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“Unapologetically Me: A reflection on Body, Gender and Acceptance”
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BREAKING CHAINS, UNITE TO IGNITE, AN ILLUMINATING PATH TO A DRUG-FREE LIFE

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Global Fashion’s Dirty Secret: How Fast Fashion Exploits Cultures and Communities
In an era where fashion trends change overnight and clothes can be ordered with a few taps, fast fashion seems like a dream. Cheap, accessible, and always "on trend" — what’s not to love? But beneath the racks of affordable clothes lies a harsh reality: fast fashion thrives on cultural exploitation and systemic inequality. Behind each patterned top or tribal-print skirt is often a story of stolen culture, underpaid labor, and environmental destruction.
Fast fashion brands frequently draw "inspiration" from traditional clothing around the world — without credit, compensation, or context. Indigenous beadwork, African prints, South Asian embroidery, and Native American headdresses are often reproduced in mass quantities for profit. These items are stripped of their cultural significance and marketed as exotic trends. For instance, in 2021, Urban Outfitters faced backlash for selling items labeled as "Navajo" without permission from the Navajo Nation. The company was sued for trademark infringement, a rare case where legal action highlighted the deep-rooted issues of cultural exploitation in fashion (Jones, 2021). Similarly, luxury and fast fashion brands alike have mimicked traditional Mexican textiles and patterns, often sidelining the artisans who created them. Cultural elements are not “aesthetic.” They are part of identity, history, and resistance. When large corporations profit from them without acknowledgment or collaboration, it perpetuates a system that benefits the powerful while silencing the marginalized.
Fast fashion’s production pipeline is also built on the backs of vulnerable workers, most of them women in developing countries. Countries like Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, and Cambodia are popular manufacturing hubs due to their cheap labor and minimal regulations. Workers in these countries are often paid far below living wages, work in unsafe conditions, and lack basic labor rights. A tragic example is the Rana Plaza collapse in 2013, which killed over 1,100 garment workers in Bangladesh. The factory was producing clothes for major global brands, highlighting the direct connection between Western demand for cheap clothing and unsafe labor practices abroad (International Labor Rights Forum, 2022). While some companies promised reforms after the tragedy, progress has been slow and inconsistent. Despite contributing billions to the global economy, garment workers in the Global South remain impoverished. According to the Asia Floor Wage Alliance (2023), many workers in fast fashion supply chains earn only 20–30% of what they need to support a family. This economic disparity is a form of modern-day colonialism — Western countries continue to benefit from the cheap labor of the Global South without sharing the profits or improving working conditions.
Fast fashion not only harms people during production — it also impacts communities through waste. Every year, 92 million tons of textile waste are generated globally (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2020). While Western consumers discard clothing quickly, many of these garments end up in landfills or are dumped in African and Asian countries, where they clog ecosystems and harm local economies. In Ghana’s capital, Accra, over 15 million used garments arrive weekly, mostly from the Global North. Many are of such poor quality that they’re thrown away immediately, creating mountains of textile waste that pollute waterways and communities (OR Foundation, 2023). This "waste colonialism" forces developing countries to deal with the consequences of overconsumption they did not create.
What can be done to combat the exploitation within the fast fashion industry? First, supporting ethical brands is key. Shop from brands that are transparent about their sourcing, pay fair wages, and collaborate with artisans respectfully. Platforms like Good On You and Fashion Revolution offer helpful guides and brand ratings. Second, respect cultural boundaries by avoiding the use of sacred symbols (like bindis or headdresses) as fashion statements and instead buying directly from creators or businesses run by people from those cultures. Ethical consumerism is about asking the question: Am I honoring or appropriating? Third, embracing slow fashion is crucial. Buy less and wear more — slow fashion values quality over quantity. Thrift, repair, and rewear. Each garment reused is a blow against the fast fashion machine. Finally, advocate for policy change by supporting legislation that enforces fair labor practices, protects Indigenous intellectual property, and penalizes environmental violations.
Fast fashion isn’t just a personal choice — it’s a global issue. It reflects systems of power, inequality, and exploitation that stretch from factory floors in Dhaka to storefronts in New York. To be a responsible global citizen, we must look beyond price tags and trends and recognize the true cost of the clothes we wear. Fashion can be beautiful, but only if it’s rooted in respect — for people, cultures, and the planet.
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