According to the introduction, "this comic strip is based on real events in 2001 in Pueble, Central Mexico" and is devoted to a narrative journey of exploited Nike sweatshop workers securing liberation in the forming of a union, a canteen and decent wages. (In cartoonist Andy Vine's narrative, the company is known as Nice, and the locale is metamorphosised to place in a British inner city). The attitude is by its own admission, propaganda, and more than a little dull mainly owing to its evangelical nature and somewhat dispersonalised workers, buyers and buyer-bosses. This does allow for occassional twists of idea forms that become clear with facts divulged.
The booklet is printed on glossy paper withh a colour cover. Stylistically, I'm not sure who to compare it to, or at the time i wrote this review, how to describe it. So heres some clips,



"No Sweat" is twee false left-right paradigm - which should be okay given its matter, but I know good comics, and this is worth only a brief information more than it gives its sequartvengelical intro. Theres nod entertainment, which Vine's style tries so hard to create. I can see the influence of Pat Mills in this though, it reminds me far more of Jack Chick. Andrew Luke no like bad comics. The hearts in the right place but helping the cause will be better achieved leaping this comic and getting straight to points, with companies like Ethical Threads and Ethical Wares
The cartoonists website is www.avine.co.uk, the No Sweat website contains details of were you can buy the comic and other gear or later additionm its available here free in pdf form
Or you might could try and do a better job yourself.