Democracy in Chains -
The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America
quote [ A US appeals court in New York on Friday weighed arguments over whether Uber customers gave up their right to sue the company when they registered for its popular taxi hailing service. ]
So tempted to file this under Mafia.
[SFW] [business] |
[+2 WTF] |
|
[by
XregnaR]
|
|
|
|
rylex said @ 11:59pm GMT on 27th March
I think boycotts prove more effective when you dont have a sizable base of consumers to sell to. The more your pool of potential income grows, the harder it becomes for people to align with boycotts for a variety of reasons; diffrrent culturan norms, different societal views, different level of being informed.
As it stands, a company can act horribly in one market and be lauded for it by another (chik-filaanyone?)
rylex said @ 12:00am GMT on 28th March
I think boycotts prove more effective when you dont have a sizable base of consumers to sell to. The more your pool of potential income grows, the harder it becomes for people to align with boycotts for a variety of reasons; diffrrent culturan norms, different societal views, different level of being informed.
As it stands, a company can act horribly in one market and be lauded for it by another (chik-fil-a anyone?)
/
rylex said @ 11:59pm GMT on 27th March
I think boycotts prove more effective when you dont have a sizable base of consumers to sell to. The more your pool of potential income grows, the harder it becomes for people to align with boycotts for a variety of reasons; diffrrent culturan norms, different societal views, different level of being informed.
As it stands, a company can act horribly in one market and be lauded for it by another (chik-fil-a anyone?)