If a particular person says/does something worthy of being shunned, yes, do so. But most people were only Trump voters or Harris voters for one day. Campaigns “got out the vote” and begged for money, but they made no effort to encourage nuanced critical thinking. I wish there were a super PAC for that, but there isn’t.
@EileenKCarpenter Boycotts work better when enough people actually do them.
Been trying to scrape people off Amazon for years, to no avail.
@AskTheDevil
I’ll order elsewhere when I can. Hard to do — many sites just link to their stuff on Amazon
@EileenKCarpenter look for B corps. they are generally owned by the employees. my local B corps include:
King Arthur Flour
Cabot Creamery
Badger Balms
Lake Champlain Chocolates
Stonyfield (despite being bought out by Dannon)
@EileenKCarpenter nah. most trump voters were returning maga. it was the dems where voters didn't show.
maga were not '1 day' voters. they showed up b/c anti immigration, anti woman, racist, homophobic, transphobic - the hate, intolerance, & outrageous slurs appealed to them.
they'll say economy but kamala was talking about the economy AND riding on biden's successful economic policies.
peeps made choices based on their perceptions & beliefs. no amt of facts were going to sway them.
@singlemaltgirl
Many people have not voted consistently with one party - they voted Obama, Trump, Biden, Trump. “It’s the economy, stupid,” as Clinton posted on the wall to try to keep himself from straying off message. It’s a potent weapon against incumbents.
Racism and misogyny drive a significant minority, but most people didn’t care enough to listen to Trump and see how impaired he is. He said he would lower prices, and they don’t know enough to know they’re going to go up instead.
Alas, that is a story we tell ourselves because we reflexively do not want to see.
Even this article frames it as ignorance.
But it is a lazy, willful ignorance. Black women didn’t fall for it, because they couldn’t. Black men mostly did not.
The rest of us? 😑
@Y2cake
This is what I want a superPAC to address. Send a series of mailings to EVERY voter, each explaining one issue, maybe in comic book form. Why does the Fed set interest rates? How does the government actually collect tariffs? What is Citizens United? What is Chevron? Make the mailings so fair in presenting both sides that no one can tell who sent it, but let voters make up their minds based on understanding how issues affect them. And start now, so it’s not tied to one candidate.
@EileenKCarpenter @Y2cake In my opinion even that won’t work effectively. A mailer doesn’t compete with social media propaganda echo chambers.
@bmacmixer @Y2cake
We see them as powerful, but maybe 10% of people really participate in politics on line.
@EileenKCarpenter @Y2cake Where did you get that number?
Out of my butt, mostly, but it tracks with Pew research.
@EileenKCarpenter @Y2cake That makes more sense. They get their news from social media only sometimes too. I had a Trumper proudly tell me he gets all his news from Facebook. But to your point and that article … they don’t follow the candidates and do the work you are supposed to do before voting. It’s beyond infuriating that ignorance is a catalyst to pain and despair when it is so avoidable.
Anyway, boycotts are of limited effectiveness when a few billionaires and investment firms own controlling shares of everything, and they use our 401K funds to do it.
Positive actions work better than negative ones. It is much more useful to share info about independent businesses that may cost a bit more but are responsive to their customers, like Penzys. (Which I only know about because people do share stuff like that on CoSo).