I wonder if this is how western civ will end?

boycottallthethings
If everybody falls for the ol’ reliable left/right false dichotomy, and then they all boycott all the things that annoy them, wouldn’t that essentially bring all commerce to a whoa? In one generation we’d be back to chipping flint and trying to sneak up on antelope, without even a nuclear war to blame it on.

Just something that crossed my mind…

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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8 Responses to I wonder if this is how western civ will end?

  1. Maybe if the left boycotts ammo I will be able to get some .22LR for a reasonable price.

  2. Joel says:

    😀 I think most of them already do boycott ammo, Harry…

  3. Anonymous says:

    Joel, I think that is a part of how the free market thrives. People choose reasons informed by their own culturally-imbued form of praxeology. New markets spring up where someone perceives a need for the next “smart phone app” and the market is driven in another direction for some small segment of humankind. Of all the forms of snarkiness, I am pleased they are boycotting, and we are not, in most instances, resorting to battlegrounds of ultimate honor or anything like that.

    But, yeah, it’s very funny and somehow a parody of “If I can’t have everything my way, then I’ll take my marbles and go home!” sort of pout. But even then, dissatisfaction drives humans to find better replacements. And thus the agora turns . . .
    **

  4. feralfae says:

    I didn’t mean for that to be anonymous.

  5. Kentucky says:

    “If I can’t have everything my way, then I’ll take my marbles and go home!”

    I just wish they’d take their marbles, go home, and SHUT THE HELL UP!!!

  6. Ben says:

    “If I can’t have everything my way, then I’ll take my marbles and go home!”
    Just to put this subject into perspective: Like it or not, we are all consumers. As consumers, we all continually exercise our “boycott”. We buy things from “store A” rather than “store B” for any of thousands of possible reasons, each of which may or may not be rational. Often, we aren’t aware of the reasons ourselves!
    I remember one time in particular when I “took my marbles home”: At a barber shop the proprietor took another customer who had arrived after me. He explained that that customer was a lawyer and “his time was important”. Being the passive-aggressive SOB that I am, I didn’t protest, yet never returned. Why not tell him? Because informing him why he had lost my business would have been giving him important information, and I was too pissed off at him to do that.

    That shop is now long-gone and I like to think that I am a tiny bit of the reason.

  7. Joel says:

    Sure, we all vote with our feet. Always have. Hell, I do it myself even though I probably have the smallest economic footprint of anybody. It’s a good point. Just sometimes I fear that boycotting as a political weapon could get really dangerously out of control. Also, being inconsistent, sometimes I wish it would hurry up and bring the whole damned infuriating thing down.

  8. Kentucky says:

    Occurs to me there’s considerably more talk about boycotting than actual boycotting.

    Similar to all the lefty hollywood/media/elites who were going to leave the country if Trump got elected. Haven’t noticed any one of them doing so . . . they’re still around, threatening this, that, and the other thing.

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