American here. Just want to voice my support for this effort. Consumers are long overdue in striking back at companies making record profits from our necessities.
I started a permanent loblaws boycott this week. Won't be shopping at any of the other big names either. Preparing to participate in the boycott led me to sign up for a co op that I should've been using all along and I don't see myself ever going back. Anything they don't carry I can get at a local independent grocer and they're usually a little cheaper than no frills anyway.
Co ops are a solution to corporate greed, use them whenever possible.
Yep. we started using local grocers when Loblaws prices skyrocketed and local grocer stayed reasonable. This month we stopped going to any Loblaws owned thing, might continue indefinitely if no reasults happen
The only places I've had to cut out was shoppers, and I go there so rarely that it really didn't matter.
Their grocery stores have been garbage for so long that "boycotting" is such a moot point to me. They're the only nearby grocer that forces you to buy the amount of a listed item to actually get the discount (ie, if an item is 2/$6.00, buying one charges you full price, not $3.00). Between that and many items being ~5-10% higher than the other grocers, I'm not sure why anyone shops there to begin with.
Hey, did you know your profile is set to appear as a bot and as a result many may be filtering your posts and comments? You can change this in your Lemmy settings.
If we respond to this, does it count as virtue signaling?
I avoided going to the bi-weekly coke sale at Shopper's Drug Mart. Looks like I'll be pouring my drinks a bit rich for the next little while. Ever since Loblaws bought them and the subsequent price increase, I've been less confident that it really is the loss-leader I've been led to believe it was. Then, my wife had a prescription faxed there since our local pharmacy had already closed for the day.
I grumbled about it and had it transferred to the co-op, since I had been meaning to get set up there (3rd party insurance and all).
I'd love to but I live in a small town with only 2 grocery stores. No Frills and Metro. I have to drive 30 minutes to another town if I want to shop somewhere else. They're both expensive so I usually end up going to both and looking for sales.
I have doubts that this boycott will actually make a difference. The world is fucked and controlled by the rich. The only way things will ever change is if the working class band together and force change. But we're all too busy arguing amongst eachother about meaningless shit to do that.
You're not in a good position to boycott for sure, but that doesn't mean there aren't many others who are. I think we can agree that the working class banding together is important. Let's hope something positive comes of this
I'm not convinced the boycott will make a difference, but it's pretty easy for me to shop somewhere else, so I'll give it a shot. If I had to drive 30 minutes, there's no way I'd do it.
I tend to avoid the large corps where I can (Amazon, Walmart) recently moved to buying what I can from farmers markets and honestly having someone remember you and be proud of their product is a game changer, and tastes better too.
I refuse to shop at Sainsbury's since they started having gates where yoy physically have to scan your receipt to leave. They have also started doing nectar card prices where they charge more if you don't want them to track you. Tesco does the same. I'm not sure about Morrisons and Asda. Waitrose just costs more no matter what.
Not only was I spending 100% of my grocery budget at a Loblaws owned store, but I can probably count on one hand how many times I've visited one in the last 6 years.
Switching to alternative stores saved me thousands over the years.
I mean I am just cause I never shop there and none of em are near me. I'm lucky that there's an independent market near me for all the produce, and a really great fish market where I can buy wild caught, sustainable fish.