they really are. I mean, who wouldn’t want to smell nice? I know I want to smell good, it boosts my confidence almost immediately. But you know what I don’t want? I don’t want children who are supposed to live their childhood happily to pick the flowers for my perfume. I don’t want to enjoy anything that causes others to suffer.
    ‪@dr.claire.perfume‬'s video: • Child Labour Used To M...
    My Dior video: • Dior Scandal Is Just T...
    #luxuryshopping #lancôme #luxuryperfumes
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    / @perspectiveofme

Komentáře • 25

  • @katerinab5099
    @katerinab5099 Před 29 dny +12

    Dont we, customers, need to punish these luxury companies with a dollar? Make them respect harvesters'/ workers' labour? Its awful to pay 10€ p.h your workers and then sell pieces 100-200times more expensive to be able to enjoy your luxury life as a company owner. And still continuing to save on labour costs. Any business should be ethical
    Somtimes I think to myself: There are people who have 20 hermes birkins at home and at the same time there people, who cant afford buying fish or meat to eat. The world is so freaking unfair!😢

  • @sarahbee27
    @sarahbee27 Před 26 dny +2

    Even when the world knows this, celebs I’ll still take their millions to advertise these items.

  • @SSkye7
    @SSkye7 Před 28 dny +4

    This is why I love your channel. Features fashion while also educating about what goes on behind the fashion we so love. The more you know.🧐

  • @peterlangendorff9846
    @peterlangendorff9846 Před 26 dny +3

    Eau no! I’m surprised that people didn’t know or assume that all luxury products have a seedy background. From fragrance to fur- it all involves suffering. Diamonds? Gold? That is the way of the world. That is the price of affluence.

  • @insaneandvain6188
    @insaneandvain6188 Před 6 dny +1

    Thank you for making this very important video.

  • @lerc3690
    @lerc3690 Před 29 dny +12

    IF you buy a luxury perfume from this brands, YOU are the one to blame. YOU and only YOU, dear luxury perfume lover. Because now you know where they come from. DISGUSTING.

  • @analiza8497
    @analiza8497 Před 28 dny +1

    Hmm, I was in the outlet shop last Saturday and saw TF Jasmine Rouge was on sale. 50ml normally cost 200+€, but that was half the price. TF wS not mentioned here though, but I wonder it triggers the sale as it’s usually a riddle effect. Idk, but I left buying one bottle though, I also love Jasmine scent. I honestly think luxury brands won’t make the adjustments, in reality this may have effect but won’t last long. I also don’t think buyers will also stop buying them. There’s just something that draws us whether it’s the brand, packaging and long lasting.

  • @DieynabaNduwayo
    @DieynabaNduwayo Před 28 dny +1

    I ve watched this documentary and it was painful and chocking to watch. When I saw the perfum from lancome idole I myself own I was demolished, the worst is they are buying it on third hands seller so then of anything happen they wont get sue.

  • @tereza5211
    @tereza5211 Před 27 dny

    Poor children, I make my own perfumes from essential oils which I make sure have ethical source.
    Also, there is lot of really bad chemicals in perfumes then you then ingest or leave on your skin.

  • @shrinidhi8856
    @shrinidhi8856 Před 29 dny +7

    Perfumes are one of my favourite thing..i watched that BBC documentary..nd it's truly sad... big brands are always money sucker..but i also have another take on this like there should be family planning ,if u can't feed ur children properly why not take 1 child instead of 4..maybe im sounding rude but i don't like their mother at all..shouldn't she plan first ..how she is going to manage that big family..

    • @LauraRealLife
      @LauraRealLife Před 28 dny

      While birth control is legal in Egypt, it's not necessarily widely available and until 2022, was too expensive for those who need it most - meaning the poorest families. In 2022, Egypt's government began providing all types of birth control to women free of charge.

  • @janejdough2230
    @janejdough2230 Před 29 dny

    Thank you

  • @GinaArch
    @GinaArch Před 19 dny

    Usar perfume, ahora será un placer culposo... y creo que tienen disruptores hormonales, así que no deberíamos usarlos tan liberalmente...

  • @niki151416
    @niki151416 Před 28 dny +4

    Man....good video, BUT you need to compare the average pay they get to the countries pay, to the costs of living in general, not just a drawing book somewhere on amazon.... that doesn't work
    You can't pick one thing that is a luxury (unfortunately, yes, colouring books are a luxury)
    A quick google search can do the trick...then another factor - is jasmine picking more of a "mom with kids side job while husband makes more" or is that the main income? Not trying to defend companies, but people need to make more research not just go, listen to how the "shocking" amount they are paid is so low 🤷‍♀️
    According to 2022 data, the cost of living in Egypt is around 86.3% lower than in the United Kingdom and 65% lower than in the United States.

  • @dvdgalutube
    @dvdgalutube Před 29 dny +8

    So in order to help these children is by cutting off their only income source because that would immediately change their country’s economy, government inefficiency, welfare system and unprovided fathers to 180 degree. Way to go!

    • @maggiechang9956
      @maggiechang9956 Před 23 dny +1

      Doing flower picking work, still many times better than being sold to prostitution

  • @ResonantSun17
    @ResonantSun17 Před 28 dny

    I haven't bought perfume in years, I have essential oils. Who knows if they are using real oils or manufactured oils, that smell the same, and are way cheaper? Stop buying these brands, find ethical alternatives. Debra xxx

  • @ntheresa50
    @ntheresa50 Před 28 dny +1

    Can you do a review on vegan perfume? I wear Skylar perfume. I like it but it doesn’t last long.

  • @user-rs1xd4xx2k
    @user-rs1xd4xx2k Před 29 dny +15

    I’m more likely to blame the unmentioned husband who was nowhere to be seen and forces his wife and children to work in a field. Egypt is not a third world country. It’s not like they’re children in a slum in India or a village in sub Saharan Africa. Or a factory in myanmar. This is also taking into account that if they are awake at 3am then that means they’re not going to school. This is a parenting issue not a perfume problem.

    • @notme1255
      @notme1255 Před 28 dny +6

      Based on current stats, the most common profession for men in modern day Egypt is farming, agriculture and labor jobs, then historians, artists and government jobs. So I would assume that the father is doing all the farming and agriculture to grow the jasmine while his family picks the flowers. Not excusing the fact that a child is working so young however statistically he's not sitting in a Lazy boy recliner watching football while the kids work outside.
      Plus, children's books here cost $6-15 dollars however they might cost more on average in Egypt because it's not considered a necessity. As of May 2023, a carton of eggs in Egypt costs $0.12 USD or 1.54 Egyptian pounds so considering their cost of living over there, that's still a lower wage but not terrible. People in Western countries, especially the US are so easily outraged but don't do the basic research to understand that cost of living abroad is completely different. When I go shopping in US grocery stores, I pay almost $4 per dozen eggs. But we also have higher cost of living here, and especially higher home prices. It would be impossible and impractical to make every country have the same minimum wage that we do. It would not make sense. Like making a $15/hr minimum wage in other countries is the equivalent of enforcing a $80/hr minimum wage in the US. It sounds nice but it would not be necessary for entry level jobs with no skills required and if you understand economics, it would ruin the country and deflate the dollars value worldwide, which many nations rely on for economic stability.