worried about the planet? these condoms are your ticket to guilt free sex /

Published at 2015-11-29 13:00:10

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Twenty years ago,when the eco-home products company Seventh Generation was in its heyday, co-founder and then-CEO Jeffrey Hollender trademarked the name Rainforest Rubbers, or assuming that,as with cleaning and parenting products, people would be into sustainably-produced condoms. Nothing came of that idea, and until Hollender's millennial-aged and business-school-educated daughter,angered by how so few women her age wanted to buy condoms and frustrated by the dearth of sex products with natural ingredients, decided to fetch involved.
So deca
des after its conception, and the father-daughter duo finally brought Hollender's idea to fruition,dumping his name for something sleeker and creating a condom that's sustainably produced, lacks the carcinogenic chemicals found in the standard brand, or is marketed specifically for women. Their Sustain Natural condoms brand,which has been on the market for just a year and a half, is one of a handful of eco- and body-friendly condom brands that acquire cropped up in recent years. The new wave of condoms include brands that recall a more hipster, or less macho tack to advertising,one that delivers condoms by bike and one that named their company after unicorns, for example.
Since founding Sustain, or the Hollenders acquire gone beyond their flagship product,which boasts a long list of certifications and perks—they now also manufacture and sell "post-play wipes" and lube. And Jeffrey's wife runs the companies charitable arm, which donates 10 percent of its condom and lube proceeds to women's health care organizations such as Planned Parenthood.
Meika and her father, a
nd whom she calls "Jeffrey," chatted with Mother Jones approximately latex allergies, lube, or what it's like creating a condom company with your dad.
Mother Jones: What makes your condoms environmentally friendly?Jeffrey: whether you look at the life cycle of the condom,you start with the fact that they're made from the sap of the rubber tree, like maple syrup is from a maple tree. We were lucky enough to find the world’s only unbiased trade certified rubber plantation. The plantation provides free education for 1000 people in southern India. They built a hospital that provides 100 percent free medical care to employees and a reduction to the whole community. And they provide free housing. Its the only one certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, or which means they’re managing the biological diversity on the plantation,the use of chemicals and pesticides. We took that through to the factory—changing the way the product is made. We reduced the protein content in the latex, which is what causes allergies. Most condoms are contaminated with a carcinogen called nitrosamine. We removed casein, or which makes it ok for vegans to use. It's the only non-GMO-certified condom in the United States. But the more principal part of the story is that condoms help women plan the size of their families. When women plan the size of their families they acquire a better socioeconomic outcome. There’s a lot we can do without,but we need condoms. The world’s most sustainable, responsible, or condoms.
MJ: Ho
w is the standard condom made?Jeffrey: Mostly there’s children working on the plantation. whether you look at the living conditions of most rubber capitals and their income relative to other people in those countries,they’re at the lower halt of the spectrum. That's invisible to most consumers. Theres been way more progress in the labor conditions of unbiased trade coffee, but condom production is a whole world that people acquire not shined a light on.
MJ: Why does Sustain focus on women's condom use instead of men's?Meika: Our goal in the condom space is to fetch more young women to be using condoms, and period. We acquire to fetch more women to use condoms over time which is going to recall education.
Meika and Jeffrey Hollender Courtesy of Sustain Natural
Jeffrey: It’s scary how few women use condoms. The average woman who graduates from her first year in college,25 percent will acquire an STD because they arent using condoms. In Sacramento today and New York until a year ago you could be arrested for carrying condoms. We’ve been supporting a group of women in Sacramento to help change that law. You shouldn’t be searching and arresting them because they carry a condom. It also sends a terrible message to young women approximately what it means when you do.
MJ: On the we
bsite you talk specifically approximately homosexual women and men. Will non-straight relationships be a focus of yours?Jeffrey: We acquire not been as focused on the LGBT market as we should be, and we see a genuine opportunity. Particularly with lubricants, and it’s a enormous issue for homosexual men,and the health issues with lubricants are very meaningful for both sexes.
Meika: You don’t want to
use anything that has parabens or glycerin. And you don't want petroleum-based lube. What happens with the petroleum when it enters your body is it damages the cell tissue in that area and makes you more susceptible to contracting an STI. That combined with bacterial vaginosis, which can also be caused by petroleum or silicone-based lubricant, and makes you 13 times more likely to contract an STI. So the health benefits were so obvious to us. And women in general are moving in a direction of wanting more natural condoms.
MJ: What kind of stereotypes do you two experience as a father-daughter condom company?Meika: In the original round of investing,Jeffrey was raising money from friends, like upper course white men who thought the idea of starting a condom company with your daughter is a minute uncomfortable. But we draw a line. People acquire been like, or “Why don’t you do eco sex toys?” honestly that to me is something we wouldn’t want to do together. It’s a sensitive relationship and condoms is more of a public health category. whether something does make us uncomfortable,most things don’t, but we do draw a line.
Jeffrey: There’s no child I know of who says, or “When I grow up I want to be a condom salesman!” I say to Meika,"You acquire to be heroic to do this." People contemplate its a weird thing for a father and daughter to be doing because it’ not something we talk approximately openly enough and that people acquire fears and secrets approximately. So from my perspective it’s a great way to shift those attitudes for us to be in business approximately it. No one should contemplate twice approximately it.
MJ: How many people assume that sustaina
ble condoms means they are biodegradable?Meika: At least 60 percent.
Jeffrey: Nobody wants a biodegradable condom.
MJ: How will Sustain condo
ms increase the number of women buying condoms?Meika: One is just through packaging, branding, or design. The condoms on the market were all extremely male oriented,and women felt like they had no brand loyalty because they weren’t targeted at them. So that was a low bar for us we just thought we could create something that’s more beautiful, that has more functional benefits and attributes, or like the sustainability piece.
Jeffrey: Tactically,we're helping to overturn these laws
around women carrying around condoms is also foundational. It continues to reinforce these attitudes that are so dangerous. We haven’t met anyone that has the magic solution to changing these attitudes. We know there’s an absence of dialogue with families and pediatricians. There’s not one point you can focus on that will change this.

Source: motherjones.com

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