Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is one lady in ours that’s hustles to grab baby formula. Any brand, unopened or opened, doesn’t matter.
She probably selling it somewhere.
Or owns a daycare center or volunteers with kids in a church or a baby pantry or other help center ???
Why do we always go to the negative? It must be sad to first assume the worst in others. Why not just give the “benefit of the doubt”!
In our group, most tell you that what they are doing if they take lots of stuff. We have people who collect for animal and women's shelters all the time, but they tell you and not hoarding.
Many have been caught selling and kicked out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not white nonsense. Yes I read the article.
I don’t love all the rules not that’s why some of the groups changed names. I just gave away a swim team bag and picked up a plastic kids pool for the dog.
It’s an awesome concept.
It's a deeply flawed concept, largely because of the control structures built into it (ultimately for profit) by it's creators. Like literally everything else white people make, it was built on a very white foundation. Even the creators have (half-assedly) acknowledged this, so you don't need to cape for them: https://buynothingproject.org/tpost/judjdav7e1-racial-justice-amp-the-buy-nothing-proje
"Additional Public Statement from the Co-founders of the Buy Nothing Project:
7 June, 2020
In the beginning of the Buy Nothing Project, our white fragility and privilege so clouded our understanding and judgement that we asked people not to call other group members or items being offered racist. In fact, this white fragility and privilege is so deeply rooted in us that we didn’t even remember taking this stance until after releasing our statement above about racial justice in the Buy Nothing Project in June of 2020, almost seven years into this experiment, when a past participant took the time to remind us and call us out on our gaslighting and racism. We are grateful to her for her work to hold us accountable. She made it possible for us to see more clearly just how deeply entrenched racist norms are in us, even today, after daily personal work, education, and conversations about these issues over the past two years."
If you honestly thought two white ladies built a properly anti-racist structure from the jump, perhaps you'd also like to buy a bridge?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think 75% of the people who take things, especially the ones who comment again and again they want it, don’t live in the area. They have fake profiles and make a living off it.
I am fine with this. They come to my house and pick things up, if they want to turn around and sell it somewhere else, by all means GO AHEAD!
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen people post sofas from a dog friendly home that are stained and thread bare. They claim it still has plenty of life and cover it with a throw blanket. Disgusting! Take it to the dump!
Anonymous wrote:I think 75% of the people who take things, especially the ones who comment again and again they want it, don’t live in the area. They have fake profiles and make a living off it.
Anonymous wrote:The whole concept of Buy Nothing groups is white nonsense: https://www.wired.com/story/the-battle-for-buy-nothing/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is one lady in ours that’s hustles to grab baby formula. Any brand, unopened or opened, doesn’t matter.
She probably selling it somewhere.
Or owns a daycare center or volunteers with kids in a church or a baby pantry or other help center ???
Why do we always go to the negative? It must be sad to first assume the worst in others. Why not just give the “benefit of the doubt”!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is one lady in ours that’s hustles to grab baby formula. Any brand, unopened or opened, doesn’t matter.
She probably selling it somewhere.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not white nonsense. Yes I read the article.
I don’t love all the rules not that’s why some of the groups changed names. I just gave away a swim team bag and picked up a plastic kids pool for the dog.
It’s an awesome concept.