I get that, but I also get the other side. I, as a customer, don't want to feel like my choices are negatively impacting someone else.
Ah, I take it this way: In the US, we live alongside 300 million other people, on a planet with seven billion others. There's no way our choices don't impact others. I take that as a given, and that puts some onus on me to be responsible.
And the only way to be an ethical consumer is to be an informed consumer.
However, I'm expecting my daughter in April. I'm in the US, and that's going to cost upwards of $10,000.
Well, congrats! And heck, she's going to cost a darned sight more than that!
Hearing about @Sacrosanct 's razor-thin margins, though... It gives me a feeling that I have let the OP down. I'm exactly the target market, and I didn't bite. I have a feeling of guilt.
Having a kid to care for beats the business decisions of others hands down. You've got your priorities straight on that.
I take this on the other side of the scale. When I am flush, knowing the margins of thin is an incentive to be a customer - I did quite a bit of that at the start of the pandemic. I knew my job was secure, so I was a little more free with my disposable income to businesses that were going to be getting the short end of the stick.
When I don't know where the next mortgage payment is coming from, though, no amount of discussion of how thin the margins are is going to loosen my purse strings.