The environmental disaster fuelled by used clothes and fast fashion | Foreign Correspondent

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  • čas přidán 11. 08. 2021
  • The dark side of the world’s fashion addiction. Many of our old clothes, donated
    to charities, end up in rotting textile mountains in West Africa. This is a story
    about how our waste is creating an environmental disaster.
    Have you ever thought about what happens to your old clothes after you drop them off at the
    op shop? It might be time to start, because these goodwill gestures are helping to fuel an environmental catastrophe on the other side of the world.
    When charities in Australia can’t sell donated clothing, tonnes of it ends up being exported to
    countries like Ghana, in West Africa. Ship after ship docks every week with bales from Europe,
    the US, China and Australia.
    They call them ‘Dead White Man’s Clothes’. Once they arrive in Ghana, they’re taken to the
    bustling Kantamanto markets in the capital Accra and from here, they make their way to
    villages and towns across the country.
    The industry provides jobs for thousands of people, like Asare Asamoah, a successful importer.
    He brings in clothes, mainly from the United Kingdom, and if they’re good quality, he can make
    a decent living.
    But it’s risky business. He has to pay upfront for a bale and never knows whether it’s trash or
    treasure. With cheap, fast fashion flooding the world, the quality of the clothes arriving in
    Ghana is getting worse and worse.
    ‘Sometimes you’ve gone and bought something, then you don’t get what you want’, says
    Asamoah. ‘Then you lose your money.”
    And there’s a dark side to this industry.
    Correspondent Linton Besser travels to Ghana to uncover the dirty secret behind the world’s
    fashion addiction.
    While 60 per cent of imported fashion items are reused and resold, 40 per cent are rubbish,
    creating an environmental catastrophe for this poor nation.
    With the main dumpsite for textile waste now full, unregulated dumpsites ring the city. These
    fetid clothes mountains are often set on fire, filling the skies with acrid smoke.
    ‘It is totally a disservice to us in this part of the world because we have become sort of the
    dumping ground for the textile waste that is produced from Europe, from the Americas”, says
    Accra’s waste manager, Solomon Noi.
    Emmanuel Ajaab imports used clothes from Australia but he despairs at the poor quality of the
    clothes that arrive. From a bale of about 200 garments, he finds only seven he can resell at a
    good price.
    “In Europe and UK and Australia, America, they think Africa here, sorry to say, we are not like a
    human being”, he tells Foreign Correspondent.
    The dumped textiles also get swept up in the monsoonal rains and end up choking the city’s
    waterways and beaches, posing a danger to fishermen and aquatic life. Liz Ricketts, who runs
    an NGO campaigning for awareness of Ghana's textile waste crisis, lays the blame at the feet
    of international fashion houses.
    “Waste is a part of the business model of fashion. A lot of brands overproduce by up to 40 per
    cent”, says Ricketts.
    Noi begs the people who donate their clothes to think twice about where they end up.
    “If they come here, like you've come, and you see the practicality for yourself, then they will
    know that, no, we better take care of these things within our country and not to ship that
    problem to cause problems to other people.”
    About Foreign Correspondent:
    Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval - through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
    Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’s Online Terms of Use www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation CZcams channel

Komentáře • 16K

  • @jimmyliu4614
    @jimmyliu4614 Před 2 lety +3470

    One thing I’ve learned from this pandemic is that, I don’t need as much clothes as I have.

    • @johnmoorhouse1455
      @johnmoorhouse1455 Před 2 lety +31

      So you came to the realisation that Edward Bernays manipulated your mind... Good for you

    • @1Mhoram9
      @1Mhoram9 Před 2 lety +115

      When going to a work place we wear clothes for each other. At home, just for ourselves.

    • @comfeefort
      @comfeefort Před 2 lety +59

      Me Either, I don't have, but 5 days worth of cloths. I hand wash them and hang to dry, they last longer.

    • @malkeitkaur3046
      @malkeitkaur3046 Před 2 lety +33

      I down size and donated mine I do my laundry every five days and reuse them.

    • @ninomino2682
      @ninomino2682 Před 2 lety +54

      I have realised exactly the same. I need a good clean out. Soo many clothes I don't wear and I will give them to a charity. I'd rather give them to people who really need clothing for free. All in great condition and some not used. It shows how much my life is different from a lot of people like in this video and other places

  • @karinaf8326
    @karinaf8326 Před 2 lety +922

    I don’t support fast fashion. I’d rather buy something that is good quality and I will keep it for several years. We all need to do our part.

    • @kenkovar2647
      @kenkovar2647 Před 2 lety +30

      None of my family does, people who feel compelled to buy that crap should see what the consequences are of "fast fashion" and develop their own sense of style that respects craftsmanship and longevity..

    • @lafo1639
      @lafo1639 Před 2 lety +20

      Seriously! I want quality too! Hey, clothes makers, I won’t buy your crappy polyester blends!

    • @doncorleole2356
      @doncorleole2356 Před 2 lety +21

      While that sure is the case, we certainly need our politicians to act and change the system. As long as it's profitable for the companies and cheap for the people, there most likely won't be any changes

    • @LordElfa
      @LordElfa Před 2 lety +6

      Except almost nobody will. That's the problem with that idealism. It will never, ever happen, so other options must be considered.

    • @marcelasandino2268
      @marcelasandino2268 Před 2 lety +28

      Fast fashion pieces can most definitely hold up for several years though. What your average person deems “good quality” is still fast fashion. The problem is where your clothes end up once their shelf life has expired. We are all “doing our part” and it’s not enough. Only way out is through regulation of mass fashion corporations.

  • @dank1132
    @dank1132 Před rokem +15

    I am from Eritrea 🇪🇷 east africa. Despite the dictatorship regime with very limit human right in the country, & with very low 2 billion USD DGP in comparing Ghana's DGP 76 billion USD. Eritrea is one of the poorest country, but also one of the cleanest country in the world. The 1000 km eritrean red sea is one of the cleanest sea in the world. You may ask How this can be possible? There are rules. Plastic bags & packages are banned. If you go to shopping you have to have any permanent bag to use or you have to buy from the shop paper bag. And the people are helpful they're clean, they dont littered. Second the gov. Doesn't allowed importation which can damaging the environment, even cars are not allowed to import older than 8 years. the country is also not accepting any aid from foreign countries including Europe and USA.

  • @juliekay902
    @juliekay902 Před 2 lety +1181

    Best line I've ever heard:
    Better to fix the problem within the country rather than ship the problems somewhere else.

    • @magnetarattractionsno9643
      @magnetarattractionsno9643 Před 2 lety +20

      except when you say that about illegal aliens, the leftist start screaming and calling you a bad person.

    • @Gypseygirls
      @Gypseygirls Před 2 lety +7

      No kidding....

    • @trachyte11
      @trachyte11 Před 2 lety +4

      @@magnetarattractionsno9643 Who are you saying wants to ship the problem somewhere else? Sounds exactly like the right to me. Either don't let them in, or ship them away and its all ok.

    • @magnetarattractionsno9643
      @magnetarattractionsno9643 Před 2 lety +6

      @@trachyte11 you are confused, and no i am not going to illuminate you, it wont work. you will project whatever meaning you want, in lieu of what i am actually saying.

    • @Music4Marko
      @Music4Marko Před 2 lety +28

      But in this case, these guys are actually buying those containers. It's not like they are shipping to them by force.

  • @SouthernBelleReviews
    @SouthernBelleReviews Před 2 lety +595

    I'm still wearing things from when I was 15 and 16 years old... I'm almost 29. I will wear it until it has holes and then I will sew those holes. I grew up in a town of extreme poverty, and I was taught the values of using what you had. I met many snotty kids who made fun of me in school. I usually stay to myself even to this day. Fast fashion makes no sense to me. I get most everything from thrift stores and I wear it until there's no thread left. If I've gotten a brand new article of clothing, it will last me the rest of my life. Everything I have is precious to me.

    • @lebogangdlaminilebogangdla1691
      @lebogangdlaminilebogangdla1691 Před 2 lety +22

      You must be very skinny

    • @patriciamunsch3920
      @patriciamunsch3920 Před 2 lety +31

      I've had some of my clothes for the last 10 years and still wear them. If they get small holes I wear them for yard work. My weight goes up and down so I keep them all

    • @andriikyslenko7895
      @andriikyslenko7895 Před 2 lety +21

      You are a strong and determined woman, those are great values to live by!

    • @mokhtaramran7041
      @mokhtaramran7041 Před 2 lety +7

      Same here. I was a bit fatter at my teenage yrs and lost it afterwords. But now im gaining weight. Even tailors don't do canvassing anymore. They all do press.

    • @KM-wf9yx
      @KM-wf9yx Před 2 lety +40

      I am a 61 year old woman and I still wear clothes from the mid 80's! Still fit them and still wear them! No shoulder pad puffy sleeve clown fashions, but real nice clothes and I always get women asking "where did you get that, it is so cute or so classic I can not find such nice clothes anymore"! Even being older they still fit and are still age appropriate... I am thin and petite and they look just as good as they did then...

  • @heatherwoodley8244
    @heatherwoodley8244 Před rokem +13

    I'm shook! This is so awful on so many levels! It's sad that at the same time that these imported clothes have been providing income for so many in Ghana, the whole process is an environmental disaster everywhere along the way, - from the terrible pollution of waterways, and people in the fast fashion industry, (all the chemicals they are exposed to and horrific working conditions, in countries like Bangladesh, which sadly completely depend on the industry), to the shipping of these clothes all over the world, to then be sold to us, then discarded, even when we think we are doing good donating them to charities, that then ship them to Africa (and Chile), for all this horrific dystopian reality as we have seen in the documentary just now. SO MUCH WASTE!! All the contamination generated by the shipping, then the discarding, hours away by truck, the sea filled with the clothes, the suffering aquatic life and all it's associated problems, the beaches ruined, the landfill, the burning of the clothes, -which can do no good for the people there breathing in not only the smoke but all those acrid chemicals. And the whole place just looks scummy and awful for those people to have to live in. And then after all that, the waste is increasing and the people are suffering more, as now they are not even making money in many cases, like the lady with her baby and the importer who got the bale from Australia. This is so disgusting! How as a human race have we not addressed these problems??! It's shameful. There must be some industry that can use all the waste clothes for something useful, insulation, tiles, Other clothes, I don't know. Maybe there are several. But there must be something, so that all the waste clothes could be used in a healthy way, no longer in landfill and still creating jobs and money for these people.

  • @wallacepeeace6492
    @wallacepeeace6492 Před rokem +39

    I heard about this probably like 20 years ago, the only things I'll buy brand new are socks and underwear. Everything else is second hand because I don't mind it and it does help my wallet and our mom, this planet that provides us with everything we NEED in order to live...

    • @wintersbattleofbands1144
      @wintersbattleofbands1144 Před rokem +2

      Yup. Occasionally I'll have to get something new, but only every few years. Like jeans if I can't find used ones, but if you launder carefully, clothes can last decades. People also wash their jeans way too much. Levi recommends hanging them and if you're not getting them word-dirty, washing them like 2 to 4 times a year. People also use way too much soap. 1/4 to 1/3 what's recommended is enough unless you have really hard water.

    • @MrSGL21
      @MrSGL21 Před rokem +1

      thats about it for me too. someone else above said he only owns 4 sets of foot wear and thats what i have too. mud boots, hunting boots, sneakers, and flip flops.

    • @wallacepeeace6492
      @wallacepeeace6492 Před rokem

      @@MrSGL21 oh yeah! I forgot to mention comfy shoes! I have a similar approach when it comes to footwear. 🤙

    • @user-tq2kq7xk7j
      @user-tq2kq7xk7j Před 11 dny

      I only buy new cloths when I cannot get them from the op shops. Sox and undies are the exception. However lately the op shops do not have stock that I want - the op shops are giving the cloths to those locals who need them.

  • @Rootsradical808
    @Rootsradical808 Před rokem +51

    Sad. I work at a thrift store and I'm disgusted at the amount of stuff people buy and throw away. Equally frustrating is the crap that does get donated, dirty, stained, ripped, smelly clothes, ripped up moldy books, boxes covered in rat and cockroach shit, other items broken and unusable to anybody, etc, and we basically end up throwing there trash away for them. We will even give what we can away for free, but the amount of trash, ugh. I can't stand this fast cheap fashion and low quality clothes that's everywhere now, quality so bad that after a first use and wash is no good anymore. Then what we sell for very cheap everyone wants it for cheaper, it's disgusting, and I would say at the very least half if not more of the customer are reselling it. I don't have a problem with resellers but many want it for cheap or free and are super pushy. I bust my ass all day long and it's not worth it dealing with customers and donations of trash.

    • @JulieH819
      @JulieH819 Před rokem +2

      Wow.

    • @nbaoldgirl
      @nbaoldgirl Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thanks for what you do. It’s really unsung work and you are appreciated.

    • @666Necropsy
      @666Necropsy Před 2 měsíci

      the guy in the video tossed away a shirt with a small stain. i guess they dont have soap. later a women finds perfectly good jeans in the trash. many of us have to pay a lot for rags to clean gras and mess. nobody points out the careless that toss there clothes in the street and pollute there own area. look what these pope do in white countries when they get upset. they destroy there own neighborhoods. i dont feel sorry for these people at all. i want to stay far away from people with no impulse control.

    • @Ab3ndcgi
      @Ab3ndcgi Před měsícem +1

      I feel your pain. I helped organize once a free clothes shop where people could just take, leave or swap clothes. People would donate tons of stuff, most almost new; and even brand stuff like polo shirts and loewe handbags. All very clean and in good condition, so no complaints there.
      But visitors would only want to inquire about dropping stuff, and not even take a second to browse, even tho we had everthing very neatly arranged and offered free drinks. It was a kinda posh/gentrified neighbourghood, so I felt like people though of us an excuse to dropp off the clothes they were bored with, in order to have closet space to just go out and buy more. In the end, only the organizers and a couple of people picked up something; and the rest we donated to a woman's shelter.

    • @solidrock6524
      @solidrock6524 Před 26 dny +2

      I work in repossessed mobile homes... you would be amazed at what people will buy and discard instead of keeping up their payments 😢😢😢....

  • @vincenthighwind7622
    @vincenthighwind7622 Před 2 lety +540

    When I first learnt about this, I never donated my clothes again. Instead I took up sewing, so whatever peices I don't want to wear anymore I tear up and make new items I do like.

    • @truemamle6184
      @truemamle6184 Před 2 lety +16

      Great idea

    • @WeissLiebe
      @WeissLiebe Před 2 lety +4

      Hey, good idea!!

    • @tulayamalavenapi4028
      @tulayamalavenapi4028 Před 2 lety +24

      Yes, there's just so many ways to be consciously creative about saving all that energy & resource that is uselessly squandered.
      What about quilts? What about some kind of cleaning rags, or sanitized diapers even. There could be rugs made. Thanks for the uplifting comment.

    • @kf2436
      @kf2436 Před 2 lety +11

      I do the same thing and do not and will not make unnecessary purchases anymore. Thanks for the new knowledge that I now have.

    • @citisoccer
      @citisoccer Před 2 lety +5

      They are buying the garbage clothes. No one is shoving down their throats.

  • @Jablicek
    @Jablicek Před 2 lety +512

    It's more *profitable* for charity shops to sell these clothes to poorer countries than to pay for waste disposal here. They're a scandal and a scam - which truly is a shame, because they started out actually doing something positive for people.

    • @manufacturedconsent7850
      @manufacturedconsent7850 Před 2 lety +29

      The poorer countries don't have to buy it.

    • @sinephase
      @sinephase Před 2 lety +17

      nobody forces them to buy anything

    • @ostapbendervan7874
      @ostapbendervan7874 Před 2 lety

      No scandal
      If charities keep everything,be tons in store & you may lose your 4 kids in bundles

    • @mruncletheredge
      @mruncletheredge Před 2 lety +32

      @@sinephase and nobody FORCES people in the US to buy new stuff every season...
      It's a choice that's led to this level of garbage and waste....
      I hope the Fashion industry collapses some day...
      We need to stop buying new clothes every year because some Fashion Designer tells them to.....
      Bunch of sheep and slaves....

    • @beka1090
      @beka1090 Před 2 lety +7

      @@mruncletheredge the US can handle the waste, the problem is they got buyers for it, here is when the problem starts.

  • @adnel4142
    @adnel4142 Před rokem +89

    No one forced these people to import these clothes, they could always manufacture their own. There is a thousand ways to reuse the clothes not fit for wearing. Wash them, cut them up and create carpets, curtains, sleeping mats, bags, hats, insulation materials, nappies etc to name a few.
    Furthermore, we need only a few outfits and not hundreds.

    • @dembojuwara5506
      @dembojuwara5506 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Agreed .

    • @kirilstoianov3422
      @kirilstoianov3422 Před 3 měsíci

      Why don't you do all what you say in England or Australia and not sent all the garbage to Africa?

    • @Laurod24
      @Laurod24 Před 3 měsíci +17

      You could also buy less clothes in the west to reduce this problem rather then making them feel bad for not doing things properly

    • @arbjful
      @arbjful Před 3 měsíci +17

      @@Laurod24or make the clothes manufacturers responsible for recycling them.

    • @cococock2418
      @cococock2418 Před 3 měsíci

      Exactly. Notice how all responsibility is always removed from black people? Their corrupt leaders are the one doing this.

  • @DevikaK100
    @DevikaK100 Před rokem +38

    Quite enlightening documentary. Thank you for producing this. The fashion industry contributes so much to environmental decline. They overproduce by 40%? That's ridiculous. When I was growing up in the United States in the 1980's, the biggest social faux pas was to wear the same clothes twice within a week. Some aimed to not wear the same clothes twice, ever. I hope subsequent generations are changing to realize how much of a waste that is. I personally wear my clothes until they're ripped. I then donate to charity. If anything, I hope the cloth from my attire can be repurposed as blankets, curtains or other materials.

  • @Wonderhussy
    @Wonderhussy Před 2 lety +3807

    I can remember when it was a big deal to buy a new outfit, because clothes were expensive!! These days, you can buy junk for cheap at the dollar store or the swap meet, wear it a few times, and then toss it when it goes out of style or the elastic gives out. It's easy to blame the consumer for buying this crap...but poor people want to stay in style too, especially given the emphasis placed on style and fashion on social media. Our values are totally jacked! Better to spend a bit for a quality piece and wear it until it truly gives out...fashion be damned.

    • @liselottehildegarde5367
      @liselottehildegarde5367 Před 2 lety +284

      This is why I buy high-quality vintage clothes because something that is aesthetically pleasing will always be beautiful for more than decades. Trendy fashion be damned.

    • @SparkyOne549
      @SparkyOne549 Před 2 lety +259

      I sew and repurpose clothing.

    • @Mastordant
      @Mastordant Před 2 lety +76

      Same, I will buy something fancy without “fashion”, that I can wear for years.

    • @icost4671
      @icost4671 Před 2 lety +150

      I used to wonder what the "Goodwill Stores" would do with clothes that no one wants...
      ... Here's the answer

    • @jonmacdonald5345
      @jonmacdonald5345 Před 2 lety +16

      Fancy seeing you here miss Hussy! Keep up the great work we appreciate you!

  • @rose191991
    @rose191991 Před 2 lety +139

    every fast fashion influencer NEED TO WATCH THIS!!!

    • @Rctdcttecededtef
      @Rctdcttecededtef Před 2 lety +6

      I doubt it will suddenly change their mind. Not that they should, they are operating a legitimate business. It’s a sad situation but landfills being filled with used clothing is only the tip of the iceberg

    • @officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
      @officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 Před 2 lety

      a treasure trove of fashion finds!

    • @carolinaroach5938
      @carolinaroach5938 Před 2 lety +1

      Well fashion is one thing and style is an other thing.

    • @rose191991
      @rose191991 Před 2 lety +1

      @@carolinaroach5938 there are some influencers who share minimalist style or triftngbor how to style one shirt / dress etc. multiple ways... BUT so many just share hauls and hauls every week 💔

    • @qmawpxvecxydiwixytvieowizhehsi
      @qmawpxvecxydiwixytvieowizhehsi Před 2 lety +3

      Yup! But sadly if the government doesn't change the way we work.. greed won't stop on destroying us. We need to have meaningful jobs. And jobs that don't destroy the earth just cause of money! We need free housing to start of, we need less cars, we need more public transportation!! And we need to change a lot in our cities and our way of living to improve as a society. But here's the thing.. WE DON'T CARE UNTIL IT'S TOO LATE! so, my hopes for humanity are 📉 declining, like so low.. that I don't know what's going to happen. I think that we will end up extinct at one point just for how destructive we are as a specie.. :/

  • @deborahhymer9315
    @deborahhymer9315 Před rokem +3

    They could take the unsellable clothes, cut into pieces, make quilts or rugs. Use to stuff mattresses.

  • @karelysvelasquez-olivo5152

    In 2023 I will sincerely make an effort to buy less in general , and make what I do buy more deliberate. Watching these types of videos is extremely eye opening for me, and definitely make me reflect on what’s really important.

  • @shabadoo24
    @shabadoo24 Před 2 lety +357

    I wear clothes til it falls apart. Anything like T shirt, flannel, etc gets cut up and used for cleaning rags.

    • @ralphfurley4217
      @ralphfurley4217 Před 2 lety +18

      Same here. I literally wear my clothes and shoes until they are full of holes. Then I used them as rags or throw them away.

    • @elledix3575
      @elledix3575 Před 2 lety +5

      Same here

    • @oliviagreen8853
      @oliviagreen8853 Před 2 lety +11

      Same! I almost never go clothing shopping unless i absolutely have to

    • @youcansoften
      @youcansoften Před 2 lety +8

      This is my new inspiration

    • @RogueSecret
      @RogueSecret Před 2 lety +12

      @@ralphfurley4217 Most of my t-shirt i got when i was 18, and i'm 31 now. FRUIT OF THE LOOM band tshirts last forever :)

  • @_loss_
    @_loss_ Před 2 lety +321

    My mom always made sure the clothes that we donated were in prime condition and washed. Can't believe others didn't share that idea.

    • @electricdreams9446
      @electricdreams9446 Před 2 lety +4

      but other people might be as well. The people in ghana looking for particular styles and fashion.

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 Před 2 lety +8

      I once bought an old t-shirt at a thrift shop because it was very soft, a color that I liked, and was an anniversary memorial (from a precious decade) of an institution I had admired since I was a child. The little hole was ok, but 15 years later I had to stop wearing it because there were more holes and they were too big to be socially acceptable.

    • @nightreader1264
      @nightreader1264 Před 2 lety +14

      If I would not buy it at the thrift store, I sure as hell am not donating it!

    • @nightreader1264
      @nightreader1264 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mgd6087 Ha, it nowadays- you can go out practically naked! Look at the jeans for 125 with the tips in them!

    • @EchadLevShtim
      @EchadLevShtim Před 2 lety +4

      Thats your problem then. Why aren't you wearing out cloths before buying new.

  • @pinkwakabeagle
    @pinkwakabeagle Před 8 měsíci +5

    Yikes! I'm over here refusing to do squats and lunges cuz my left knee hurts. But there's a woman here, carrying he baby, and balancing like 50 pounds of clothing on he head and walking casually. TF is wrong with me.

  • @graemewatson2296
    @graemewatson2296 Před 11 měsíci +3

    This is disgusting. As A 70 year old New Zealander,I have always been very much against this kind of waste. Thanks for this reporting. Pity the clothing can't be chewed up and recycled into something - like bricks for housing???

  • @searsfarmcat3328
    @searsfarmcat3328 Před 2 lety +490

    I buy most clothes from second-hand shops, Salvation Army, Goodwill, private owned Thrift Stores. I've seen huge piles of unsellable clothing at Goodwill, being readied for shipment to third world countries. A lot of it was stained or torn. One man in the video said it was insulting to get those kinds of clothing and he's right. Things not wearable should be recycled into cleaning rags, quilt pieces, etc., HERE, before it's shipped out. We have an excess of clothing in the U.S. and we shouldn't be sending un-wearables to these countries. We're the reason for the textile waste over there.

    • @rosetui6070
      @rosetui6070 Před 2 lety +19

      exactly. why send to charities clothes that are unwearable??? and another thing, they are smelly maybe because they were not washed before taking them to charity stores. donators or givers, think that what you give away or donate should be happily worn by the takers

    • @hope2029
      @hope2029 Před 2 lety +21

      @@rosetui6070 many charities wash the clothes where I live before selling them. Anyway-- the ones shipped to this place they are showing should be washed and restyled or made into quilts whatever-- creates jobs and a respectable living. Look at how many everyday people are doing this on pintrest, etc.
      I think these people who are putting these potentially great things into a landfill have no business complaining about being poor.

    • @tinahorn3671
      @tinahorn3671 Před 2 lety +6

      @@rosetui6070 mother of 4 i was shopping thrift before it became fashionable & never donated anything I or children wouldn't wear

    • @pjfountaine7755
      @pjfountaine7755 Před 2 lety +17

      So true. If it is stained or looks raggedy and I wouldn't wear ot because of that, I throw it in the rag pile, and don't expect someone else to wear it either. I too, shop used for most of my clothes. I was raised like that. We were poor and got teased for wearing used stuff but I am not ashamed. I was never allowed to wear jeans with the holes like are in style now. They were patched or cut into shorts or made into rags. We were poor but had dignity, and were taught to let others have their dignity as well. Giving torn, holey, or stained clothes to someone else is not showing dignity to them. They might not have money but at least let them have their dignity. If a person wants to run around in pants with holes, let them buy them and wear them. But please don't throw rags to people who don't have any other choice but to accept what is offered to them. It is then not an act of human kindness or compassion. Everyone deserves to have dignity.

    • @TippyPuddles
      @TippyPuddles Před 2 lety +8

      People should not donate soiled, ripped and worn out clothing.

  • @jaymefunny7424
    @jaymefunny7424 Před 2 lety +800

    Can we all agree that the traditional clothing is far more beautiful and well made.

    • @1duskyknight
      @1duskyknight Před 2 lety +18

      Greetings to you & your family, yes you are absolutely right.
      One Love.

    • @leschatsmusicale
      @leschatsmusicale Před 2 lety +38

      Yes I totally agree. And so sad that this influx of imported clothing is destroying the market for it.

    • @TJlolbagger
      @TJlolbagger Před 2 lety +4

      Big disagree.

    • @artic9514
      @artic9514 Před 2 lety +15

      Afghan women will be getting lots of traditional clothing again.

    • @mason4354
      @mason4354 Před 2 lety +4

      You mean traditional American clothing.

  • @ShaneMclane-PrivateEye
    @ShaneMclane-PrivateEye Před 3 měsíci +6

    They can't figure out how to not litter excess clothes all over their town? Wtf?

  • @alise4041
    @alise4041 Před měsícem +2

    PSA, stop buying fast fashion, develop your own style, buy clothing that lasts and you only need few clothing anyway.

  • @lyndatro5158
    @lyndatro5158 Před 2 lety +651

    My grandma used to cut out aunts used clothes and make clothes for us. Then the leftovers would be made into the crazy quilt

    • @mobutter2879
      @mobutter2879 Před 2 lety +29

      Do you still have any of those quilts? Those are the real treasures!!!❤️

    • @fredsilvers1427
      @fredsilvers1427 Před 2 lety +14

      Mine too. I wish I'd asked for one of her quilts. I remember how heavy they were.

    • @leberthasmith9491
      @leberthasmith9491 Před 2 lety +1

      I was just thinking about that

    • @LeslieDugger
      @LeslieDugger Před 2 lety +33

      My grandma was in the American dust bowl… they made clothes out of things like flour and sugar sacks. The sacks even sometimes intentionally had clothes-like patterns because of this trend.

    • @teh_major4106
      @teh_major4106 Před 2 lety +15

      Yep still have my two patchwork quilts.

  • @lechatel
    @lechatel Před 2 lety +578

    Old clothes were used as manure for the fields here in the UK and elsewhere. They would rot down and decompose and, because they were of natural materials like wool cotton and linen they would enrich the soil. Artificial man-made fabrics of course are another story.

    • @marcwright4790
      @marcwright4790 Před 2 lety +101

      I was wondering why they didn’t have little old ladies sorting out the cotton and wool discards for fertilizer or at least to burn. The natural fabric wouldn’t release toxins. This is Ghana’s issue to deal with. The documentary blames the Western countries. Ghana doesn’t have to accept these shipments.

    • @fyt00000
      @fyt00000 Před 2 lety +29

      @@marcwright4790 Thank you!!!

    • @chemistrycat3961
      @chemistrycat3961 Před 2 lety +43

      @@marcwright4790 yep honestly this documentary is contradictory. They don’t have to accept these shipments that also provide a potential stop before the landfill vs not shipping them out and Immediately throwing everything away. I think they are angry that the quality is worse more than anything which is a combination of likely fast fashion with poor quality fabric and the rise of secondhand shopping in the west.

    • @omowhanre
      @omowhanre Před 2 lety +10

      @@marcwright4790 the ways we soothe our souls...

    • @paulaartandmusic4412
      @paulaartandmusic4412 Před 2 lety +24

      Rule of thumb when donating, noting stained, torn, threadbare. If it’s not good, throw it away, please.

  • @vaemcdowell6205
    @vaemcdowell6205 Před rokem +3

    If the clothing is only from America, it is racist to call it white man's clothing when 15% of the population is black and more percentage points belong to other ethnicities not originally from Europe. I HATE that everything is being labeled white (bad) and black (victim). Even the discarded clothing we put in the recycling. Yet no one talks about the ethnicity of the looters last week in the Buffalo Walmart.

  • @denisethorbjornsen7493
    @denisethorbjornsen7493 Před 9 měsíci +2

    This is outrageous😢

  • @olibrooke-bailey333
    @olibrooke-bailey333 Před 2 lety +661

    Failed to mention who is sending those clothes to Africa.
    Tax exempt charities. The same charities that we here in Australia are led to believe that our donations go towards helping impoverished people here at home.
    Noone in Australia donates used materials believing it will end up in Africa.
    We are being misled.

    • @resetbs1955
      @resetbs1955 Před 2 lety +10

      Most if not all of the western world not just Oz, UK, USA, most of Europe! & the Africans are sending it back themselves by the barrel

    • @alextwin8748
      @alextwin8748 Před 2 lety +46

      agree they need to stop sending all these donations to Africa

    • @bazbbeeb7226
      @bazbbeeb7226 Před 2 lety +20

      bit like our household recycling deception that had up until recently been offloaded into China and Indonesia.

    • @infinidominion
      @infinidominion Před 2 lety +71

      A key factor to see that this is a shit story, is that they have to mention 'white man's clothes' ...it's an extraneous detail, but words to incite emotion

    • @seanwatson8644
      @seanwatson8644 Před 2 lety +5

      Not true, these donation and charity shops all sell bulk clothes to rag houses in Australia that then export them to Africa

  • @Bebedollie
    @Bebedollie Před 2 lety +301

    I wouldn't feel comfortable donating clothes that I wouldn't wear myself .

    • @Hussainpiplodwala
      @Hussainpiplodwala Před 2 lety +4

      What you do to the used clothes?

    • @myc0ldst4r
      @myc0ldst4r Před 2 lety +4

      @@Hussainpiplodwala i have a big bag of unused clothing that doesnt fit me for sewing

    • @stephenwalsh4481
      @stephenwalsh4481 Před 2 lety +18

      But people without clothes may like them!

    • @bearball49
      @bearball49 Před 2 lety +12

      I cut up old tshirts, towels etc. They make great substitutes for paper towels. When the big toilet paper scare was in, I wasn't worried because I could have easily repurposed some of my rags into small squares to use instead of TP. A bucket with a little bleach water like diapers go in and then launder. No need to waste.

    • @NiinasJournal
      @NiinasJournal Před 2 lety +3

      @@Hussainpiplodwala at least if you live in a country that burns their trash to energy I would put my broken and unusable clothes that can't be fixed to garbage unless I can use them for something else. For example cleaning oil of your bike and then to garbage.
      Some companies also take rags for recycling but you should do your research and try to find if they really make something out of the clothes because for example H&M is NOT very reliable for recycling rags even if they say they do.
      But if your now unusable clothes are in very good condition then I also would donate them but after thay try to make more consious choices when buying new clothes for example try to buy them used, try not to buy clothes you are not super sure you will use a lot and really like etc.

  • @selinab140
    @selinab140 Před rokem +18

    God forgive me not being grateful for everything I have to see people going thru this fighting over used clothing just breaks my heart.

    • @YouTubeHandleUnknown
      @YouTubeHandleUnknown Před 3 měsíci +1

      It seems that your god has left the building 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @tandin199
    @tandin199 Před rokem +3

    It’s so sad to see desires for new clothes killing our Mother Nature 😢

  • @ralphfurley4217
    @ralphfurley4217 Před 2 lety +125

    I literally wear my clothes and shoes until they are full of holes. Then I used them as rags or throw them away.

    • @jamierupert7563
      @jamierupert7563 Před 2 lety +10

      Same here. It's been at least 15 years or more since I bought anything new for myself except for socks and underwear.

    • @SouthernBelleReviews
      @SouthernBelleReviews Před 2 lety +14

      I'm still wearing things from when I was 15 and 16 years old... I'm almost 29. I will wear it until it has holes and then I will sew those holes. I grew up in a town of extreme poverty, and I was taught the values of using what you had. I met many snotty kids who made fun of me in school. I usually stay to myself even to this day. Fast fashion makes no sense to me. I get most everything from thrift stores and I wear it until there's no thread left. If I've gotten a brand new article of clothing, it will last me the rest of my life. Everything I have is precious to me.

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před 2 lety

      @@jamierupert7563 I’m imagining you rocking super old styles like they are brand new lol

    • @celianeher7637
      @celianeher7637 Před 2 lety

      @@jamierupert7563 I do the same, now I have to purchase everything new because I have recently lost over 25 kilograms.

    • @HelloHello-yb1rl
      @HelloHello-yb1rl Před 2 lety

      I was going to comment the same... "White Men". Since when do we replace cloths...

  • @monkeybusiness2204
    @monkeybusiness2204 Před 2 lety +303

    "Recycling" is mostly a big fat lie.

    • @barnakiraly5177
      @barnakiraly5177 Před 2 lety +10

      So true

    • @cruiserkumano
      @cruiserkumano Před 2 lety +10

      Always has been.

    • @misguidedangel6550
      @misguidedangel6550 Před 2 lety +20

      It's to make people feel good

    • @NiinasJournal
      @NiinasJournal Před 2 lety +14

      Correctly done recycling is something we do need and should be innovated further than it is now. This is really not recycling as we can see. But for example some metals are recycled well already even though not perfectly. So there is of course still space for improvement.
      And about textiles, of course we should get rid of the fast fashion mindset but that is really not enough anymore as there are so many textiles in this world already. So we should also innovate real ways to recycle textiles in a big scale even though it is hard.

    • @cariwaldick4898
      @cariwaldick4898 Před 2 lety +14

      Everyone forgets the first part--reduce, reuse. This isn't recycling; it's more reuse. BUT it's clearly a failure on that note.

  • @s.s.6661
    @s.s.6661 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Fast fashion is so horrible for the environment. After seeing a few documentaries like this and seeing the impacts in so many less fortunate countries, it's convinced me to cut up as much of my old, unusable clothing for scrap as possible. I'm not sure what I'll use it for yet, but it'll at least keep it out of a landfill.

  • @AnitaDil
    @AnitaDil Před rokem +18

    So the business men there are buying it from countries then dumping what they don’t want….

    • @CapeFear1
      @CapeFear1 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yep and blaming white men of course like the title of the video indicates.

    • @annetoronto5474
      @annetoronto5474 Před 3 měsíci

      They buy them from our charity collections. I stopped shopping and giving away my stuff.

    • @ferdtheterd3897
      @ferdtheterd3897 Před 3 měsíci

      @@CapeFear1 When its actually women who use the most clothes and throw it away

  • @ibelacaol
    @ibelacaol Před 2 lety +456

    I believe that this so called "used clothes" are donations and the intention is to "donate" to those in need and not to sell to the market.

    • @Rayblondie
      @Rayblondie Před 2 lety +30

      But the Ghana people are paying for these bales of clothes also and selling them on?

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 Před 2 lety +78

      @@Rayblondie When virtue signaling racism is in progress, the real FACTS don't seem to matter...Apparently, according to MSM, only white people donate clothes...And, of COURSE they figure out a way to make it bad...

    • @vinitbhatia4685
      @vinitbhatia4685 Před 2 lety +70

      What a ridiculous and racist title- I’m not white but even I find it insulting. Why are these media idiots so quick to use racist slurs against only white people?

    • @nadiahope1175
      @nadiahope1175 Před 2 lety +31

      Because they are pretending to be the heralds of truth and justice, yet they are vipers in the tall grass

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 Před 2 lety +11

      @@vinitbhatia4685 Like another poster previously pointed out; To get CLICKS; They don't care if they are from everyone HATING THIS BS; But, the ad revenue from the clicks themselves...

  • @ScrapPalletMan
    @ScrapPalletMan Před 2 lety +1609

    As an American dumpster diver, I used to think corporations using our dumpsters and landfills as part of their business plan was tragic. The donation stream is far more tragic 😢

    • @donotpursuelubu9179
      @donotpursuelubu9179 Před 2 lety +59

      Thanks. Now I learned two terrible things today.

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 Před 2 lety +17

      Well, its gotta go somewhere.

    • @williamk1452
      @williamk1452 Před 2 lety +190

      @@outkast187 bro, humans need to get off the consumption train.

    • @ScrapPalletMan
      @ScrapPalletMan Před 2 lety +52

      @@outkast187 wrong. Corporations do not need to factor in 1/3 of their inventory gets put into landfills so they can sell 2/3

    • @savetrump9120
      @savetrump9120 Před 2 lety +14

      @BARDLEG it's a lifestyle

  • @JyotiShivaShakti
    @JyotiShivaShakti Před rokem +2

    So sad. I've changed a lot since knowing this. I used to buy clothes etc because I liked it. Now I only buy when I really need it.🧿♥️💔

  • @JamestheChrist
    @JamestheChrist Před 10 měsíci +12

    I fell victim to the fashion industry for the vast majority of my life. What I finally learned is that plain, humble clothing is the best message you can send. You will save resources that you can deploy elsewhere while remaining humble and avoiding pride.

    • @robertafierro5592
      @robertafierro5592 Před 3 měsíci

      Big fast money is being made by hustling and reselling, bit what you're talking about is deep. You are totally correct in your new thinking!

  • @Drelam
    @Drelam Před 2 lety +631

    I wear clothes till they're literally falling apart. Most of my shirts, and shorts are from 2008-2015. Only when my clothes can't be fixed with a sewing kit do I buy anything new.

    • @alastairpearce3078
      @alastairpearce3078 Před 2 lety +5

      My mum still buy clothes…

    • @patrickganly5206
      @patrickganly5206 Před 2 lety +16

      Me too! But my family tell me I smell bad and have stopped speaking to me.😵

    • @joytothworld
      @joytothworld Před 2 lety +4

      What's worst, clothing dry rots after a while.

    • @justlaughatlife8461
      @justlaughatlife8461 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joytothworld what is that ???

    • @justlaughatlife8461
      @justlaughatlife8461 Před 2 lety +19

      I too have a wardrobe full of clothes and I decided a couple years ago to try to wear all of it till it has become too old then I wear it on my allotment or to do dirty jobs in and now watching this I’m feeling proud that I do just that

  • @tanoz1440
    @tanoz1440 Před 2 lety +636

    We never had this problem before manufacturing in China developed. Clothes were much more expensive pre 80’s, far better quality too. Many People made their own clothes back then. The problem is overproduction of cheap goods today, it’s all low quality so you throw it out after a few years.

    • @madg00se
      @madg00se Před 2 lety +20

      Only if you buy that crap in the first place.

    • @ebayerr
      @ebayerr Před 2 lety +6

      Tan Oz: It wouldn't be as bad if they didn't charge so much for the clothes.The re-sellers have to be choosy what they sell because they don't have money to waste.
      They pay more for their used clothes in Ghana than what I pay at the local resale shop here in the states.

    • @jon1jjjjjj
      @jon1jjjjjj Před 2 lety +6

      Almost everything that is manufactured is not recycled and goes into a waste stream of some kind. Some metals and some plastic are recycled. Some fabric is recycled. Most furniture goes in the landfill and torned down buildings including the concrete. Like the twin towers. More people more waste!

    • @twistedspike69
      @twistedspike69 Před 2 lety +75

      Honest question why do we put China first in describing this instead of something more like “Before the USA moved manufacturing to China because it was cheaper”? I actually haven’t considered it before

    • @Wasserkaktus
      @Wasserkaktus Před 2 lety +44

      You can't solely blame the supplier when the consumer demands a product.

  • @cinzabeary5226
    @cinzabeary5226 Před rokem +27

    There's a Big Brothers Big Sisters clothing donation bin near me where I drop off clothes. I learned recently that's one of the organizations Savers/Value Village buys donations from (Yup. The way they describe it is the non-profits are given money for donations. But donating and buying from VV doesn't help non-profits.) All the clothing deemed unsellable here is sent to Africa. Yeesh. I'm donating directly to a shelter from now on.

    • @julie.1081
      @julie.1081 Před rokem +1

      @Cinzabeary - I'm sorry I can't remember the name but, in most cities, there's a NP that gathers professional clothing to help men & women who are trying to get back to or just getting into the job market. Many organizations will train people for the job market but, if you don't have the right wardrobe for even an interview, how can you get the job!? So, if you do have professional clothing (think suits, pant suits, nice dresses, even shoes) that one would where for say an office job or working retail, please talk to people in your city & find an organization that does this kind of help. If you have more (how do I say this right?) a working man or woman's clothes, I'd suggest starting out by calling the closest vo-tech school. There are people in every field that need a little help now days though. Bless you for doing the research about what happens in your area & finding a way to really help those who are trying to make a good life!

    • @teekolinski491
      @teekolinski491 Před rokem

      Even with shelters, a lot of the staff takes the good stuff and leaves the crappy pieces. The same with Goodwill or thrift shops

    • @cinzabeary5226
      @cinzabeary5226 Před rokem

      ​@@teekolinski491 No they don't. Not really, anyways. Employees have to wait 2 days for an item to be on the sales floor before they can buy it. There have been things I've wanted and never got to get because it was already bought by someone by then. What really drives me nuts is that I see the same people in the store, all day, every single day loading up their carts. We recognize them as resellers. They go up and down the aisles picking out whatever they deem worthy of upselling online. However we can't kick them out because they're spending so much at the store. It's been a bit of problem for other thrift stores, though, so much so they are starting to refuse to sell to those they suspect, or have found reselling their purchases on eBay and other auction/collectible sites. Crazy, eh?

  • @SteveSmith-lo2wd
    @SteveSmith-lo2wd Před 7 měsíci +1

    I know this household doesn't contribute to this problem. We grew up appreciating what little we had and we have continued to think that way. When I buy a couple shirts and jeans I wear them till they are rags. Then we use the wore out clothes to clean with. We were given 1 planet yet we have destroyed it.

  • @suckafree6195
    @suckafree6195 Před rokem +627

    I'm so glad I was raised on thrift goods. To this day I find great satisfaction shopping for used clothes and other goods.

    • @renaherbert3142
      @renaherbert3142 Před rokem +21

      I do the same. Especially for work. I even find a few trinkets along the way.

    • @suckafree6195
      @suckafree6195 Před rokem +16

      @@renaherbert3142 it can be a treasure hunt

    • @renaherbert3142
      @renaherbert3142 Před rokem +9

      @@suckafree6195 indeed. Sometimes I get lucky.

    • @suckafree6195
      @suckafree6195 Před rokem +19

      @@SoWhatsNew0 I’ve never had any issues when I buy used clothes. However, I do wash them thoroughly

    • @renaherbert3142
      @renaherbert3142 Před rokem +15

      @@SoWhatsNew0 I usually wash the clothes I buy from the goodwill before wearing them. That's what you should do anyway.

  • @everevelyn1094
    @everevelyn1094 Před 2 lety +171

    I cut up old clothes and use them as stuffing for dog beds. Gave a few to the shelter too, dogs don’t need anything too fancy if it’s comfy!

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 Před 2 lety +10

      that's a solid idea

    • @selsam7064
      @selsam7064 Před 2 lety +5

      @@greenwave819 I was thinking the same thing. Great idea!

    • @chlorine5795
      @chlorine5795 Před 2 lety +5

      i would love to be your dog

    • @nita1stunna1
      @nita1stunna1 Před 2 lety +2

      So I hope you got a website and a business name. Then take and donate some to Ghana

    • @suzipam1234
      @suzipam1234 Před 2 lety +2

      And it’s more appreciated

  • @MrBownze
    @MrBownze Před rokem +3

    Let me get this straight. These people are profiting of donated goods and complaining about it. Got it. Not sorry. I will burn my old clothes from now on.

  • @mikephiri1256
    @mikephiri1256 Před 23 dny +2

    These clothes used to be very good quality now we get trash. Its like it's become big business and people are compromising. I watched a video of how these clothes are collected washed and then put in those bells. So despite not knowing who may have been wearing them you get good clothes. The major problem in Africa is that we fail to produce our own clothes or it's too expensive to produce such that the clothes are too expensive to sell. So the only clothes that come in as new items are usually from china and are the kind of clothes if you wash them 2 to 3 times they start fading and not good. This is totally different from the clothes we usually get from these bells ("dead mans clothes"). Even Fashion Chain stores clothes aren't. So as Africans we need to start producing such clothes our selves and find a way to sell them cheap. This way we will eventually stop importing these "dead man's clothes".

  • @littleseamstress
    @littleseamstress Před 2 lety +314

    a lot of times the donations companies will tell us here in usa that we should donate anything at all and the good clothes will go to people in need and the bad ones will be used to recycle so most people here donating really have good intentions when they donate, they don’t do it thinking their trash clothes will go to a person.

    • @theniceashley84
      @theniceashley84 Před 2 lety +9

      Precisely. Now, what to do 0_0

    • @littleseamstress
      @littleseamstress Před 2 lety +33

      @@sandel3516 its still worth it to send because the good clothes go to people in need but a system needs to be made for the unusable ones to be dealt with in the country of origin and not sent there

    • @randomcallum
      @randomcallum Před 2 lety +5

      same here in China

    • @CC-td7ff
      @CC-td7ff Před 2 lety +33

      @@theniceashley84 I think the next step should be for clothing companies to stop over producing. Over producing by 40% is ridiculous.

    • @rkhosla9982
      @rkhosla9982 Před 2 lety +28

      If you divide the clothes being donated by the number of homeless, it would come to a ton of clothes per person. There is no way it can be used that way.
      The solution - use less clothes. Use them longer. Discard not becausevof fashion but because they are worn out.

  • @prettyinpink123587
    @prettyinpink123587 Před 2 lety +159

    That's Liz!! She was my fashion design professor, I'm so happy to see her out making a positive change in the world. Liz really helped me change the way I view the fast fashion industry.

  • @joanflemmingkendrick1107

    This is heartbreaking 😮😢

  • @crabbiecakes5663
    @crabbiecakes5663 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If cloths were all made from cotton and leather, they wouldn't have this problem.

  • @TDCflyer
    @TDCflyer Před 2 lety +283

    Main problem: Synthetic fibers. They are as bad as any other plastics or even worse.
    Textiles of 100% natural fibers would not cause that kind of "durable toxic waste"
    I remember that back in the days pure cotton or linnen textile was so valuable it was collected seperately for example for the purpose of making high quality paper. You can't do that with synthetic mixed in.

    • @heatherkaye8653
      @heatherkaye8653 Před 2 lety +47

      This is an unspoken topic, because synthetic materials also shed in the wash, so are the cause of so much micro plastic in our environment! The negative impact of synthetic materials is so multifaceted! :(

    • @triciasomogyi5431
      @triciasomogyi5431 Před 2 lety +6

      Exactly

    • @TheRatlord74
      @TheRatlord74 Před 2 lety +26

      Cotton also has a massive environmental impact. It takes massive amounts of water to produce and these days that water is stolen from poor people. The main problem is there are too many people.

    • @franciscorompana2985
      @franciscorompana2985 Před 2 lety +14

      So true. We have recycling in Portugal (Europe) for centuries. Edit: We make rugs from old clothes.

    • @Divinedreamer248
      @Divinedreamer248 Před 2 lety +11

      I wear the same thing everyday and weekend. Y’all think style makes you a better person? I was cloth as old as 10 years back. 2 Suits 5 black shirt 5 white shirt 3 shorts 5 pants 2 which I use daily plenty of socks and underwear. 4 pairs of shoes one pair I use daily another pair for the gym and 3 other pairs that matches my outfits and special occasion clothing. I don’t think to much what I am going to wear because I know what I am going to wear.

  • @d0nKsTaH
    @d0nKsTaH Před 2 lety +59

    I think it was my Grandfather (way back in the 70's and 80's) that had donated a lot of clothes to GOODWILL stores... only to one day discover that almost all of what he donated ended up in the local dump.
    Seems Goodwill stores had the practice of purposely dumping clothes and claiming a loss on their taxes and profiting from it.
    Grandfather wrongly believed the clothes were going to people who needed and could use them. There was nothing wrong with them.
    Never ever trust Goodwill stores. They sell what they can for profit and they toss the rest for profit (thru taxes) also.
    Be careful who you donate your old clothes too... chances are... they won't end up being used... but being... *used*.

    • @MJB2019
      @MJB2019 Před 2 lety

      Do goodwill stores pay tax?

    • @hollycastillo8236
      @hollycastillo8236 Před 2 lety

      Yeah and it sucks because covid made it harder to donate. The actual homeless shelters and Samaritan centers won't accept anything because of covid so goodwill is the only option

    • @cassykershaw2735
      @cassykershaw2735 Před 2 lety

      Go online. N give away to someone else who needs its instead of selling it

    • @JT-un7dc
      @JT-un7dc Před 2 lety +4

      Greedwill.

  • @d_walsh
    @d_walsh Před 3 měsíci +1

    7:39 50 kilos
    8:21 importer risk
    11:54 the day after market
    14:38 to the dump
    19:01 the rains
    23:45 sorting a loss
    24:22 the problem is
    26:35 the real blame

  • @TreasureHuntingNana
    @TreasureHuntingNana Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is terrible and I hope who ever it is that organises these clothes from our end makes sure that they only give them clean good clothes... They are donated for free from us to our local second hand shops.

  • @erikadlloyd5586
    @erikadlloyd5586 Před 2 lety +84

    I still have clothing items that are 20 years old and I was raised to take care of my stuff and not simply discard it.

    • @katybug6572
      @katybug6572 Před 2 lety +6

      Same! I still have some stuff from high school and I’m 30! Lol

    • @mikl3458
      @mikl3458 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes I was born in ‘91 and still have clothes from late 90s-2000s. I’m too big for them but my daughter has been able to wear some

    • @LipSyncLover
      @LipSyncLover Před 2 lety

      @Big Bob I mean that's reasonable though. A lot of us arent skaters. Ever heard of Arbor though? Skateboarding company with clothes made from bamboo. That way when your clothes get destroyed at least they'll biodegrade better than synthetics

    • @edm9704
      @edm9704 Před 2 lety +3

      I have some clothing from high school and I am 74.
      I have plenty of clothing that is 30 years old. I mend things when necessary.
      Since I have clothing, I do not shop for more clothing.

    • @wildamerican2771
      @wildamerican2771 Před 2 lety +1

      Right. I’m a white man and I shop for clothes every 5-10 years and wear the same shit every week.

  • @chlin4600
    @chlin4600 Před 2 lety +185

    When clothes are not good anymore they can be used as cleaning rags. That's why it's always good to just buy clothes you'll actually wear so to not have a ton of clothes

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 Před 2 lety +11

      spot on my friend. even tho I'm white, I use my old clothes for rags

    • @shawnadyment
      @shawnadyment Před 2 lety +11

      @@greenwave819 lol what ? Why bring being white into it.

    • @bonniebester606
      @bonniebester606 Před 2 lety +8

      Once l ripped a bunch up in stripes and made a rug...buttons and all! I can't believe l sold it!

    • @bonniebester606
      @bonniebester606 Před 2 lety

      @@greenwave819 lol...l get it

    • @IceLynne
      @IceLynne Před 2 lety +11

      If my old items aren't good enough to donate I always turn them into rags. Then I use the rags until they're worn out and then they go in the garbage.

  • @b.m.kiambi3389
    @b.m.kiambi3389 Před 9 dny

    That's an eye opener. Dumping disguised as donations.

  • @user-bl1eh2qs9o
    @user-bl1eh2qs9o Před měsícem +1

    If we don't change the way we treat our fellow humans, this world is doomed.

  • @e5m956
    @e5m956 Před 2 lety +130

    When my cloths start to wear out I just use them for shop rags when doing mechanic work lol.

    • @libra8993
      @libra8993 Před 2 lety +17

      scrub the floor, clean the stove, wash windows, wash the car, oil changes ETC ETC ETC

    • @tanyalenmark4194
      @tanyalenmark4194 Před 2 lety +3

      ditto

    • @marisabeltran3084
      @marisabeltran3084 Před 2 lety +3

      Same here, "meaning", we are not contributing to this problem

    • @jotube6147
      @jotube6147 Před 2 lety +1

      I do the same

    • @themudpit621
      @themudpit621 Před 2 lety +2

      synthetic cloth makes terrible cleaning rags. You can only use some clothes for that.

  • @mikkjaggher4221
    @mikkjaggher4221 Před 2 lety +699

    This goes way beyond clothing. Everything made now including food is produced at an unsustainable rates. For every item that sells one is thrown away or wasted or is not used

    • @mufasum
      @mufasum Před 2 lety +10

      That's better than donating it to Africa and destabilizing entire industries abroad.

    • @neelavenketraju9743
      @neelavenketraju9743 Před 2 lety +5

      I don't think it's good to ship the clothes to other countries they should just put it in the bins if they don't need it

    • @slopjawjohnson6380
      @slopjawjohnson6380 Před 2 lety +7

      The us produces twice as much food as it needs. God bless capitalism

    • @nobullshit9721
      @nobullshit9721 Před 2 lety +7

      Honestly not going to lie I don’t care if it goes to Africa if you don’t like the product don’t buy it.

    • @captain_context9991
      @captain_context9991 Před 2 lety +7

      When it comes to food in the civilized world, I think something like a third is actually eaten.

  • @coffeebreak100
    @coffeebreak100 Před rokem +2

    I had naively thought that the stuff that I donate, if they are not fit to use, they would be shredded and made into rags. 😢

  • @adwoasam9237
    @adwoasam9237 Před rokem +7

    Instead of throwing them away, the good parts of the clothes can be cut, dyed (if need be) and sewn into new clothes. Less will be thrown away then. Other parts can go into cleaning cloths for cars and workshops.

    • @vishalmore7154
      @vishalmore7154 Před rokem +1

      Who will give you water , place and labour for all this ? Better get rid of them.

    • @adwoasam9237
      @adwoasam9237 Před rokem

      @@vishalmore7154 It's a good place to start. I know of companies that upcycle stuff like this. Bring ideas not negativity. Where there is a will there is a way.

    • @AC_4643
      @AC_4643 Před rokem

      the point is that labor to produce new clothes is less affordable than used clothes
      which is why they dont produce much if anything

  • @-Epiphany
    @-Epiphany Před 2 lety +47

    At 40 I'm no longer interested in trendy fashion...I invest in pieces that can be worn for yrs...

    • @amberv4223
      @amberv4223 Před 2 lety +2

      I’m going that way too x

    • @Hard31337
      @Hard31337 Před 2 lety +2

      I've become a plain white T guy mainly myself. $1.59 shipped and I always have a new shirt that matches anything on standby. Forget fashion.

  • @arealhauntedhouse4171
    @arealhauntedhouse4171 Před 2 lety +114

    We Need to start making these big corporations accountable for their destruction of this Earth.

    • @someoneunknown1211
      @someoneunknown1211 Před 2 lety +21

      Us too. We don't need to shop that much.

    • @MsNessbit
      @MsNessbit Před 2 lety +1

      @@someoneunknown1211 The amount of pollution caused by single or family consumers is dwarfed by that created by corporations.

    • @penut3805
      @penut3805 Před 2 lety +12

      @@MsNessbit yes but the demand of customers leads to corporations producing more

    • @unclelumbago5777
      @unclelumbago5777 Před 2 lety +3

      @@penut3805 capitalism is the system that encourages that demand. It puts infinite growth of profit as its priority on a planet that isnt infinitely growing. Capitalism is like a cancer cell growing in a human body until it destroys it. All so an extreme minority of people can become billionaires and millionaires. It's why 8 men control more wealth than 3.6 billion of the worlds poor. If that's not an alarm that our system is a complete failure and immoral. Then I don't know what is.

    • @xilencered7788
      @xilencered7788 Před 2 lety +7

      Stop buying their shit. Corporations dont make that much shit unless it sells.

  • @velocity324
    @velocity324 Před 15 dny

    If second hand clothes are creating such a debacle, imagine what your mailed leftovers are doing.

  • @dylanG6683
    @dylanG6683 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I've been buying only second hand clothes for more ten years now I also upcycle most of them so I buy the most unwanted 😅 in Philippines we have the same massive industry but I really don't know where the unsold second hand clothes end up. I always ask the store attendants where they bring unsold items but they simply don't know.

  • @aphiwemagaya3279
    @aphiwemagaya3279 Před 2 lety +35

    The last guy's comment doesn't make sense because the people who donate their clothes don't think it's being shipped to another country. The government from their own country should intervene in this matter because it's not healthy to breathe chemicals from burnt clothes every day, it's sick and a disgrace!

    • @ostapbendervan7874
      @ostapbendervan7874 Před 2 lety +1

      This going on for years
      Nothing new
      Yes we do no not all donated be sold
      IM SURE MORE THAN F WHITE MAN WEAR THOSE CLOTHES

    • @Dan-ih3dm
      @Dan-ih3dm Před 2 lety +4

      Trump was right .Shit hole.Corrupt government and society

    • @donttalktomeyoureannoying8736
      @donttalktomeyoureannoying8736 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Dan-ih3dm damn I really miss Trump. He at least told the truth. People get mad when call it as you see it. The government of this country should intervene

    • @mariamaria2751
      @mariamaria2751 Před 2 měsíci

      I think it would be fine to incinerate clothing , that's fine and the chemicals on it. Why I'm sure it's minimal. Maybe stop making clothes with chemicals. Like everything else

  • @ViNguyen-ck4uy
    @ViNguyen-ck4uy Před 2 lety +84

    I don't understand why people discard perfectly good clothes? A shirt would normally last me 10-15 years. A pair of leather shoes would last me 8 years at a minimum.

    • @rentapasiva
      @rentapasiva Před 2 lety +13

      Sorry to say that it is about marketing in our capitalist countries. It is about selling, selling and selling and people buying, in the long run it is about making money and not caring about the planet.

    • @yan2503
      @yan2503 Před 2 lety

      Only if u still alive. When youre dead?

    • @amazingdollart4676
      @amazingdollart4676 Před 2 lety +3

      Wait what kind of shirts? Cotton ones?

    • @ViNguyen-ck4uy
      @ViNguyen-ck4uy Před 2 lety +4

      @@amazingdollart4676 Yes, it's very well made. once in a few years I need to stitch the hem a bit but that's easily done.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před 2 lety

      Read the title on the video thumbnail, it’s DEAD white man’s clothes. These are the clothes of dead people so they are donated

  • @PortugueseGirl27
    @PortugueseGirl27 Před rokem +2

    It's one of the most ignorant things i ever saw in my life. That is why I will not donate any of my clothes to those " organizations " . Here in my country we say " SÃO POBRES E MAL AGRADECIDOS ! "

  • @kellymurphy6642
    @kellymurphy6642 Před 8 dny

    We, in the western world, have no idea our clothes donated are going to Africa. It’s not like we’re picking and choosing who gets which of the worst clothing.

  • @missshaneezh
    @missshaneezh Před 2 lety +282

    These woman are the strongest I’ve ever seen. I’ll never complain about my job ever again.

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 Před 2 lety +12

      You gotta be strong if you are stupid. These people are 200 years behind because of all the freebies they get. They get just enough to stay ignorant and survive.

    • @miepmaster25
      @miepmaster25 Před 2 lety +7

      They’re beyond dense; who would want to put a child let alone 3 or more into such an environment?

    • @MikeSmith-ch7jv
      @MikeSmith-ch7jv Před 2 lety +5

      @@outkast187 if you are gonna be dumb you have to be tough

    • @moonooze6171
      @moonooze6171 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes you will

    • @biowerks
      @biowerks Před 2 lety +4

      @@moonooze6171 I was going to say the same thing.

  • @erisi236
    @erisi236 Před 2 lety +227

    I don't know about that "men" part, men generally wear the same t-shirt and pants for 5 years minimum

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 Před 2 lety +31

      The sweat shirt that I'm currently wearing is probably 20 years old, I just buy stuff for best, then use it to wear for work when it's starting to get shabby, I have removed a back pocket from a pair of jeans to use as a patch on a knee, some knee holes go from seam to seam. . Apparently a lot of women order stuff from the internet, wear it once, then send it back to get a full refund.

    • @Regimeshifts
      @Regimeshifts Před 2 lety +6

      "man" here, is used for people more generally - come on (its wrong, but you know it)

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 Před 2 lety +43

      I dont donate clothes, I use it, then trash it when its no longer usable. Often using it for polishing rag. But being white, I hear I'm the devil...so must be my fault somehow.

    • @sq1rlsqu4d
      @sq1rlsqu4d Před 2 lety +3

      That's true. If I wore them for 7.5 years then I'd have to wash them three times 😳

    • @steves1015
      @steves1015 Před 2 lety +11

      @Ryoutes Hiraeth surely it is better to wear the clothes until they are worn put and unusable, rather than chucking out perfectly good clothes and buying more?
      Or am i missing the point here?

  • @exosproudmamabear558
    @exosproudmamabear558 Před rokem +3

    It makes me flabbergasted that many clothes go to the trash like this. In my family clothes will be used until the person cant wear it anymore. If the person grown up the clothes will be given to a poor person or a relative with apropriate age.If the clothes are unusable due to wearing out then we will turn it into cleaning cloths. It will only go to trash if none of these things can be done to the clothing. And I dont remember when was the time we threw our clothes to trash before since we usually wear durable clothes.

  • @LAF_YT
    @LAF_YT Před rokem +1

    I used to work with a guy from Ghana, we used to do deliveries. When we stopped for
    Lunch he insisted that we do so by a goodwill, Salvation Army or value village.
    He would come out 30 mins later with bags of clothes.
    I guess he would put them in a barrel and that would go into a shipping container that would goto Ghana where his wife would sell them.
    I don’t know how that works in the finances you would guess the cost of clothes plus shipping would eat into any profit in Ghana 🤷‍♂️

  • @Kkayoodle
    @Kkayoodle Před 2 lety +238

    Def a moment of clarity for me. I'm ashamed to admit how often I forget to be grateful for the life I have, as well as things I can do for others. I can do better. Thanks for the reminder.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Před 2 lety +6

      Yes I had to turn it off when they started fighting over the bale. Say a prayer 🙏🏻

    • @katybug6572
      @katybug6572 Před 2 lety +3

      Amen!💜🙏✌️

    • @theworldwelivein482
      @theworldwelivein482 Před 2 lety +5

      Serious. We all sitting being bums on CZcams and they working all day all week for nothing. They have no retirement plan.

    • @this_boy-gent_is_a_roy-den2660
      @this_boy-gent_is_a_roy-den2660 Před 2 lety +4

      I think that's the main point of the video; be thankful you live where the clothing gets consumed brand new, and not where these poor saps live. Which is at the end of the line for all that crappy used clothing.
      It's a good use of the oceanic shipping industry, though. It helps get all that junky used clothing off of our continents and put elsewhere, so we don't have to deal with it all.
      Capitalism always finds solutions to the problems it creates. This is proof. Naysayers be damned.

    • @thisgame2
      @thisgame2 Před 2 lety +1

      Good we induced more guilt into another passive poodle

  • @normahepburn1643
    @normahepburn1643 Před 2 lety +556

    My grandma used to make patch work quilts, braided rugs and childrens clothes from material of unwanted clothing. There are many uses for second hand clothes that if you use the imagination could save them from going to the land fill site.

    • @karen4you
      @karen4you Před 2 lety +57

      I agree, rugs can be made from the cast offs after washing them. Small stains on ladies' clothes can have embroidery added to hide the area. Cloth tote bags and purses can be made from old clothing and quilt patches. The buyers are not thinking outside the box at all. It is horrible what is happening to the ocean and landfills. They need to make products out of the cloth and resell. In America they make insulation from old clothes as well.

    • @florencelaw1122
      @florencelaw1122 Před 2 lety +9

      My late great grandma used to do that too....

    • @SharonPiano8
      @SharonPiano8 Před 2 lety +55

      The younger generation don't know how to sew anymore. Even some of the older generation can't sew on a button. They stopped teaching home economics and besides, there was a turning point where making your own clothes at home became more expensive than buying them.

    • @cariwaldick4898
      @cariwaldick4898 Před 2 lety +53

      @@karen4you I partly agree, these are good ideas to use the clothes. I disagree that it's their problem. It's OUR problem. They're getting more clothes in by the shipload, than they have a market or space for. The problem starts on our end. If WE would reuse our own cast-offs, sew quilts, weave rugs, repair tears, fix zippers, replace buttons, etc., and stop buying so much, we could be part of the solution. I sew and quilt, and I was looking at those jackets as good patchwork fabric--not trash.
      If only there was a way to send them sewing machines, embroidery machines, fabric dye, thread, weaving looms, and what they'd need to make a business out of reclaimed clothing, they could have a reliable income, and save some of the waste from polluting their environment.

    • @karen4you
      @karen4you Před 2 lety +14

      @@cariwaldick4898 I don't buy much for clothes and do remake or use all the fabric even sock material. None of mine goes to the landfill. The buyers of the clothes there are being taken advantage of with things they can't sell. Here there is a place that makes insulation out of old clothes so none is being sold off in my area that I know about. I'm older and don't need fast fashion. I love recycling, even melting down number 2 plastic for stepping stones for the yard.

  • @pritam6903
    @pritam6903 Před rokem +1

    The last moment where the kids and even the teachers where happy and dancing 💕

  • @NinaRoad
    @NinaRoad Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much!!!

  • @paulafranciscac2787
    @paulafranciscac2787 Před rokem +193

    It is heartbreaking. The same is happening in the desert of Atacama in Chile. Towers of unwanted clothes. Stores like Zara, H& M, Forever 21 should be fined. They are responsable for these tragedy. People should be educated. Overbuying has repercussions all over the world. People in wealthy countries don't know how to fix clothes anymore. Skill such as hemming a skirt, replacing a button, or replacing an elastic band appear to be forgotten.

    • @diegoperez2090
      @diegoperez2090 Před rokem +8

      You do realize that a lot of people dont want to wear the same clothes for a long time. Luckily for poor countries they can get cheap clothes from rich countries.

    • @antinatalist9995
      @antinatalist9995 Před rokem +29

      @@diegoperez2090 Is that because they get bored of the clothes or because they feel under pressure to wear what the power elites deem to be fashionable the next season?

    • @mja2239
      @mja2239 Před rokem +5

      Don't "they" have eyes and brains to see and decide for themselves after watching both the fast fashion promoters and detractors?

    • @a.f.7246
      @a.f.7246 Před rokem +4

      Or putting in a new zipper

    • @Ensensu2
      @Ensensu2 Před rokem +3

      Or darning the tiniest of holes in a sock or a shirt.

  • @Michael-si7gy
    @Michael-si7gy Před rokem +703

    I am in Nigeria, West Africa, everything in this documentary is so true. I never knew those clothes were actually donated. Yet we buy them here too as well. May God help us in Africa.

    • @suziecreamcheese211
      @suziecreamcheese211 Před rokem +79

      I was thinking the same thing, how can clothes that were donated to be given free to all the people be taken and sold by a few?

    • @nobodyspecial4702
      @nobodyspecial4702 Před rokem +42

      @@suziecreamcheese211 Wherever you donated them to, they all sell them to the "needy" not give them away. They just happen to beselling them to the needy in Africa.

    • @ruthhaller276
      @ruthhaller276 Před rokem +46

      @@WorldIn360channel I now scan what my clothing is made of
      I avoid polyester like the plague ad it is indestructible. also I wear my clothes long as possible. even cheap clothes last a long if taken care of properly and with care. rhh

    • @RealityStand
      @RealityStand Před rokem +37

      Did you ask who paid for the shipping to Africa and other expenses? It was donated free by people but people brought it to Africa so they spent money.

    • @blazefairchild465
      @blazefairchild465 Před rokem +25

      @@ruthhaller276 how is the milk , cheese, & meat from the goats ,sheep and cattle who munch on mixed threaded items at the top of the garbage pile ?

  • @northshorelight35
    @northshorelight35 Před rokem

    This is an eye opener. I've been going minimalist for years now and yet, there must be a better way for when I need to discard items.

  • @LucillaGormandy
    @LucillaGormandy Před 2 měsíci +1

    Also the unwanted clothing can be disinfected washed and grinded in a machine to make cheap mattresses stuffings. Your trash is wealth. Employment for the needy, with good pay to sustain the employees and their families. May God Bless you

  • @seancamacho4273
    @seancamacho4273 Před 2 lety +69

    I don’t even think about complaining about my life these days. Every one day that passes is a gift to me now and I live feeling extremely thankful knowing that way too many places on this planet are filled with daily hardships. I’m so lucky I can’t even comprehend it sometimes.

    • @candice44441
      @candice44441 Před 2 lety +5

      I wouldn't feel so lucky. Just because this happens in other parts of the world it doesn't mean it's not going to affect you. Clearly a lot of countries are contributing to the waste and we are seeing the consequences in global warming and ocean contamination.

    • @maryluwhittle6366
      @maryluwhittle6366 Před 2 lety +12

      @@candice44441 I think he's talking about basic things--like in some places they don't have basic sewer and toliets....or a sanitation system with garbage bags in the street. It's like that in the slums in India. I talk to my son about other places in the world and we watch videos about them because I want him to appreciate everything he has and understand how fortunate he is.

    • @ostapbendervan7874
      @ostapbendervan7874 Před 2 lety +1

      Use condoms
      I comprehend very well
      I spent $8,000 on CHANDALIER must I feel apathetic. Eh I don't have 5 kids

    • @seancamacho4273
      @seancamacho4273 Před 2 lety +1

      @@candice44441 yeah well. Now. Today. I woke up alive. Family is healthy. I took a shit in my own toilet. Ate Cocoa Puffs. Then went and cut hair. All without a single worry. I feel extremely lucky. CANDICE.
      Edit: compared to so many other places on this planet that have daily DAILY hardships. Somewhere down the line it might affect me. But right now it sure doesn’t.

    • @seancamacho4273
      @seancamacho4273 Před 2 lety

      @@maryluwhittle6366 you’re right on the money marylu.

  • @sk.n.9302
    @sk.n.9302 Před 2 lety +45

    You used to buy just what you needed, prices were more expensive, but clothes were much better quality. Now it’s just buy, use, throw away.

  • @mandymullett1615
    @mandymullett1615 Před rokem +2

    A very informative documentary, thank you. Where ever possible, I purchase only second hand clothing, and recycle as much as is possible. I make considered purchases and do not subscribe to fast fashion. We are killing the planet

  • @magzb2642
    @magzb2642 Před rokem +1

    It beggars belief that for all the years aid has flooded to Africa there's still a problem. I know a man from Ghana who lives in the UK, he has a UK partner, they've 3 children. He has another wife or two in Ghana whose children arrive in the UK and get educated. He's building a large house in Ghana and he takes van loads of stuff there regularly.

  • @SjaakSchulteis
    @SjaakSchulteis Před 2 lety +110

    Amazing, I didn't know that this happened with clothes.
    And here I thought I'm not normal. I usually wear my clothes until it is not possible to wear them anymore and even then I use them as a cleaning cloth. I have shirts that are over twenty years old and I can't remember the last time I bought some new clothes. Admitted, I'm not young anymore and I live in the countryside. The pressure on something new was always there when I lived in a city. My wife changes her clothes a lot, but whatever she gives away is clean. There is a big second hand clothing market here in Thailand where I live.
    I agree what the man says, that donation of clothes should be sorted out in the country where it comes from. If you donate, it should be in good condition and clean. I agree, it is an insult to the people you are giving it too, if your clothes are full of stains or are broken. Then it is better to get rid of it in your own country.

    • @SaneAsylum
      @SaneAsylum Před 2 lety +1

      Same.

    • @mad-cyantist3159
      @mad-cyantist3159 Před 2 lety +1

      Same here brother. Keep on keeping on.

    • @victorclabaugh1373
      @victorclabaugh1373 Před 2 lety +1

      I do the same my old clothes are either donated or turn my clothes to rags. I get clothes from the used clothes shop most of the time so I donate the good stuff I no longer need. It's sad when I see people throwing good clothes in trash.

    • @grandwonder5858
      @grandwonder5858 Před 2 lety

      The exploits of the white man never ends!

    • @victorclabaugh1373
      @victorclabaugh1373 Před 2 lety

      @Fonxa_Ltd0007 not exactly. It starts as an charitable act then over time people stop caring and just send whatever and I'm sure money is involved as well. It's to much being sent and not checking it out before hand. Laziness in my opinion. What we need is stop giving as much and help these people find some means of production of their own. Those clothes are for people with nothing not to be resold.

  • @Tammissa
    @Tammissa Před 2 lety +296

    Watching the people fight over the clothes was horrific. And the environmental distraction is devastating.

    • @ziruiwang4806
      @ziruiwang4806 Před 2 lety +6

      Society

    • @josephwinkler4863
      @josephwinkler4863 Před 2 lety +26

      At least they’re all white man’s clothes so that no one else has to take responsibility

    • @CrystalRicotta
      @CrystalRicotta Před 2 lety +11

      They’re fighting because of the economic despair, but yes it’s sad to watch.

    • @yushamush9849
      @yushamush9849 Před 2 lety +33

      Reminded me of Black Friday sales

    • @twizz420
      @twizz420 Před 2 lety +7

      Environmental distraction... Could be a band name

  • @karmaisreal9094
    @karmaisreal9094 Před 9 měsíci +1

    We live in one world. If it effects others it will eventually effect us on the other side as well.

  • @Vazlist
    @Vazlist Před 3 měsíci +1

    Wow. This is insane. I hardly ever buy any new clothes. Do people really keep on buying clothes just.. because?

  • @kizpaws
    @kizpaws Před 2 lety +45

    I mainly shop at second hand stores. When my clothes have lived out their life, I use the fabric to make patchwork quilts, cushions, doll dresses, etc.
    I save all my sewing scraps in a box, then when there is enough to stuff a cushion/pillow, I make a pillow bag, stuff it with the scraps, and voila no waste.
    Seeing this video is a real eye opener ... makes you so sad to see our planet in yet another predicament.

    • @valkyrie1066
      @valkyrie1066 Před 2 lety

      I loved my rag pillow. I'm a stomach sleeper so I like a firm, flat pillow, commercial ones are so puffy they wrap around your face. I still know how to darn a sock, but admittedly do it less when you buy them by the dozen.

    • @SouthernBelleReviews
      @SouthernBelleReviews Před 2 lety

      I'm still wearing things from when I was 15 and 16 years old... I'm almost 29. I will wear it until it has holes and then I will sew those holes. I grew up in a town of extreme poverty, and I was taught the values of using what you had. I met many snotty kids who made fun of me in school. I usually stay to myself even to this day. Fast fashion makes no sense to me. I get most everything from thrift stores and I wear it until there's no thread left. If I've gotten a brand new article of clothing, it will last me the rest of my life. Everything I have is precious to me.

  • @gargwinvinesnake6961
    @gargwinvinesnake6961 Před 2 lety +234

    Makes me feel better about my 14 year old t-shirt. It's still wearable so no need to replace it. When I do event need to replace it, sadly the new one likely won't be manufactured to last as long.

    • @angelxtasy
      @angelxtasy Před 2 lety +12

      Agree much, now i dont feel so bad about keeping some favorite pieces of Clothing for many years now.

    • @maureen8930
      @maureen8930 Před 2 lety

      Are the people allowed to burn the clothes in one pile at a time ??? 🙏

    • @decoyakiba6804
      @decoyakiba6804 Před 2 lety +1

      I'll be honest. That is a bit weird lol. Power to you I guess tho

    • @orangerightgold7512
      @orangerightgold7512 Před 2 lety +10

      Keep them old clothes my friend, they dont make clothes with the same quality anymore, shirts dont last longer than a year nowadays.

    • @sivhengu
      @sivhengu Před 2 lety +5

      I still wear my 15 years old clothes , same as shoes! If you choose the basic designs, and colors, you can wear them forever. The classic ones always in style forever! Not run after the fad or seasonal! Get compliments all the time! GW Boutique does miracle! AKa GoodWill!

  • @islandwanderer1173
    @islandwanderer1173 Před rokem +1

    I remember hearing the calls to prayer when I was deployed to Iraq. That meant we would get about 10 mins of peace..
    Some of those guys really get into it too.. There was one guy, who sang the prayer call, and it was quite amazing..

  • @frankcampeau1033
    @frankcampeau1033 Před rokem +2

    Its simple stop donating them to their ungrateful people

  • @autumnflower3287
    @autumnflower3287 Před 2 lety +214

    When I was raising my nine kids we had a house fire, my kids lost all of their clothes, people started dumping off garbage bags full of moldy, dirty clothes, like they were doing us some favor, they would just leave them without asking if we even wanted them, I had to sort out anything usable from those bags and find some way to get the tons of clothes to the dump and somehow to pay to discard them there. I was a single divorced mom raising nine children not on welfare, but we struggled so hard financially, it was heart-breaking how insensitive people were who did that to us. I can relate to how these people feel, so sad.

    • @perlacazares8885
      @perlacazares8885 Před 2 lety +12

      You should had out a sign no dumping clothes

    • @catherinepoole9485
      @catherinepoole9485 Před 2 lety +25

      Wow. That is horrible. Sorry you had to go through that.

    • @jean6453
      @jean6453 Před 2 lety +16

      Autumn I've seen that happen to someone before, people can be so rude and clueless.

    • @barrytelesford5265
      @barrytelesford5265 Před 2 lety

      where do you live. (country or state)

    • @bobsworld2351
      @bobsworld2351 Před 2 lety +14

      Well damn they thought they were doing you a favor!! You have a house fire kids had no clothes and they left you stuff to go through no thankfulness at all.

  • @cynthiadiaz7533
    @cynthiadiaz7533 Před 2 lety +260

    Interestingly when I was last in Ghana nobody there called them 'Dead white men's clothes' except for reporters or activists who were looking for a 'cause'.

    • @electricdreams9446
      @electricdreams9446 Před 2 lety +25

      i think it's appalling

    • @TheFreedomGypsy
      @TheFreedomGypsy Před 2 lety +12

      Thank you!

    • @wildamerican2771
      @wildamerican2771 Před 2 lety +38

      The fact that this is a headline by a major corporation proves they will be racist if you let them…

    • @madden12
      @madden12 Před 2 lety +16

      @Red Mustang 1976 they make it seems like there are only white people in Europe, Australia, USA...

    • @BarryAllen-xg4pj
      @BarryAllen-xg4pj Před 2 lety +16

      "Get whitey" ABCIA NBCIA CIABS MSNBCIA CIANN

  • @B.Pa.
    @B.Pa. Před 4 měsíci +1

    In meiner Kinderzeit ( 60iger Jahre) war es üblich, gute gebrauchte Kleidung, insbesondere Kinderkleidung innerhalb der damals größeren Familie weiterzugeben. Man hatte natürlich auch neue Kleidung, aber nicht so viel. Damals hat man auch noch Kleidung ausgebessert oder umgenäht für einen anderen Zweck. Man brauchte keine Altkleidersammlung. Das geht aber nur mit Kleidung aus gutem Material. Ich bin wirklich entsetzt, wenn ich diese Dokumentation sehe.

  • @robfromvan
    @robfromvan Před 3 měsíci

    The fact that these Africans are actually rejecting many of these donated clothes proves living standards are improving in Africa. If they weren’t they wouldn’t reject them and would wear any scrap of clothing they could find.