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by jacquesm
3977 days ago
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> Perhaps this is my inner Ultra-American speaking, but I think it's perfectly fine for people to feel aligned, even owned, by their brands. I strongly disagree with that. Brands should not 'own people', brands should be at best an indicator of what you can expect from a product quality or service wise. And what's being American (Ultra-American??) got to do with it? > Hell, look around you. How many items do you see that were NOT made by a corporation? That does not have anything to do with it. Having corporations produce goods is fine, having them try to hack our brains is not. > The brands I choose are a reflection of my personality. Please read 'The Space Merchants', one of my favorite books which is a frontal assault on that one sentence. |
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I've not read 'The Space Merchants' but I wonder how it assaults that sentence as I believe it is generally true. That's not to say that your chosen brands are a full representation of your personality, but they certainly cover a lot of it.
I shop at Albert Heijn, even though there's an Aldi, Lidle and Jumbo at roughly the same distance from my house. I'm sure that will tell you all sorts of things about my personality. Not that all people who go there are the same, but it'll still tell you something about me. Same goes for that my workstation runs Linux, and my laptop is a Mac (with dual boot linux).
I don't think now you know exactly what kind of person I am, but they are partial reflections of my personality. What I tolerate, and what I don't. What I prefer and what I disdain.