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Birdjaguar

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There are a growing number of efforts to thwart Trump and his many enablers among the GOP, US billionaire oligarchs and pro Project 2025 adherents. Feel free to post them here.

The ‘economic blackout’ movement now wants you to boycott Amazon, starting today​


New YorkCNN —
A grassroots movement’s call for Americans not to shop at major chains for 24 hours in an “economic blackout” last week went viral — and now, its organizer is launching a weeklong boycott against Amazon that starts Friday. John Schwarz, the 57-year-old founder of The People’s Union USA, is calling on Americans to boycott Amazon and its companies, including Zappos, Ring, Whole Foods, Twitch and Prime Video, for one week.

The Amazon boycott is about “sending a message loud enough to shake up the system” and rattle the company, Schwarz said Thursday on his Instagram account. “Amazon is one of the biggest, wealthiest, most powerful corporations in the world,” he said in a video. “It crushes small businesses. It exploits its workers. It fights against unions while raking in billions. It could make a positive difference in the world, but it chooses not to.”

Schwarz is leveraging the attention from the wider “economic blackout” on February 28. He told CNN in an interview last week that he hadn’t expect much traction for his post, which was viewed millions of times. Celebrities like Stephen King and Bette Midler encouraged participation, and reporters wrote and aired TV pieces about it.

On The People’s Union USA’s website, Schwarz calls the group “a grassroots movement dedicated to economic resistance, government accountability, and corporate reform,” adding that the “goal is to unite Americans against the corruption and greed that has kept us struggling for decades.”

Blackout’s impact​

Schwarz’s boycott call last week gained strength online because it has captured the visceral public anger with the American economy, corporations and politics. Still, the “economic blackout” effort is relatively uncoordinated and nebulous. Experts on consumer boycotts and corporate strategy are dubious that it will make a dent in the bottom lines of the massive companies that it targets, let alone the vast US economy.

Last week’s efforts didn’t make much of an impact to those corporations’ bottom lines, according to Placer.ai, an analytics company that uses phone location data to track store visits. The firm said that “many retailers experienced year-over-year declines in weekly visits throughout February 2025,” but attributed this to “post-holiday spending pullbacks, decreased consumer confidence, economic and tariff uncertainty, and unseasonably cold weather”

As a result, Placer.ai said, the February 28 event’s “specific impact is difficult to isolate, as most retailers saw year-over-year declines in line with recent weekly trends.”

Amazon didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.
 
I have purchase ~10 bucks worth of goods at Polluzon in my life.
I feel ashamed :o
 
I don't use Amazon, but most purchases in the house are made by my mom, who doesn't want to give up Amazon permanently (though she was fine going one day without it when I mentioned the blackout to her) because she likes only having to order from one place. Does anybody here in the States have an alternative I could sell her on?
 
You would have to do a product search for each item she wants to buy and see if any other vendors show up. Perhaps the manufacturers site?
 
This is some pudding I’m not going to eat.

Anyway, I’m not an online shopper to begin with—if I can’t touch it, I don’t trust it, and if I can’t carry it and they don’t deliver it, I probably don’t need it.
 
Unless you buy stuff on Amazon every single day, I can't see what a one day boycott will do. Even then, if there's something you want you'd just get it the next day anyway. They'll probably see a slight dip, followed by a slight spike the next day.
 
Isn't it scary that many peoples wouldn't know what to do without Amazon.
If that doesn't point towards a potential monopoly problem, what will..

I know alternatives for every product i could possibly want.
Maybe that's different elsewhere, but this whole situation strikes me as weird.
 
I'm baking my own bread and have switched to the Canadian version of VISA, vials of beaver gland excretion stored on the blockchain.

But actually yes, I have taken an effort to use less American companies overall. The more evil/republican the owners the more of an emotional reaction I get when I'm out shopping. I'm a lazy shopper at times, so I'll just get whatever, but now I'm making more of an effort to buy Peruvian, Canadian, and all the other ians
 
Isn't it scary that many peoples wouldn't know what to do without Amazon.
If that doesn't point towards a potential monopoly problem, what will..

I know alternatives for every product i could possibly want.
Maybe that's different elsewhere, but this whole situation strikes me as weird.

People on David Gerrold's FB page were talking about this yesterday: How to get groceries, etc. without Amazon.

Me: Call around to the local stores and see if any of them have in-store delivery arrangements. For instance, the Co-op here delivers groceries. It's a $10 charge, the stuff isn't just dumped on the doorway where it can get stolen. It's a proper in-person delivery, and some of the drivers even help put the heavy stuff away.

That said, it's been awhile since I used Co-op. Wal-mart is in an actual mall now, so I can run other errands as needed. But I did score a bunch of non-American things, so that will make my fellow members of Reboot Alberta happy (some have gotten up on a soapbox saying there is NO EXCUSE for buying ANYTHING American.

Well, bully for them. They should tell the Minister of Health to source insulin from the other countries that make it, then. Canada doesn't, at least not the kind I take.

I'm baking my own bread and have switched to the Canadian version of VISA, vials of beaver gland excretion stored on the blockchain.

But actually yes, I have taken an effort to use less American companies overall. The more evil/republican the owners the more of an emotional reaction I get when I'm out shopping. I'm a lazy shopper at times, so I'll just get whatever, but now I'm making more of an effort to buy Peruvian, Canadian, and all the other ians

Be aware that some stores put fake stickers on American stuff.

Overall, I think that to be ethical about this means considering that we still need people to have jobs.
 
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Flipping through the TV channels just to discover this and think what the heck?
 
Reboot Alberta is a political group I belong to on FB, for Albertans who are trying to figure out how to deal with the current political mess we have.
 
In all my time in earth I am not sure I've ever bough anything from amazon at all, bough once from ebay (got ripped off), otherwise no temu or other chinese amazon. I lack nothing I really need or want.
 
I bet not as annoying as the Company I Will Not Name who are evidently monitoring the internet for mentions of their name and any customer complaints. I mentioned their company here on the forum once some years ago, in the Rants thread.

Damn if that company didn't instantly make an account that sneaked past the admins and basically doxxed me right in the middle of the Random Rants thread, purporting to be "concerned" about the negative customer service experience I was talking about, and asking how they could make it right. Well, invading my privacy when I'm here under a forum username would be something to stop doing!

I reported the post, asked the moderator for a couple of minutes to take screenshots to support the letter of complaint I intended to send, and then they were deleted and permabanned.

And I gave them a lot more than merely two barrels in my letter.
 
Amazon Prime is now running Trump's Apprentice shows. It is time for us to cancel our subscription to Prime.
 
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