Well, I know one place where I will no longer shop.
Basically the only reason I ever shop Amazon is to avoid walking into a Best Buy.
following pressure from a conservative think tank that holds shares in the company
Yeah, while I hate to say I rather support capitalism – living in a milder capitalism country in which the bigger problem is commercialism – I admit capitalism is broken fundamentally. Any bad actor can push their conspiracy just by putting money.
Capitalism is primarily defined by the need to push for constant growth. There’s nothing wrong with buying and selling things, but making growth a matter of primacy automatically means the quality of the product and user experience isn’t. Neither is the well-being and livelihood of the workers.
In a system where companies are incentivized to compete on that level, we can’t have nice things. Not for long anyway.
It’s definitely capitalism, rather than just commerce, that’s the problem. It’s a social cancer.
Increasing wealth inequality is a feature, not a bug, of capitalism.
Capitalism is primarily defined by the need for constant growth
That’s an American definition, though. Oxford Languages says “an economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit” and that’s how it’s defined elsewhere, as far as I can tell.
There’s the dictionary definition and the “how it plays out in the real world” definition. It isn’t defined as a system pushing for constant growth, but due to its competitive winner-take-all nature it becomes a matter of grow or die.
I’d be happy if you can cite the source of your “how it plays out in the real world” definition, if you want to argue that it’s a commonly agreed definition.
Source: *gestures broadly at everything*
What other explanation would you have for the endless pursuit of growth if not capitalism? What other explanation would you have for larger companies pushing smaller ones out if not capitalism. I’m talking both the “why” but also the “how”? Consider the mechanisms of how a company such as Wal-mart can go into a small town and drive everyone else out of business. And then consider why they do it.
Please check what a definition means.
You seem to think if it’s not explicitly in a dictionary, then it doesn’t define a word. That’s not how the real world works.
This is akin to the classic argument that no one has gotten communism right, and in theory it’s a good model. The reality is that humans are going to human, and some things do not work at scale because humans will inevitably do the human thing and some systems just aren’t designed well for human behavior. The insistence that people just aren’t following the definition that you’ve chosen disregards how words come to be - people create them to describe something new which was not previously defined, and they are generally created on the fly by people, not by people sitting down and writing out a specific definition before publishing and/or using it. Definitions also change, over time, to reflect how the words are being used or how the world itself has changed.
With all that being said, you did ask for sources on how capitalism plays out in the real world in response to people abundantly telling you that capitalism is harmful, so here’s a few sources you might find interesting that approach the harms or outcomes of capitalism as it has played out in the world in various countries.
1. The Impact of Advanced Capitalism on Well-being: an Evidence-Informed Model
2. Capitalism, socialism, and the physical quality of life
3. Testing hypotheses about the harm that capitalism causes to the mind and brain: a theoretical framework for neuroscience researchYes, and take that a few steps further: does that need for profit ever end? Where does the idea of “constant growth” eventually inevitably lead?
You guys, please check what the word definition means. I’m absolutely not saying whatever that’s against your ideas.
You seem confused as to what defines a term. The thing written in a dictionary comes from observing the real world. The real thing isn’t constrained by some written words on a website, it’s literally the other way around.
I rarely shop Best Buy as it is so it’s not like avoiding them in the future is difficult for me, but I fear that a lot of big corps have something like this tucked away somewhere.
It’s sad to realize that this type of conservative think tanks are everywhere. They are also counterproductive, but I guess they’re just there to grab money from idiotic conservative donors with the lowest IQ.
I haven’t purchased anything from a Best Buy in many years and don’t intend to any time soon.
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Funny how they cry about surgeries that literally don’t happen, but chopping the foreskin off is A-OK with them and they want those to keep happening. And breast implants, no problem with those either as long as it’s a cis-woman.
Best Buy should have just issued a statement saying those organizations don’t advocate surgeries on minors and threaten to sue them for defamation if they go public with it.
Gross. Wth Best Buy
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Best Buy offered to screen donations from its employee resource groups going to LGBTQ causes following pressure from a conservative think tank that holds shares in the company, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing made public this week.
Why are Best Buy shareholders funding the proliferation of an ideology seeking to mutilate the reproductive organs of children before they finish puberty?” the proposal, signed by Ethan Peck, an associate at the NCPPR’s Free Enterprise Institute, states.
Later that day, Peck thanked Rizzo in an email “for looking into this” and added, “we’re definitely delighted to hear all that.” He then raised several follow-up questions, including why a page on the Best Buy website still indicates the company supports the Trevor Project and a book titled “Our Gay History in 50 States.”
In response to NBC News’ request for comment, Peck declined to share any specifics regarding his communication with Best Buy, stating, “We don’t discuss confidential discussions.” He did, however, confirm that his organization has sent similar proposals to other public companies, though he did not name them.
Major consumer brands, including Bud Light and Target, have faced heated criticism from conservative activists, prompting a rollback of LGBTQ-focused marketing campaigns and products as well as calls for boycotts.
In Bud Light’s case, sales declined and shares of its parent company, Anheuser-Busch Inbev, tumbled in the months following the beer brand’s partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney on April 1 of last year, though the stock has since rebounded.
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