this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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Philosophy
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Philosophy (from Greek: φιλοσοφία, philosophia, 'love of wisdom') is the systematized study of general and fundamental questions, such as those about existence, reason, knowledge, values, mind, and language.
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It will in 99.9% of the cases be cheaper for a company to give some concessions to the boycotters before it kills off otherwise profitable segments of its operation. If they weren't profitable they were on the chopping block anyway and any concessions made can easily be reversed later once the dust settles.
So even if the short term cost would eat up the profit (it most likely won't), long term the venture can still be profitable by weaseling around or even outright reversing any sort of concessions made. See for example the whole green washing debacle most companies engage in.
Indeed I agree… boycotts would not cause impact on workers.
I would like to get to the bottom of why boycotts are so under utilized. Non-activists always have a common list of excuses claiming:
The “all companies are bad” excuse is easily dismissed by a comparison of wrongdoing among competing corps, but still hard to counter because those with that reasoning don’t likely care about the harm being fought in the first place. The first two bullets are contradictory. Thus non-activists are likely to believe one or the other. It’s hard to turn around the thinking of people who think boycotts don’t work, but perhaps activists can reach those who worry about collateral damage because those in that group are more likely to intrinsically care enough to take actions.