The Unsuitablog

Exposing Ethical Hypocrites Everywhere!

Persil : Dirt Is Good For Business

Posted by keith on August 8th, 2008

Persil Business

Children should get out more; they need to discover the world for themselves, connect with this world and understand that life does not exist in a bubble of technology or commerce. In fact, under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, article 31 states:

1. States Parties recognize the right of the child to rest and leisure, to engage in play and recreational activities appropriate to the age of the child and to participate freely in cultural life and the arts.

2. States Parties shall respect and promote the right of the child to participate fully in cultural and artistic life and shall encourage the provision of appropriate and equal opportunities for cultural, artistic, recreational and leisure activity.

Pretty unequivocal. In the UK (for this is the focus of this article), a charity called Playday, also have this to say:

– All children need opportunities to take their own risks when playing; they need and want challenge, excitement and uncertainty in play.
– Through play, children can learn how to manage challenge and risk for themselves in everyday situations.
– Opportunities for children to take risks while playing are reducing, as increasingly health and safety considerations are impacting on children’s play.
– Adults should provide for children and young people to have adventurous play opportunities.

Which reinforces the UN Convention in a very positive way. In short, children should be playing as much as possible, without interference.

Interestingly, Article 32 of the UN Convention says the following:

1. States Parties recognize the right of the child to be protected from economic exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental, spiritual, moral or social development.

For a while now Persil, or rather the manufacturer of this detergent, Unilever, have been running a campaign called “Dirt Is Good”, the implication being that it doesn’t matter how much mess kids get into, it’s all part of being a child. Of course, by running a campaign that links such a positive message with what is — if we are being perfectly honest here — a bunch of cleaning chemicals, Unilever get big kudos for their positive attitude but, more importantly for them, get big sales.

Is this child exploitation? According to the UN Convention Article 32 any such exploitation would be completely unacceptable — and while this is bread and butter to a huge corporation, a charity like Playday really should know better than to let commercial interests get in the way of good clean fun.

Then there is this list

Pentasodium Triphosphate Builder
Sodium Silicoaluminate Builder
Sodium Carbonate Peroxide Oxidising Agent
Sodium Dodecylbenzenesulfonate Surfactant
Aqua Bulking Agent
Sodium Carbonate Buffering Agent
C12-15 Pareth-7 Surfactant
Sodium Acetate Tablet Disintegrant
Tetraacetyl Ethylene Diamine Oxidising Agent
Sodium Silicate Builder
Sodium Sulfate Bulking Agent
Sodium Stearate Surfactant
Ethylene Diamine Tetra Methylene Phosphonic Acid Ca/Na salt Sequestrant
Maize Starch Bulking Agent
Parfum Fragrance
Citric Acid Builder
Cellulose Gum Anti-redeposition Agent
Dimorpholinopyridazinone Optical Brightener
PVP Dye Transfer Inhibitor
Sodium Acrylic Acid/MA Copolymer Structurant
Simethicone Antifoaming Agent
Sodium Chloride Bulking Agent
Sodium Bentonite Softness Extender
Sodium Polyacrylate Structurant
Glyceryl Stearate Emulsifier
Protease Enzyme
Sodium Polyaryl Sulfonate Surfactant
Amylase Enzyme
Lipase Enzyme
CI 74160 Colourant

That is the full ingredient list for the best selling form of Persil, the biological liquid. I’m not going to go into the chemistry of this list, but it would be fair to say that to blindly go into a trusting relationship with this product, containing all of these substances — whether as a parent, charity or most importantly, a child who usually has no choice over what their clothes are washed in and what substances pour into the waste water system and eventually into rivers, lakes and seas — is pure folly.

Persil is a commercial product; it exists to make money for business. Never forget that.

5 Responses to “Persil : Dirt Is Good For Business”

  1. Matt Fontaine Says:

    Hi Keith!

    I too, like most who visit this site, am constantly angered by the corporations that pollute and often unknowingly implicate consumers like myself. It seems a tragedy that despite the high level of education and access to information we enjoy in the west the organizations we fear the most and trust the least are seemingly at the reigns. Sometimes resistance can feel almost futile to the tide of unethical and enviromentally unfriendly consumerism that pervades our society, and windows of hope appear few and far between. This site is, for me, an indispensible tool that aids me to live my life in the way I feel I should and I often scour the good news section for a little something to cheer me up. I just wish sometimes that I could find more sources that could help me to find alternatives – To get to the point, Keith. Are there any good, reliable sites that you know of that could help to inform by buying decisions and tell me which products I should use rather than which I shouldn’t. It could certainly make my life a bit easier but mainly it could even help to stop me moaning and boring all my friends to death at such regular intervals like i’ve just done here.
    Thank you for the great site!

    Yours sincerely
    M Fontaine

  2. keith Says:

    Hi Matt

    Thanks for the thoughtful comment and nice words. Glad I can be of help.

    I’ve tried to answer your question as best I can at http://thesietch.org/mysietch/keith/2008/08/27/what-to-buyor-not/

    So rather than answer your friends with “Well, you could try going to x shop, or buying y product”, the first thing to say is: “Why do you need to buy one?” That always puts the cat amongst the pigeons.

    K.

  3. Amber Says:

    Hi Keith,
    I really enjoy the Unsuitablog, the Earth Blog and your posts on the Sietch. I caught this post recently and out of curiosity I started looking up many of the ingredients on the list, online. From what I can tell, aside from the colourant, most of the ingredients are forms of salts and enzymes (I recognised the enzymes as the same as those in the digestive enzymes I sometimes take), which led me to wonder, is this product really environmentally unfriendly? I don’t know anything about chemistry, so perhaps when these substance are mixed, their combined effects are damaging? Or maybe the different kinds of sodium are toxic? Anyway, I was hoping you might be able to shed some light on this for me!
    Thanks,
    Amber

  4. keith Says:

    Hi Amber, glad you like what I do – it’s always nice to hear.

    It’s the surfactants (detergents) that cause most of the problems, as they are poisonous to marine life; but the optical brighteners are also toxic. The top listed (largest amount) surfactant is benzene-based, which is especially toxic to shellfish. I certainly wouldn’t be happy letting my children anywhere near the waste water this product produces.

    Cheers

    Keith

  5. Amber Says:

    Hi Keith,
    Thank you for taking the time to answer my question! I appreciate the information. Now I know more about what to be aware of and why, in the products I buy.
    All the best,
    Amber

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