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Victoria's Dirty Secret
By
Josh Mahan
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The
cat is out of the bag, Victoria has a dirty,
dirty secret. The pretty pages of her catalogues are printed on the
pulp of Canada’s Boreal
forest, one the largest wildernesses left in the world. And we’re not
talking
just a couple of glossy pages here, folks. Over one million Victoria’s Secret
magazines are shipped out to consumers every day. 395 million per year.
Today
in Missoula a group of
protesters gathered at Victoria’s Secret in
the Southgate Mall to try to convince the lingerie powerhouse to
maximize post-consumer
recycled content in their catalogues, as well as reduce their paper
usage in
general. The protest was the only one in Montana, but it was synchronized
with 99 other protests at Victoria’s Secret
locations across the country.
Holding
signs with phrases like, “Forest Destruction Is Not Sexy” and handing
out
fliers of supermodels with chainsaws, the Missoula group engaged
shoppers, but also drew the ire of mall security guards. They were
particularly
upset with Jake Kreilick’s bladeless chainsaw, though it did go well
with his
zebra-striped nightie. Nevertheless the crew held tight and insisted
upon a right
to point a critical finger at the lingerie superpower.
Jeanette
Russell of the Missoula-based National Forest Protection Alliance said,
“It’s
not very sexy to know that Victoria’s Secret
catalogues contain paper made from one of the largest wilderness areas
in the
world. Customers don’t feel good about supporting businesses that are
leaders
in forest destruction, whether it’s in the Boreal or on our national
forests
here in the U.S.”
Ted
Fellman of the Native Forest Network was also on hand. “Our endangered
forests
are far more valuable providing critical wildlife habitat, clean water,
and
hunting and fishing opportunities, than they are cut down for cheap
throwaway
products such as Victoria’s Secret
catalogues.”
A
bus load of school kids from Sussex were on hand to
study freedom of speech in motion. Unfortunately the mall was not the
best
venue to see these rights fully exercised, as it is private property.
City
police arrived eventually and politely dispersed the crowd and took
down the
cardboard signs. But not before a point was made.
Come
on Victoria’s Secret, and corporate America, wake up! In the era of the
internet and fiber alternatives to tree pulp it is ridiculous to
liquidate one
of the world’s last true great forests for a product that will be in
the
landfill within weeks. One day soon we’ll have to put a serious check
on our
resource consumption. Let’s hope we have forests like the Boreal around
when
that happens.
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