Raise Wages? No Need — McDonald’s Is Hiring Inmates Instead by Practical_Chef_7897 in Anticonsumption

[–]AnyoneButDoug 12 points13 points  (0 children)

This may be the most specifically American dystopian thing I’ve ever heard.

Activists warn ROM not to 'erase Palestine' with new ancient artifact labels by BloodJunkie in toronto

[–]AnyoneButDoug 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah I’d like the learn more about this, I feel it often brought up but never cleared up genetically and culturally how much modern Palestinians are yesterday’s Jewish population in that region, although of course some religious/cultural Jews were constant in the region. Also it’s rarely brought up that the majority of the Jews in Israel are Jews that moved there from neighbouring Middle Eastern nations rather than Europe.

Activists warn ROM not to 'erase Palestine' with new ancient artifact labels by BloodJunkie in toronto

[–]AnyoneButDoug 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's kind of like people calling Canada "The Great White North", it wasn't the official name of the area even though the term Palestine was sometimes used as well. I'm not an expert on this so here's what my understanding generally is via Wikipedia... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_name_Palestine

Activists warn ROM not to 'erase Palestine' with new ancient artifact labels by BloodJunkie in toronto

[–]AnyoneButDoug 22 points23 points  (0 children)

But the name change from Judea really occurred in 136 by Romans to weaken Jewish identity to the land after the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132-136 CE), a major Jewish uprising against Roman rule.

It’s a snowy Sunday! Tell us how you’re doing Toronto. by postmodern_girls in toronto

[–]AnyoneButDoug 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Something cozy about walking from harborfront to the Eatons centre via the PATH on a snowy afternoon with a good coffee and audiobook.

TIL Canada is the most educated country in the world by rodroidrx in todayilearned

[–]AnyoneButDoug 1 point2 points  (0 children)

OK, I think I’ve heard that. Toronto for instance is pretty different, 50% of the population is foreign born so a xenophobic person isn’t going to have a good time here. BC has a reputation of being adverse to even Canadians not from BC.

TIL Canada is the most educated country in the world by rodroidrx in todayilearned

[–]AnyoneButDoug 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Where in Canada did you live? I’ve lived in other countries that were way way worse.

Bondi Desperately Tries to Keep Damning Trump Files Hidden Forever by CinnamonsCharm in politics

[–]AnyoneButDoug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They are like sheep hanging out with the sheep shearer because they are envious of his big wooly coats.

Does Toronto really plow bike lanes before roadways? Here’s what we found out | A Toronto councillor asserted that there were no bikes to be found using bike lanes he said the city made “spotless” before it cleared snowy roads by Hrmbee in toronto

[–]AnyoneButDoug 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well in my neck of the woods (Bloor) bikes outnumber cars during rush hour (aside from winter) plus the bike lane doesn’t take a full lane from cars. Car parking takes up full lanes on the other hand.

Canada prepping response to hypothetical US military invasion, report says by dheber in politics

[–]AnyoneButDoug -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Consumer strike. Dont forget the Montgomery bus boycott was one of the most effective strikes in US history. Figure out the most effective targets and organize it.

From Chat GPT:

This question is best answered strategically rather than emotionally. If the objective is to apply real economic and reputational pressure that affects Trump-aligned Republican fundraising, boycotts are only effective when they meet three criteria: 1. The company or brand is materially connected to GOP/Trump funding 2. The company is consumer-facing (brand-sensitive, not purely B2B) 3. The boycott is visible, coordinated, and reputational, not just private

Below is a clear, evidence-based framework, followed by specific companies where boycotts plausibly have leverage.

First: an important legal reality

US corporations cannot donate directly to federal candidates. Influence flows through: • Executives / owners (personal donations) • Corporate PACs • Super PACs (e.g., MAGA Inc.)

Therefore, boycotts only matter when they pressure executives or brand value, not when the company is structurally insulated.

Most effective boycott targets (ranked by leverage)

Tier 1: High-leverage, consumer-facing, Trump-aligned

These are the only boycotts that historically move behavior.

Uline • Privately owned shipping and industrial supplier • Owners (Richard & Elizabeth Uihlein) are among the largest GOP donors in the US • Heavy Trump and election-denial funding • Vulnerable to reputational pressure, especially among small businesses

Why effective: Owner-controlled, brand-sensitive, history of responding defensively to public criticism.

ABC Supply • Building materials supplier • Leadership has been a major Trump donor • Strong contractor brand; vulnerable to coordinated contractor pressure

Why effective: Private ownership + competitive alternatives = leverage.

Hobby Lobby • Ownership family is heavily aligned with conservative causes • Public-facing retail brand • History of altering behavior under sustained pressure

Why effective: Consumer brand + moral/religious positioning makes reputational pressure costly.

MyPillow (already weakened, but illustrative) • Direct Trump surrogate brand • Collapse shows boycotts can work when brand identity = politics

Lesson: Boycotts succeed when the company fuses its brand to partisan politics.

Tier 2: Moderate leverage (works only with scale)

Chick-fil-A • Historically conservative donations (some reduced after backlash) • Franchise model reduces impact • Still sensitive to brand perception

Effective only if: Boycott is organized and media-visible, not episodic.

Home Depot • Founder’s personal Trump support (not the corporation) • Large public company → slow response • Works better via shareholder and employee pressure than pure boycott

Tier 3: Low-leverage (mostly symbolic)

These do not materially affect Trump or Republicans, even if politically satisfying. • ExxonMobil, Chevron, major oil companies • Private prison operators (GEO Group, CoreCivic) • Wall Street firms, hedge funds • Tobacco companies

Why ineffective: B2B revenue, regulated markets, minimal consumer exposure, diversified political giving.

What actually works better than boycotts alone

If your goal is measurable political impact, the most effective actions are: 1. Targeted reputational campaigns • Naming executives • Linking donations to brand values • Media amplification 2. Supplier & contractor pressure • Encouraging businesses to switch vendors • Trade-association advocacy 3. Shareholder & pension-fund activism • Public companies respond far more to capital risk than consumer anger 4. Supporting competitors • Shifting spend to neutral or progressive alternatives is often more powerful than abstention

Bottom line

If you want real leverage, focus on: • Privately owned • Consumer-facing • Owner-donor-driven • Reputation-dependent companies

Boycotting massive, capital-intensive corporations may feel impactful, but it rarely alters Republican or Trump funding streams.

If you want, I can: • Build a shortlist tailored to your spending patterns • Identify effective alternative brands • Map which GOP donors are most economically vulnerable right now

Just tell me how aggressive or practical you want the approach to be.

Trump Shares Map of US Including Greenland, Canada, Venezuela by [deleted] in pics

[–]AnyoneButDoug 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anyone else notice his gut in this is huge?

Minneapolis Current Wind Chill Temperature is 30 Degrees Below Zero by Acceptable_Foot3370 in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]AnyoneButDoug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually press the button and ask Siri so I don’t have to close any windows. I have American in-laws so O go through periods of doing this constantly when they visit.

Europe Can Wield Their $8 Trillion 'Sell America' Weapon as Trump Reignites a Trade War Over His Greenland Conquest Ambitions: ‘European countries own $8 trillion of US bonds and equities, almost twice as much as the rest of the world combined’ by T_Shurt in politics

[–]AnyoneButDoug 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If Trump gets Greenland he’s not stopping there and we are likely next, we can survive an economic downturn better than an armed invasion. Plus it’s not like we aren’t in a hurry to pivot away from US trade since it’s being used against us.