butterfly75
Rough_Rock
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2006
- Messages
- 15
Let me see if i understand your position?Date: 5/24/2006 12:07:43 AM
Author:julieinthecity
I have been thinking about Canadian diamonds lately since I want to avoid conflict diamonds at all costs. Has anyone bought one or know of any good places to buy Canadian diamonds?
Thanks.
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By all means there are fine people in Canada who both need and deserve your business but I’m with Garry that this is not a solution to the problem of ‘conflict diamonds’. One of the arguments regularly presented for buying Canadian merchandise is that it avoids the issue of African politics and the resultant diamonds are therefore morally superior to stones mined outside of Canada. If this is the justification, it’s ill founded and I think it’s what Garry is objecting to.
I would like to point out that none of the Canadian diamond companies that I’ve seen take this position. They don’t denigrate African stones and they don’t encourage a boycott of them. They promote their own goods on their own merits. The problem is coming from the merchants and the media.
All economic activity supports a complex web of people and has a set of tradeoffs in the form environment and social issues. Balancing these topics is one of the primary responsibilities of governments and, as has been pointed out, some governments are better at it than others. The division of proceeds between the labor force, management, equipment suppliers, fuel suppliers, shippers, bankers, graders, arbitragers, security, tax collectors and the myriad of other participants is different for every mine and distribution channel. Blanketly boycotting all Africa products does not, and cannot, help when this get’s out of whack and becomes exploitive. To help the plight of African workers, or workers anywhere else for that matter, it’s necessary to reward what you want to encourage and to penalize those who behave badly. What could an African miner, or mine operator, or mining company or country do to earn your business? An effective consumer pressure program will make it clear what consumers want, encourage suppliers to do that, reward those who do it, and penalizes those who don’t. A continentwide boycott has the opposite effect. It leaves the mining companies in the position of selling only to people who care for nothing other than price and leaves them prey to those are willing to cut prices at any cost. The companies/countries that resist find themselves losing market share to those with fewer scruples. They must compromise or close where closing means massive unemployment for the very workers it supposedly helps and provides exactly the avenue required for the criminals and pirates to take over operations. It makes the situation worse, not better.
This thread has had some wise and thoughtful posts.Date: 5/24/2006 10:07:47 AM
Author: portoar
Garry, I''m not sure you''re making your case. I still don''t understand why Canadian diamonds make you ''sick.'' If what Galateia says is true, that First Nation peoples are gaining employment in the Canadian diamond mines, well, isn''t that helping to put money into the hands of impoverished people too?
People pay premiums for diamonds all the time -- when they go to a B&M, when they buy the Tiffany, Hearts on Fire, Eighternity names, Canadian origin, etc. Sometimes the premium is paid out of ignorance, sometimes it is paid with eyes wide open because the ''thing'' the buyer is paying the premium for has a value to the buyer -- whether it''s a name and implied standard of quality behind the name, customer service, or something else. I don''t know that we say it''s ''sick'' when people go to Tiffanys. (Although I admit to feeling a little sick when I think I considered an HOF diamond).
I feel a little skeptical that my purchase of an African diamond might actually trickle down and benefit some impoverished native. The connection seems remote to me. Many of us probably have an ingrained perception (albeit possibly false) that our support of the African diamond industry ultimately fuels strife-ridden and corrupt governments. I don''t know that my first thought is ''buy an African diamond -- educate a peasant!''
Portoar,Date: 5/24/2006 3:04:43 PM
Author: portoar
Neil, that was a thoughtful post, I wish I''d said it myself. This diamond source issue must really bother those of you who are directly in the business and have ready access to more fact that the rest of us, who deal in perception.
I guess I''m just bothered by the all out sarcasm that is trotted out anytime someone expresses concern about conflict diamonds. We are having a hard enough time learning about pavilion angles and idealscopes and hearts and arrows and clarity issues . . . we never even make it to the Kimberley process or any mechanisms the industry puts in place to ensure that diamond profits don''t fund armed conflict. You guys are on the board to educate us . . . so educate us, don''t try to make us feel stupid.
It makes more sense to me that when this conflict-diamond issue comes up, as it always does, that you guys point us in the direction of some material we can read to help us understand that our diamond purchase is not paying for Uzi''s and how our support of the diamond industry can help impoverished people gain employment, better living conditions, literacy . . .
Thanks for the kind words.
Yes, it’s a point of frustration for those of us in the business. I get asked about this nearly every day and I really wish I had a better answer. The whole point of diamonds is that they stand for something and you don’t want them to be the product of slave labor and torture tactics. I’m all for socially responsible shopping and consumer pressure on both businesses and government. Where I differ from the Hollywood types is that I like to selectively apply pressure to places that deserve it and I like to see tactics that actually work towards solving the problem instead of fueling the fire. Perception tends to become reality and protests for the sake of protesting make me crazy. I was quite serious when I asked what could responsible Africans (or Russians, Chinese, Australians and other non-Canadians) do to make customers more comfortable with their products.
GCAL announced a new service a week or so ago that is intended to address this issue. Would one of these reports be sufficient evidence to qualify a non-Canadian stone as being conflict free?
http://www.collectors.com/articles/article_view.chtml?artid=4714
You are so right, and I''m well aware of it. . . how many people who are terribly concerned that their diamond not come from a conflict area are driving around in their $45K gas guzzling SUV (now this is the issue that makes me "sick" -- not 1 out of 10 people has a legitimate need to drive an SUV, squander oil resources, and add fuel to our government''s war on terrorism, which as far as I can tell, is a war on control of oil resources . . . but no one frets about "blood gasoline" -- they want their SUV and really don''t care about the politics of conspicous consumption . . .Date: 5/24/2006 7:01:45 PM
Author: DiaGem
Yes its true, the conflict issue is frustrating to all of us in this industry...
Again we keep repeating ourselves that it only accounting for less than 2% of all rough diamond material comming out of the ground...
But what can we do when the media decided to put it in the spotlight..., bigger and more powerfull leaders in our industry are trying to address an issue that is here to stay..., just as diamonds will be here to stay.
If anyone thinks he can be guaranteed his/her ''polished'' diamond is conflict free..., i have news for him..., but on the other hand the chances that a consumer is buyng a ''blood diamond'' are close to Zero.
Yes, the majority of people from the industry will try to do whatever they can to relax the consumer on this subject..., but not everything is in our controll, and unfortunatlly where there are ''wars'' you''ll always find people making a ''killing'' in doing any business NOT JUST DIAMONDS. and if you chose to be reasonable.... diamonds are accounted for a fraction of a percentage than other more important commodoties...( like OIL for example, but there are more....).
But its not in some people''s interest to shake grounds under the feet of some other comodoties....
I must say I am surprised by all the responses to my post. I have done some reading regarding diamonds in different geographical regions, although not enough. I am aware that my little diamond purchase will not change the world but when I know that a product is made / manufactured / mined in a certain way I try to avoid the product. i.e. I do not buy Nike products because of the incredibly low wages many people are paid and that there have been documented to use child labor. I am not naive enough to believe that everything I buy is made from good hardworking people who believe in non-violence. I''m sure a lot of what I purchase could be made using children or as in some African areas, with people who are segregated from their families and sometimes forced to work in the mining areas. I am also sure that many of these people choose to work there to feed your families. But I can not deny that there still exist many issues / problems in African nations. Who am I to say their way of living is wrong unless of course, which is many times the case, they are oppressed people forced into living in such a way. I could go the way of my soon to be mother in law and buy Montana sapphires for a ring but I want a diamond. Diamonds may not have the value or purpose of say a house but to me it is sign of something and is of great importance. I see the positives and negatives of both arguments and although my purchase could help feed a starving child I can''t help the nagging feeling that I could be contributing to horrific conflicts. Everyone is free (those who do not live in many of the African nations) to have their own opinions as to what to buy, where to buy, and why. Like I said who are we to say another person is wrong. I''m not trying to make a political statement just trying to find out information so I can make the decision that is right for me.
P.S. As to the comment of not buying gasoline, did you know Canada is second to only Saudi Arabia in reserves. There are many options out there but many times people and governments make choices based upon money. What is the cheapest to produce, etc.