In many ways, I'm one of the most conservative people I know. My politics as they regard freedom from what I perceive to be tyranny (you might consider it simple "regulation") put me in an extreme minority in this country. I really want to be left alone.
I'm the son of probably the last renaissance man the western world has ever produced. Dad could lay block, pour concrete, frame houses, was licensed in all all 3 mechanical trades (plumbing, HVAC, and electrical) at one time or another, hung and finished his own drywall at 70+ years old, trimmed and painted. He subdivided and developed bare property into streets and lots. He put in municipal city sewer and water. He did all the plumbing for our hometown's public swimming pool. He learned to program by buying a book and teaching himself. He did his own books and taxes.
He taught me the value of doing everything possible for myself -- and that when we learn to do a thing, we can gain an appreciation for the difficulty of doing it well, and stop underappreciating the people who do it for us. Just because a thing is simple does not make it easy.
And so I believe very strongly in siding with the undervalued and the truly oppressed people in this world. There is a biblical injunction to do it and protecting people who need protected runs very deeply in my bones. The trade policies that have allowed Reebok and Nike and all the rest to take a 1000+% markup by riding on the backs of what amounts to slavery ought to at least bother us. People on the left give lip-service to social justice, et al, but still go shopping for the cheapest widgets made in the most dire hell-holes in east Asia. My friends on the traditional right hew so closely to the "market fixes everything" Eloi/Morlock ethos that they don't see how making literally nothing here is going to be our ruination, just like ancient Rome's.
This is not to give cover for the victim mentality of people too lazy or stupid or evil to actually apply themselves to the business of acquiring and employing skills both they and the market wants -- it is simply a statement that somebody as smart and hardworking as I am, whose only shortfall is living in a place where the prevailing wage is $5/day ought to make a wage commensurate with the value they provide me.
Henry Ford was a Nazi and he understood this. I wonder why the entire western world has such a hard time understanding it.
I've made it my ambition to try to pay people what their service is worth to me, which is almost always a bit more than the market says they're worth. I don't haggle over a subcontractor's price and my guys are paid above union scale. I may have missed some money along the way, but my house is paid for and my conscience is clear.
Buying sneakers is harder. I don't think this is a thing for the government to regulate -- I think this is a thing for decent people to recognize as a problem. A rising tide really ought to float everybody's boat. A race to the bottom ends up drowning all of us.