Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP but also boycotting Amazon (also cancelled my Wash Post subscription) and Target and doing my very best to shop local. I find something on Amazon and then use Google lens to find it elsewhere. Also team never a Tesla Nazi mobile or shop at Walmart (we subsidize Walmart so much because they don't pay their employees enough and teach them how to apply for welfare, SNAP, etc. It's a piss-poor business model that wouldn't succeed without the government handouts to their employees
I will not willingly support the oligarch billionaires
Yet you almost certainly own stock in Amazon, Target, and Walmart. And you're telling us that you never shopped at Walmart? It wasn't like they just started engaging in these business practices. Very hypocritcal and not the flex that you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Must be exhausting to be OP. Does she have to a 401k? If so, she is likely profiting from those evil companies, Amazon and Target.
And she's hypocritical. If she cares about employee well-being, she should know the worst places to work at are small locally owned businesses. They are much more likely to take advantage of employees and abuse them, whereas major retailers and businesses are subject to much more scrutiny and labor regulatory oversight. There's a reason why Target and Walmart and Amazon get thousands of applications from workers who want to avoid working at small mom and pops, who pay less, have fewer benefits and less oversight allowing them to take advantage of workers.
This is pure drivel. Do you know how much Walmart costs American taxpayers because they underemploy workers?
Why so many people standing up for the billionaires. Truly inconceivable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't proactively support small businesses even if I like the notion of small businesses because they're just not that great. They are more expensive and don't have the same stock. And some are certainly very ideological (looking at you Penzys).
Amazon is wonderful. Target is convenient. The only person who cares if you try to make a moral argument out of avoiding Amazon and Target is you and you alone, no one else. Do what you want but you aren't budging the needle except you will spend more money by trying to avoid the big boxes and Amazon, and it was another person on another thread who also pointed out it's more ecologically friendly and sustainable to stick with Amazon and deliveries than going to 20 different stores in your car.
Beg to differ:
Teslas is down 40%
Target sales are down 3% since Jan, stock is down
You don’t think Target and Tesla care? You do you but I’m spending MY money where I want and with businesses who aren’t groveling at the feet of facists.
Tesla is an intriguing and narrow example to cite, the product was far more popular among the "left" than the "right" so it was prone to consumer shifts in a way mass retailers are not. A comparable would be Budweiser, it's a product more popular among the "right" than the "left" so the boycott had real impact. And it doesn't help that Tesla stock was already enormously overvalued as any market guru would have told you even before Musk came on the scene. Unlike Budweiser, given Musk's history in reviving Twitter's value I wouldn't rule out a big Tesla boom in a year or two.
Your boycott is going to garner nothing more than a slow clap because reasons you cite are actually very popular among most Americans, such as the DEI rollbacks. You are in the distinct minority. Both Amazon and Target and Walmart also hire large numbers of working Americans who'd struggle otherwise to find other jobs. If you knew anything about Amazon, while their corporate culture is demanding and works people hard, those who who are able to perform are rewarded greatly. A lot of success stories of employees starting from the bottom and working their way up with determination and grit.
You can do what you want, the tradeoff is that you will spend more money and be more inconvenienced by avoiding Amazon and popular big retailers who have enormous scales of efficiency they pass on consumers. Virtue signaling is a luxury, and it's your decision.
I am both virtual signaling and think you're all lazy that you can't run a few errands instead of ordering on amazon. Take a walk! It's not that hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP but also boycotting Amazon (also cancelled my Wash Post subscription) and Target and doing my very best to shop local. I find something on Amazon and then use Google lens to find it elsewhere. Also team never a Tesla Nazi mobile or shop at Walmart (we subsidize Walmart so much because they don't pay their employees enough and teach them how to apply for welfare, SNAP, etc. It's a piss-poor business model that wouldn't succeed without the government handouts to their employees
I will not willingly support the oligarch billionaires
Yet you almost certainly own stock in Amazon, Target, and Walmart. And you're telling us that you never shopped at Walmart? It wasn't like they just started engaging in these business practices. Very hypocritcal and not the flex that you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:Not OP but also boycotting Amazon (also cancelled my Wash Post subscription) and Target and doing my very best to shop local. I find something on Amazon and then use Google lens to find it elsewhere. Also team never a Tesla Nazi mobile or shop at Walmart (we subsidize Walmart so much because they don't pay their employees enough and teach them how to apply for welfare, SNAP, etc. It's a piss-poor business model that wouldn't succeed without the government handouts to their employees
I will not willingly support the oligarch billionaires
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd love a good replacement for kids stuff - specifically basic clothes, not the kind I would get as hand-me-downs. For example, socks, underwear, leggings. Where you shop for these?
Don't sleep on Kohls! It's old school but seriously...Nice selection of Under Armour, Nike, etc for kids. Also good for shoes, homewares, toys for gifts, socks, bras, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't proactively support small businesses even if I like the notion of small businesses because they're just not that great. They are more expensive and don't have the same stock. And some are certainly very ideological (looking at you Penzys).
Amazon is wonderful. Target is convenient. The only person who cares if you try to make a moral argument out of avoiding Amazon and Target is you and you alone, no one else. Do what you want but you aren't budging the needle except you will spend more money by trying to avoid the big boxes and Amazon, and it was another person on another thread who also pointed out it's more ecologically friendly and sustainable to stick with Amazon and deliveries than going to 20 different stores in your car.
Beg to differ:
Teslas is down 40%
Target sales are down 3% since Jan, stock is down
You don’t think Target and Tesla care? You do you but I’m spending MY money where I want and with businesses who aren’t groveling at the feet of facists.
Tesla is an intriguing and narrow example to cite, the product was far more popular among the "left" than the "right" so it was prone to consumer shifts in a way mass retailers are not. A comparable would be Budweiser, it's a product more popular among the "right" than the "left" so the boycott had real impact. And it doesn't help that Tesla stock was already enormously overvalued as any market guru would have told you even before Musk came on the scene. Unlike Budweiser, given Musk's history in reviving Twitter's value I wouldn't rule out a big Tesla boom in a year or two.
Your boycott is going to garner nothing more than a slow clap because reasons you cite are actually very popular among most Americans, such as the DEI rollbacks. You are in the distinct minority. Both Amazon and Target and Walmart also hire large numbers of working Americans who'd struggle otherwise to find other jobs. If you knew anything about Amazon, while their corporate culture is demanding and works people hard, those who who are able to perform are rewarded greatly. A lot of success stories of employees starting from the bottom and working their way up with determination and grit.
You can do what you want, the tradeoff is that you will spend more money and be more inconvenienced by avoiding Amazon and popular big retailers who have enormous scales of efficiency they pass on consumers. Virtue signaling is a luxury, and it's your decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Must be exhausting to be OP. Does she have to a 401k? If so, she is likely profiting from those evil companies, Amazon and Target.
And she's hypocritical. If she cares about employee well-being, she should know the worst places to work at are small locally owned businesses. They are much more likely to take advantage of employees and abuse them, whereas major retailers and businesses are subject to much more scrutiny and labor regulatory oversight. There's a reason why Target and Walmart and Amazon get thousands of applications from workers who want to avoid working at small mom and pops, who pay less, have fewer benefits and less oversight allowing them to take advantage of workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't proactively support small businesses even if I like the notion of small businesses because they're just not that great. They are more expensive and don't have the same stock. And some are certainly very ideological (looking at you Penzys).
Amazon is wonderful. Target is convenient. The only person who cares if you try to make a moral argument out of avoiding Amazon and Target is you and you alone, no one else. Do what you want but you aren't budging the needle except you will spend more money by trying to avoid the big boxes and Amazon, and it was another person on another thread who also pointed out it's more ecologically friendly and sustainable to stick with Amazon and deliveries than going to 20 different stores in your car.
Beg to differ:
Teslas is down 40%
Target sales are down 3% since Jan, stock is down
You don’t think Target and Tesla care? You do you but I’m spending MY money where I want and with businesses who aren’t groveling at the feet of facists.
Tesla is an intriguing and narrow example to cite, the product was far more popular among the "left" than the "right" so it was prone to consumer shifts in a way mass retailers are not. A comparable would be Budweiser, it's a product more popular among the "right" than the "left" so the boycott had real impact. And it doesn't help that Tesla stock was already enormously overvalued as any market guru would have told you even before Musk came on the scene. Unlike Budweiser, given Musk's history in reviving Twitter's value I wouldn't rule out a big Tesla boom in a year or two.
Your boycott is going to garner nothing more than a slow clap because reasons you cite are actually very popular among most Americans, such as the DEI rollbacks. You are in the distinct minority. Both Amazon and Target and Walmart also hire large numbers of working Americans who'd struggle otherwise to find other jobs. If you knew anything about Amazon, while their corporate culture is demanding and works people hard, those who who are able to perform are rewarded greatly. A lot of success stories of employees starting from the bottom and working their way up with determination and grit.
You can do what you want, the tradeoff is that you will spend more money and be more inconvenienced by avoiding Amazon and popular big retailers who have enormous scales of efficiency they pass on consumers. Virtue signaling is a luxury, and it's your decision.
Anonymous wrote:Must be exhausting to be OP. Does she have to a 401k? If so, she is likely profiting from those evil companies, Amazon and Target.