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Lately there's been a trend of increasing boycotts of companies due to affiliation with another company or just something they did. There's the issue with NRA and I just read an article about a popular cellphone case maker Spigen's CEO supported a Webtoon artist that made joke of child rape. There's a boycott going on in Korea and was thinking if these boycotts were effective at all.
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 02:19 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 15:05 |
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How effective boycotts are depends heavily on the circumstances, especially in terms of how dependent the boycott target is on public opinion. That mostly means companies that sell directly to the public, but every level of indirection makes it exponentially harder. Most companies do not give a gently caress about public boycotts because they don't deal directly with the public and the companies that they do business with don't say who they're doing business with. A lot of people wanted to boycott BP after Deepwater Horizon, but BP's crude goes to refineries that don't care where their crude comes from, then gets sent to gas stations that don't care where they get their gas from, so boycotting their crude requires getting multiple levels of the supply chain to care enough about sourcing. Good luck. BP doesn't care what the public thinks, just like Goldman Sachs doesn't care what the public thinks, and most businesses don't care what the public thinks because they're insulated from it. The NRA doesn't make the majority of its money from membership dues and they're probably not going to lose a lot of membership over a few lost discount perks.
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 03:16 |
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Do you have any actually numbers if boycotts are increasing? People have been boycotting things forever and ever.
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 04:17 |
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Anything the left boycotts doesnt seem to work. Chick-fil-a, NRA memberships and gun sales all went up. It like they werent even buying in the first place and the added exposure brought in more customers. Like Change.org petitions, boycotts just provide an outlet for outrage
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 06:53 |
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Fauxtool posted:Anything the left boycotts doesnt seem to work. Chick-fil-a, NRA memberships and gun sales all went up. It like they werent even buying in the first place and the added exposure brought in more customers. Chick fil a boycott was super effective and the company disengaged from like 90% of the vile stuff they were into. Like the owner guy is still poo poo I’m sure but they totally pulled out all their donations and company support of the homophobia stuff the owner had been pushing. Now the only “bad” donations they make is stuff that is ultra blandly Christian that everyone donates, like the Salvation Army. (That is very problematic but is just a normal thing people donate to apolitically at Christmas)
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 07:37 |
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I bought a starbucks and threw it away to show them.
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# ? Mar 1, 2018 09:37 |
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I stopped selling guns at all the stores I own. No joke.
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 01:26 |
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Owlofcreamcheese posted:Do you have any actually numbers if boycotts are increasing? People have been boycotting things forever and ever. That's true, there's always something going on like that time people boycotted companies selling Ivanka Trump merchandise. Then again, people were saying they're "boycotting" while still shopping at those stores. Bip Roberts posted:I bought a starbucks and threw it away to show them. Um... you filled up their pockets with more money. LegoPirateNinja posted:I stopped selling guns at all the stores I own. No joke. Are you facing any kind of repercussion? It seems one day the news is flooded with NRA affiliated boycotts and the next day there's news of couples renewing vows with assault rifles.
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 04:49 |
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Owlofcreamcheese posted:Chick fil a boycott was super effective and the company disengaged from like 90% of the vile stuff they were into. Like the owner guy is still poo poo I’m sure but they totally pulled out all their donations and company support of the homophobia stuff the owner had been pushing. Now the only “bad” donations they make is stuff that is ultra blandly Christian that everyone donates, like the Salvation Army. (That is very problematic but is just a normal thing people donate to apolitically at Christmas) They released a statement saying they werent funding opposition to same sex marriage. Then they made a private org to funnel money into so that the company wasnt directly funding it. Their sales went up and the customers who boycotted were not missed. The boycott didnt work and the owners are even richer than before. People want tasty food and the politics doesnt factor into the decision for a lot people It was not effective but the people who got mad need to think it was so it was in their minds
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 07:34 |
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Fauxtool posted:Then they made a private org to funnel money into so that the company wasnt directly funding it. No, they actually stopped. They still fund like, broadly christian groups and christianity is a curse upon the world or whatever so any generic support for any christian cause implicitly supports any evil it holds but they actually dropped out funding anti-marriage campaigns or anything directly related to it. Like they fund the salvation army, christian youth sports and christian children's abuse shelters and just by being christian affiliated you can find all sorts of problematic stuff, but like, meh? everyone donates to that stuff, even non christian companies donate to that stuff, they donate to very blandly normalized stuff now, not to political causes.
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 14:47 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 15:05 |
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They stopped doing dark money stuff/getting anti LGBT passed in Africa because their guy(Pence) is now one step away from n-decade of darkness.
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 14:56 |