Economic Blackout: Will a 24-hour boycott make a difference?
Economic Blackout: Will a 24-hour boycott make a difference?
This is what people don’t seem to understand.
These boycotts are already priced in. The most you’re doing is mildly annoying some financial bean counter in middle management who might have to make a slight adjustment to a month-over-month sales report, and that’s only if the boycott happens at either the end or beginning of the month. Corporations have seen these countless times before, and they also know that at the end of the day, people still need to go out and buy things like food, clothes, gas, medications, etc. And they also know that there is absolutely no appetite for a large-scale extended boycott that would be large enough and last long enough to make a difference; most people couldn’t boycott for that long even if they sincerely wanted to (and most don’t. They just want to say they did.).
Like you said (and I also said once in a previous post…great minds think alike), it’s like a toddler threatening to hold his breath. Yeah, that’s nice kid. You’ve gotta breathe eventually.
From what I understand, this is a tiered boycott. Yes it starts today with a one day boycott, but there are more and longer and targeted boycotts planned. The other day I saw a flier but forgot to save it or I’d share. Hoping it pops back up again.
I think that’s important because for a general strike and boycott to work, you need to train the people, and this is how you train the people. Most everyone can stop shopping for a day, next week they can stop shopping for two days, then not at amazon for a week, then not at Walmart for a week. Then not at any big store for a week, then a month, etc
It dosent end with a one day boycott, it begins with a one day boycott!
Looking at that flyer, I only need to keep my eye out for the total blackouts, which is nice.
Any idea what’s up with General Mills?
It’s not a matter of positive or negative, it’s a matter of reality. Single day boycotts don’t work. Proven over and over again.
www.usatoday.com/story/money/2025/…/80727498007/
The boycotts that DO work are consistent and persistent. See the Bud Light boycott.
Because boycotting a single day does nothing, as stated. What made the Bud Light strike work was it wasn’t limited in that way. “Don’t buy Bud Light. Full stop.”
You want to hurt McDonald’s, Amazon, Walmart, Nestlé, what have you? It has to be continual and consistent.
This is us showing them we can organize.
We still need to build numbers, organize communities, setup support systems.
Later will come the permanent boycott.
Wanna know the easiest way to know if something will be effective? Look through all the astro-turfed corporate sponsored media telling us it won’t be effective and that we shouldn’t do anything.
They want us to fall to inaction. They want us to look weak. This is the first step in a long road of trying to pull Americans out of their consumerist dystopia.
Targeting billionaires with a 24-hour pause? Like throwing pebbles at a fortress.
😾😾
Building momentum with pebbles? You’ll need an avalanche to even scratch the fortress walls.
Regardless, 4 beanz for clarity, optimism, and logical reasoning, though it could have been more concise or directly addressed the critique about targeting billionaires.
😺😺😺😺
Not even a little bit.
Especially when it’s not even like 10% of people participating.
AND many people already don’t do anything after work on a Friday. They just go home and relax.
Needs to be longer than 24 hours and it needs to gain mainstream support. Until then it’ll be comically easy for the billionaires at the top to ignore everything.