I’m specifically talking about the one day economic blackout.
These have been done dozens of times over dozens of issues and have had zero impact ever. A one-day blackout won’t do shit except give the Ralph Wiggums of the world that “I’m helping!” feeling. If you want them to feel it it has to be longer-term. A week. A month. A year. And that’s sadly, something that people in a consumerist culture lack the stamina to do.
Also if you just move your purchases to the day before or the day after all you’re doing is very slightly messing up their forecasting. They’re still getting your money, just earlier or later than that had expected.
This is the precise problem with these kinds of empty actions. Back in the '70s and early '80s, when this was still new, companies would panic over this kind of action. Then they noticed it didn’t even register as a blip on the stats. A mild anomaly, maybe, if it was held on the last day of a month, but completely buried in annual statistics.
If you want them to actually take notice, you’re going to need to have more than a day. And that means going without. Which most people are unwilling and/or unable to do.
Yeah, why try doing anything, right? Action only counts when everybody does it! You, puny little human, are worthless. Your ideas not worth repeating. Don’t ever try and organise anything. It’s not worth it. \s
The number of people needed is huge, but it’s more like ~3% of the population. Strike cards and a critical mass of participants are key for us working people.
A general strike would be amazing, but it’s not realistic. Even just having say 25% of workers out for a few days puts strain on the system. Same with limiting spending. If even 25% of the country spends only on essentials, then that’ll translate to a couple percentage points of loss to major corporations (not all of course, but some major ones).
It’s not about a silver bullet, it’s about inflicting enough paper cuts that it starts to hurt. No one thing will be 100% effective.
These “one day no purchase” things don’t work. It takes sustained effort to “vote with your wallet”.
https://bsky.app/profile/youranoncentral.bsky.social/post/3lidyv4mggs2c
People are organizing
I’m specifically talking about the one day economic blackout.
These have been done dozens of times over dozens of issues and have had zero impact ever. A one-day blackout won’t do shit except give the Ralph Wiggums of the world that “I’m helping!” feeling. If you want them to feel it it has to be longer-term. A week. A month. A year. And that’s sadly, something that people in a consumerist culture lack the stamina to do.
Also if you just move your purchases to the day before or the day after all you’re doing is very slightly messing up their forecasting. They’re still getting your money, just earlier or later than that had expected.
This is the precise problem with these kinds of empty actions. Back in the '70s and early '80s, when this was still new, companies would panic over this kind of action. Then they noticed it didn’t even register as a blip on the stats. A mild anomaly, maybe, if it was held on the last day of a month, but completely buried in annual statistics.
If you want them to actually take notice, you’re going to need to have more than a day. And that means going without. Which most people are unwilling and/or unable to do.
A consumerist culture is unsustainable with extreme wealth inequality
lol a general strike. pure fantasy. You’re gonna need about 5000% more class consciousness in the US before you can even think about it.
Yeah, why try doing anything, right? Action only counts when everybody does it! You, puny little human, are worthless. Your ideas not worth repeating. Don’t ever try and organise anything. It’s not worth it. \s
Stop being a pawn for the rich.
Removed by mod
Sign up here.
https://generalstrikeus.com/
Thanks friend! I share that link everywhere I go.
The number of people needed is huge, but it’s more like ~3% of the population. Strike cards and a critical mass of participants are key for us working people.
A general strike would be amazing, but it’s not realistic. Even just having say 25% of workers out for a few days puts strain on the system. Same with limiting spending. If even 25% of the country spends only on essentials, then that’ll translate to a couple percentage points of loss to major corporations (not all of course, but some major ones).
It’s not about a silver bullet, it’s about inflicting enough paper cuts that it starts to hurt. No one thing will be 100% effective.
Do it anyway.