Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great to not care about the Amazon workers at all when you’re living your values.
Amazon is quite literally always hiring for the warehouse, driver, Amazon Flex type of jobs because they turn over so often because the jobs are so tough. If everyone stopped buying from Amazon and their demand tanked, I don’t want to be flip, but any laid off workers could easily find another warehouse, driver, retail etc. type of job. Those jobs are a dime a dozen and anywhere you go, there are Now Hiring signs out.
That is assuming people just switched their shopping from Amazon to any number of other retailers. If they stopped buying altogether, we have far worse economic problems on our hands.
Anonymous wrote:It’s great to not care about the Amazon workers at all when you’re living your values.
Anonymous wrote:It’s great to not care about the Amazon workers at all when you’re living your values.
Anonymous wrote:I find it hard to give up Whole Foods, any tips?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Walmart has very fast shipping and a lot of the same stuff
+1
And you can also do curbside pickup for a lot.
Anonymous wrote:I do not have a Prime Membership and never have. Honestly, I haven’t bought a thing from them since Christmas. You can still order from them, but you must spend $50 to get free shipping. And, be aware that delivery will take longer. I am not convinced Amazon is cheaper, but it is easy and convenient.
You need a different mindset when making your store list. For example, when you have 6 rolls of paper towel left, you add paper towels to the Costco list.
Anonymous wrote:I cancelled all my Amazon subscribe and saves. Been using Costco more. But not fully giving up Amazon, sadly. But some steps are better than none.
Anonymous wrote:OP your original post says that you found some of your subscription items directly through the vendor and where able to set up subscriptions there. Would you mind sharing for those of us who are trying to quit or cutback too?
Anonymous wrote:I can't quit. I order stuff for my elderly parents who cannot order for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:What are some more good alternatives to Amazon? I feel like I read Walmart and Target are just as bad. I looked at my purchases over the last 6 months and would love some advice on good alternatives to think about shopping. I think mainly Costco and the commissary/PX (we are an active duty family) could cover a lot of what I buy on Amazon. I've just fallen out of the habit of shopping on base because it's kind of a long drive for me.
home cleaning supplies and paper products - Costco already covers most of this for me
What about beauty/hygiene items? They are really expensive at drug stores and grocery stores from what I've seen. Costco doesn't have a big selection. I used to buy these things at Target, but that's apparently on the "do not shop" list.
What about random things like a basketball pump, inexpensive house planters, chair cushions, throw pillow covers - I think this is hardest for me to think about replacing amazon for
Which store for clothing basics, like underwear, t shirts, socks, pj pants? Maybe Costco, but, again, not the best selection