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One hates to kick Clegg and the Trots while they are down ...
(actually, that's not true ... it's great to kick them while they are down)
But ...
The Guardian has added a few little facts to this story.
1. Compagnie Mauricienne de Textile, the company that makes the tee shirts has a turnover of £125million.
2. They have 10,000 employees.
3. The wages paid to the women who make the tee shirts are below the "minimum poverty income" determined by the National Empowermant Foundation. The tee shirts are sold, remember, for £45 each!
4. The women workers have to sleep in a tiny room with 15 of them squashed in bunk beds.
5. One of the women who work in the sweatshop factory said "How can this tee shirt be a symbol of feminism?"
David Cameron's decision to not wear one of these slave labour tee shirts seems to look more sensible all the time.
What will happen now (one suspects) is that the posturing twits will now say ...
"Ah haa! This has brought an injustice to light, and we will do something to change things. Don't judge us by what we wear. Judge us by what we do."
Except they can't say that, because that is what David Cameron said last week.
In the meantime, look out for Milliband, Clegg and Harman wearing the shirts in the future. I mean, you wouldn't want to get only one wear out of a £45 tee shirt. That would just be extravagant.