The Detergent Illusion: How Marketing Invented Invisible Stains and Excess Suds

· epubli
Ebook
153
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Look inside your washing machine during a cycle. You see a mountain of thick, white foam and assume your clothes are getting a deep, powerful clean. But those bubbles are completely useless. They are an artificial additive, engineered solely to satisfy a psychological craving for visible action. The Detergent Illusion is a masterclass in consumer manipulation. In the mid-20th century, chemical companies realized they could not sell highly efficient, low-sudsing detergents because housewives equated bubbles with cleanliness. So, they added foaming agents that do absolutely nothing for stain removal. Today, the industry continues to sell us overdosed liquid pods and fabric softeners that coat our clothes in suffocating microplastics, solving problems that they themselves invented. This book explores the industrial chemistry and marketing psychology of the household cleaning aisle. It reveals the toxic environmental toll of our obsession with artificial fragrances and clinical sterility, proving that we are literally washing money down the drain. Break free from the marketing spin of the cleaning industry. Learn the true chemistry of cleanliness, cut your household expenses, and embrace a simpler, less toxic approach to everyday hygiene.

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