Now I generally try and buy quality items unless I expect there will be no repeated reuse, then I go cheap.
I guess if quality counts as "worthy" Then I do now select based on that. I rarely examine the politics or beliefs of a company as part of a purchasing decision. I find that large companies always seem to support all sides of all issues although they may put one thing to them forefront on occasion. Small businesses have their beliefs too but whatever that core values is more of an ethos that usually gets represented in their products. So the politics of the owners don't mean a lot to me in those cases as regardless of who I'd buy from it's very likely to provide income to individuals who support something I may disagree on. So buying on quality supports the workmanship and if I want to argue politics I'll do it in another way.
I do subscribe to the 'Buy twice as good, and only buy half as many' philosophy. I tend to buy upmarket cars and computers and then keep them for 10 years or more.
Probably more accurately, you might say I go for dependability. When I hop in that car, I expect it to start at first go, and then go as far as I want it to.
But, like anything else, it's a matter of what you can afford and what you feel comfortable spending. No, I'm not rich and don't have the highest salary. But I'm willing to sock away some money to afford goods that cost more but which will last.