What does /fa/ think about brands politicising their clothing? Is it a good marketing strategy? Does it make a brand more interesting? Do you also hate cucks?
>>12170078
Cheap marketing unless they actually tackle the issues in the clothing, in shows and such.
Basically just trying to sell their shit under some popular movement by doing stuff like this.
>Do you also hate cucks?
Well, I definitely hate edgy internet 19 year olds who are so of void of perspective, insight and independent thought that they just parrot insufferable catchall buzzwords with their shit eating "duuuude" smirk on.
Get bent you fucking germ.
>>12170137
why are you this upset at words on a computer screen?
Its trend hopping garbage when most brands do it. I find it somewhat tasteless and would never wear a political piece. Hits me similarly to wearing nerdy shit.
>>12170151
I personally think think there are some ways you can do it right, but I've hardly seen any. My main issue with it is that it's an awful tactic as I do not want to financially support brands that shill for causes I think are bad.
A trend that goes along with everything else. In a few years when everyone is over this shit it'll go back to being clothing for clothing sake.
I don't know about anyone else but this whole era of anyone being a political activists because they have a social media account just cheapens movements imo.
I can see in a few years people getting tired of these people and their pushy attitude and us getting a return of 80s style excess and assholism or a return of 90s style nihilism and it being cool to be apolotitical again.
I'm done with politics myself, I can't do shit about it and I have no desire to become an activist or god forbid, a politician.
Does the clothing brand's politics reflect /pol/?
If yes then it's a good thing.
If no then it's the worst thing to ever happen to humanity.
>>12170078
i dont buy from cucked brands if i can help it
e.g. apolis. their name is fucking stupid.
>>12170137
>shit eating
no you're thinking of antifa
>>12170078
Dumbest move most can make. Politicizing shit generally leads to either alienating a portion of you consumer base or gradually turning off people from the brand when it backfires and the issue becomes irrelevant