Is this morally wrong? A company in Italy has started selling air from a top tourist destination, drawing accusations that they are exploiting foolish visitors.
Anger over cans of air for £8 each
Is this morally wrong? A company in Italy has started selling air from a top tourist destination, drawing accusations that they are exploiting foolish visitors.
Ella's parents have been on holiday to Lake Como in Italy and promised to bring her back a special present. She gets a can of air.
The cans are produced by a company called Italy Communica and are intended to appeal particularly to American tourists.
One local said that the canned air made him feel ashamed. Another said: "I think it's better to breathe the actual air of Como. Buying it doesn't bring the same satisfaction."
Selling air is not something new. In Naples after the end of World War Two, empty cans left by American troops were resealed and sold as souvenirs.
The idea may have come from the SurrealistA movement in art and literature which sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind. artist Marcel Duchamp. In 1919 he gave two American friends a tiny glass bottle he had bought in a pharmacy and labelled "Air de Paris".
People often pay lots of money for things that others think are worthless.
Is this morally wrong?
Yes! Getting people to spend money on something pointless is a shameful waste of resources and insulting to poor people.
No! The value of something is what people are prepared to pay for it, even if the price is crazy.
Keywords
Surrealist - A movement in art and literature which sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind.
Anger over cans of air for £8 each
Glossary
Surrealist - A movement in art and literature which sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind.