Def doing so. I stopped using US-owned social media altogether, and no longer buy American products. Friends whom I know also stopped investing in the US and moved to European ESGs and SRIs.
Yup, and to avoid another US 2.0, it's advisable to invest in worker-owned co-operatives, into independent, investigative journalism, and pro-democratic, antifascist movements. Be critical of algorithms that foster polarisation and right-wing sentiment.
More democracy means better business, better labour, better wellbeing environments. Social wellbeing pays off greatly.
Exactly. Get a subscription on a good newspaper, it helps protect independent journalism. Become a party member, and make sure to vote. Naturally, that is not reeeeally a US boycott, but this is the right time to adjust your personal strategy.
Ask all the American tourism industry types who whine about the loss of Canadian visitors if anybody's still doing the boycott. Ask Jack Daniels and Jim Beam if Canadians are still doing the boycott.
Yes. People are still doing the boycott, and in the case of Canada I think we may be watching a cultural shift appear in real time. In 25 years when people think "vacation" in Canada they'll either think "Canada" or they'll think literally anywhere else in the world other than the USA.
Canada here. Still avoiding American produce in the grocery store if possible. I've missed citrus fruit, but some Moroccan oranges showed up last week. Mexico is our main supplier these days.
Yep, no money to US billionaires means avoiding all US owned companies, no matter how high up. I dont care if its assembled in Canada, if the profits go to the US.. Nope.
If an American company is making "product of " what's happening is that the Americans are exploiting the labour of while rolling in the profits in the USA.
Fuck American companies. No matter where they're exploiting their labour.
I think we're getting less loud about it as it becomes less of a boycott and more of a way of life. "Canadian first, but anything but American" is kind of the new normal now.
Norway checking in. Doing my best. About to be 100% free from Google. No Amazon... no Microsoft.. no Apple...
For the most part I buy no American products either. Think everything is going great 🙂👍
No amazon in norway isnt hard tho^^ norwegians should try no coke and tesla.
Sorry not trying to shit on you, just disapointed in many others here, no microsoft google and amazon is a great thing, getting rid of facebook dependency here would also be nice.
I totally agree with you. Tesla sales in Norway is a disapointment. We have a couple of good coke alternatives though - if only more people could buy those... (they're half the price, even).
Sadly I deleted facebook many years ago. Would love to delete it now instead 😉
Greece here, doing my best! nothing change and nothing will. FUCK USA.
I can write as many as fuck usa I want, cause fuck usa. Kids died, and their complain was their fucking oil!
I've gotten it down to just google products (youtube and android), but will be replacing them as soon as I find the means to do so. Once that's done, there will be nothing left in my life that's US, not even entertainment.
American here. I seriously fricking hope that you guys haven't given up the boycott yet. Money is the only language my fucking hellish government speaks. If you're worried about those of us on the bottom, we'll be fine. Don't worry about us. We'll live. Just keep up the pressure.
You can bet I’m still boycotting. But after the big initial sweep (low hanging fruits: email providers, social media, shopping, … this is all continuing), changes are now incremental and/or take a bit longer to implement: reduce dependency on natural gas (eg insulating our house), selling the USA EV… But overall, the dies have been cast. Most crucial now is to convince friends and family, so keep the posts with examples and successes coming.
I like many here left Reddit and found Lemmy because of the boycott. I dropped all my US streaming services and moved to the high seas. I stopped using my ISPs email because they use exchange. I have officially spent my last cent to apple as I self host things, still looking for off site backup of my Nextcloud but that will come soon enough. I started boycotting the google (minus Youtube) years ago, now I use an app that blocks ads. All of my computing that does not happen on my iPad or iPhone happens on raspberry pi’s. I still take this boycott very seriously.
It depends on the industry. You'll see some independent bookstores, a few art supply stores, and other niche things that corpos don't really do well enough to completely obliterate all human passion in the sector. Otherwise? Nah, the only other area where mom-and-pop stores are doing well is restaurants. I had to drive four hours to purchase a lenovo computer from an official retailer (a mom-and-pop joint in the middle of nowhere in Massachusetts), since I refused to use Amazon.
Me and my very large extended family are 100% committed to the american boycott for the rest of our lives. I have children in my family who have vowed to never travel to or buy from america. They have lost my family for at least the next 3 generations...
Boycotting on most food and household products, also unsubscribe from a lot of online services and sailing the great seas. I even thought my mom how to use steamio to get her to save money on her netflix subscription. I wish there were more alternatives for computers; our Chinese phones are great; I dropped my huawei phone (in a protector case) from a 5 meter roof and not even a scratch.
The problem with these OSS phones (all of them, basically) is that ... what apps do you use?
If I want to buy something on Taobao there's not a single OSS phone that has a Taobao app. If I want to use WeChat to talk to former students, coworkers, friends, and family ... there's no WeChat app.
Having "great tech" only helps if said tech has credible alternatives for things people use all the time. That is the sad power of "network externalities".
Definitely doing it. Not travelling to the US until he's dead. Hasn't been perfect, but most food staples I check labels for USA origin, and pick anything else.
I'm currently looking for a Canadian alternative for good quality playing cards that aren't cheap plastic souvenir garbage, I want to give some to a relative that loves Bridge. Might post about it soon.
People keep mistaking Trump as the source of the problem in the USA. He isn't. He's the symptom of a deep cultural rot that was decades in the making. If you had your eyes open very widely you could even spot today's USA in the late '70s. By the '90s even someone with cataracts could have seen what was coming around the bend. (I pledged never to set foot on US soil myself in 1999 after what I saw in Houston.)
Trump's death will solve nothing; indeed it might make things worse: the Redcaps will have their conveniently dead saint, and smarter people will be where Trump is, using his effigy to effectively manipulate his Redcap following. Picture in your head President J.D. "Peter Thiel's Puppet" Vance.
I'm with you. I started boycotting tourism (and shopping) travel to the US when they re-elected Bush.
I drove through the US a few times to save hours of driving when Obama was president, but otherwise I haven't been south of the border in over 2 decades.
The Republican Apparatus is the problem, and Trump is one of many symptoms. As much as it will be painful in the short term, I have high hopes for the end of American hegemony. It's been a long time coming.
Absolutely agree with you on the fact that America's problems don't start nor end with Trump, and there's a lot beyond that, that needs to be done for the world to lend its trust back to it. I've said my piece on that within this comment.
I'm just being realistic and thinking ahead of time with what can temporarily suspend or fully call off my boycott. There's a long list of things I need to see before I would even consider incorporating the USA back into my vacation plans. There's a shorter list keeping me from stepping foot there whatsoever.
Even if absolutely nothing else changes, Seattle will be out in the streets celebrating like crazy. It's one of the few events I'm willing to break my boycott just for a night to share the joy, before I go back to boycotting again.
ETA: I went to the USA last at the start of 2025 before Trump took office so I could get one last look of a pre-Trump2 baseline... going for a day can give me a another snapshot before things go from bad to worse, if what you're predicting pans out, or better if Americans manage to clean house with a Reconstruction 2.
I like to drink alcohol and I live in a city that is famous for beer. So I am not feeling any pain in choice of alcohol. If anything the replacement of American beer and Whiskey has made more room for Canadian brands I didn't know existed.
I was never a bourbon guy. As for rye, when I tried lot 40 rye I was impressed by just how good it tasted. Canadian club rye was good, but not as good. I got a different brand to try out this Friday.
100% and it's fully normalised now, I've even switched to UK English spelling myself and on all my devices.
My parents' iMacs are running Linux and everyone is drinking local Kola. My focus is now on encouraging friends and family to join in and helping where I can. (mostly the tech stuff)
I also like to throw US and Israeli products to the back of the shelves in supermarkets. Even made some 'Buy European' stickers to put over barcodes.
It is less of a true boycott to me as I live in the US that would be hard lol and more of a sustained campaign to convince people not to continue serious relationships with my government until we fix how wildly dangerous shit has become here.
I will keep advocating for moving off dependency on US companies and services because I can see first hand the danger and destruction happening here with my own eyes while the center of this country still clings to the comfort of condescending people like me for being worried....
...as the iceberg that sunk the ship clearly looms over their shoulders with ship paint scraped clear across it.
"Why are you being so alarmist? Nobody can even prove that paint was from our ship yet." - they say with their arms crossed
Moving to linux, 3/5 done. Jordan toothpaste. Meira ketchup. Looking for new favourite jeans. Going to degoogle. Switched fast food chains or rather going to non fast food altogether. Market brand cola. Soda machine, co2 and concentrates not made on stolen land. LV shaving cream. Planning to switch razor blade, electric toothbrushes and buy 3rd party parts until the switch. Changed remote desktop software. European hosting. I don't think I have need for an American booze bottle ever again. Much more that I forget now. Bit by bit finding the alternatives.
I boycotted almost everything corporate for years and got to where I physically couldn't boycott any harder, then when that became not enough to satisfy me I moved out of the country entirely. American owners and government have lost at least six figures of my money due to ghoulish behavior, and I'm just one person. 10,000 of me (only 0.002% of the population) lost this way in the last few years is already a billion dollars lost. It certainly must be adding up even if most people are too blind to see their own power
Yes - quite successfully, the only thing I haven’t switched over yet is my Office365 to OpenOffice but thanks to some account sharing we’re down to 1/3 of a family subscription.
For stuff that I cannot avoid, I have been doing a good job patiently waiting to buy them second hand. Plus it's cheaper and better on the environment.
Yes totally on it and won't go back using them again. Degoogled, deleted all US based social media, Moved from those fedi instance that uses US hosting provider, Still blocking ads, Still pirate stuff, and stopped buying stuff that i know are from US
It became my New normal.
AS an example: i am currebtly in holidays (Portugal) in the past i would habe ordered Coke in Restaurants - now i order local lemonade (sumol)
I changed my ROM to e/OS am using Debian on my PC and obviously made a lemmy account and now have stopped using reddit completly.
Okay so this is something I've been thinking about for a while and I found this community. The names you find for DRM-free digital PC games are GOG, itch.io and Zoom-Platform - only the first is Polish, the other two are American. There are smaller stores like the Swedish Fireflower Games, but the three up top are the big names.
I already don't spend money on the various DRM launchers, of which the majority are American. Don't get the point of buying a game if I need to use some online launcher connecting to a third party service to even be able to run it (unsurprisingly an idea grown in the US), I like owning my stuff, thanks.
But should I keep not actively spending money on itch and Zoom-Platform as long as the US is not even trying to get rid of its fascism? Not that I'm a big spender in any case, but it's still worth thinking about.
You should do what you're comfortable doing. Everybody has their own line for what is and isn't acceptable.
I'm hard core. I use no product or service that I pay for that comes from an American company or producer of any size. (I'll let you read between the lines on that.) I don't have a Google account, nor a Xhitter one, nor any Meta products, etc. But I also don't buy artisanal (is it really?) goods from small producers in the USA either. There's artisanal stuff available all over the world; one country is easy to avoid.
Right now literally the last American product I use is Android, and that will be corrected when I get my next phone. Since it's a Chinese phone (in China) there's nothing that will profit Google anyway, so it doesn't matter to me. The damage, in the form of Google getting money from me, has already been done. But my next phone will not have an American system on it.
That being said, I know that's not realistic for everybody and honestly, even 10% boycott is better than 0%. The disease of expecting everything to be all or nothing is part of what got the USA into the mess where everybody wants to boycott it, so ... that purity angle is ridiculous coming the other direction. Boycott what fits into your life and what you're comfortable with. No more, no less. If you think paying small producers is OK but not the megacorps and such? Fine. If you think you can't really stop using Windows or Android or iOS or whatever for reasons, that's also fine. It's your line, you draw it.
And every little bit of American stuff you cut out of your life: I think you deeply for your efforts.
My thinking about it is if I pay even a dollar to say itch.io, I know they mean well and I know they won't directly support US fascism, but they still pay taxes which would inevitably go to all the actively harmful faces making our lives worse. I wanted to know whether or I'm being overkill for that, but in all honesty there doesn't seem to be anything overkill about this, it's just the appropriate response.
I use a Xiaomi phone as well with Android, but with Google already planning to screw us over in the most """advanced flow""" possible, I'm only hoping Linux phones catch up and maybe it would be the next one. I did try to also migrate out of Google Docs but it seems my only decent European alternative is Proton which is not easily accessible in my country, what's with them offering a VPN service and all that.
Likewise, I appreciate every little bit of effort you make in boycotting the USA, and even 5% is better than 0%. Thank you.
I went to Vegas recently. And I plan on visiting Hawaii. But other then that I buy canadian when possible and if something big I need too purchase comes from the states I try to find one made in canada instead, or literally anywhere else.
You'll spend more money on US goods by each of those vacations than any purchase over a whole year.
I mean you do you, please just don't give yourself an illusion. This is not "boycotting 80%" - if your vacation spending is anywhere close to the median it's more than you'll buy in goods throughout the rest of the year combined.
This right here. "I'm boycotting US goods except for the HUGE amounts of money I spend on vacations in the USA" is not the flex people seem to think it is.
Why Hawaii? There's a myriad of non-US tropical islands to visit that aren't filled to the brim with crass assholes. Hell, Hawaii was a grossly capitalistic Hellhole back when I went there as a child in the '80s. What's next? "I'm boycotting the USA except for my annual trip to Disneyland"?
boycotting the us became the normal life for me
Def doing so. I stopped using US-owned social media altogether, and no longer buy American products. Friends whom I know also stopped investing in the US and moved to European ESGs and SRIs.
Yep, many are divesting in USA companies, and bringing their money to the EU.
Yup, and to avoid another US 2.0, it's advisable to invest in worker-owned co-operatives, into independent, investigative journalism, and pro-democratic, antifascist movements. Be critical of algorithms that foster polarisation and right-wing sentiment.
More democracy means better business, better labour, better wellbeing environments. Social wellbeing pays off greatly.
Exactly. Get a subscription on a good newspaper, it helps protect independent journalism. Become a party member, and make sure to vote. Naturally, that is not reeeeally a US boycott, but this is the right time to adjust your personal strategy.
Yup. I can recommend the Jacobin, Follow the Money, Die Tageszeitung (German), and De Correspondent (Dutch).
Ask all the American tourism industry types who whine about the loss of Canadian visitors if anybody's still doing the boycott. Ask Jack Daniels and Jim Beam if Canadians are still doing the boycott.
Yes. People are still doing the boycott, and in the case of Canada I think we may be watching a cultural shift appear in real time. In 25 years when people think "vacation" in Canada they'll either think "Canada" or they'll think literally anywhere else in the world other than the USA.
It is truly fun to behold.
Canada here. Still avoiding American produce in the grocery store if possible. I've missed citrus fruit, but some Moroccan oranges showed up last week. Mexico is our main supplier these days.
I spend 1-3 minutes to look for the company address. US address? Let's check the next one. Their fine prints won't stop me!
You mean like if it's a product of Mexico or Morroco, but the company is still USA owned?
Yep, no money to US billionaires means avoiding all US owned companies, no matter how high up. I dont care if its assembled in Canada, if the profits go to the US.. Nope.
I learned Equifruit, the fair trade banana company you see at Costco and Sobeys, is Canadian owned
FUCK yes!
If an American company is making "product of " what's happening is that the Americans are exploiting the labour of while rolling in the profits in the USA.
Fuck American companies. No matter where they're exploiting their labour.
I think we're getting less loud about it as it becomes less of a boycott and more of a way of life. "Canadian first, but anything but American" is kind of the new normal now.
I totally agree. It has become second nature now...look on the label and if it says, "Made in USA", then put it back on the shelf.
Norway checking in. Doing my best. About to be 100% free from Google. No Amazon... no Microsoft.. no Apple... For the most part I buy no American products either. Think everything is going great 🙂👍
No amazon in norway isnt hard tho^^ norwegians should try no coke and tesla.
Sorry not trying to shit on you, just disapointed in many others here, no microsoft google and amazon is a great thing, getting rid of facebook dependency here would also be nice.
I totally agree with you. Tesla sales in Norway is a disapointment. We have a couple of good coke alternatives though - if only more people could buy those... (they're half the price, even).
Sadly I deleted facebook many years ago. Would love to delete it now instead 😉
Again i didn't mean you personally, but love to hear someone else doesn't have facebook in this country ^^
Greece here, doing my best! nothing change and nothing will. FUCK USA.
I can write as many as fuck usa I want, cause fuck usa. Kids died, and their complain was their fucking oil!
Canadian here: 100%!
I've gotten it down to just google products (youtube and android), but will be replacing them as soon as I find the means to do so. Once that's done, there will be nothing left in my life that's US, not even entertainment.
This will continue indefinitely, too ♡
loops.video
Canadian here, eh, boycotting them as much as I am able to
American here. I seriously fricking hope that you guys haven't given up the boycott yet. Money is the only language my fucking hellish government speaks. If you're worried about those of us on the bottom, we'll be fine. Don't worry about us. We'll live. Just keep up the pressure.
Canadian here. As much as possible.
You can bet I’m still boycotting. But after the big initial sweep (low hanging fruits: email providers, social media, shopping, … this is all continuing), changes are now incremental and/or take a bit longer to implement: reduce dependency on natural gas (eg insulating our house), selling the USA EV… But overall, the dies have been cast. Most crucial now is to convince friends and family, so keep the posts with examples and successes coming.
I like many here left Reddit and found Lemmy because of the boycott. I dropped all my US streaming services and moved to the high seas. I stopped using my ISPs email because they use exchange. I have officially spent my last cent to apple as I self host things, still looking for off site backup of my Nextcloud but that will come soon enough. I started boycotting the google (minus Youtube) years ago, now I use an app that blocks ads. All of my computing that does not happen on my iPad or iPhone happens on raspberry pi’s. I still take this boycott very seriously.
It's kind of hard to boycott American goods when you live in the country, but I'm trying my best.
You can at least favor smaller companies instead of the big corpos. By the way, are there small family-owned businesses still surviving?
It depends on the industry. You'll see some independent bookstores, a few art supply stores, and other niche things that corpos don't really do well enough to completely obliterate all human passion in the sector. Otherwise? Nah, the only other area where mom-and-pop stores are doing well is restaurants. I had to drive four hours to purchase a lenovo computer from an official retailer (a mom-and-pop joint in the middle of nowhere in Massachusetts), since I refused to use Amazon.
That's sad, but at least a few sectors persevere. I hope the anti corporate movement gives them a new breath
Me and my very large extended family are 100% committed to the american boycott for the rest of our lives. I have children in my family who have vowed to never travel to or buy from america. They have lost my family for at least the next 3 generations...
Yes definitely still boycotting in the hopes that supply chains will change and Canada will never again be as integrated with the USA as it once was.
Eu here, doing my part.
I wouldn't be surprised if the boycott is the reason Canada has been steady economically so far.
By what measure is Canada's economy steady? Increasing unemployment, deficit near double from Trudeau. Auto, aluminum, canola, potash in freefall.
Boycotting on most food and household products, also unsubscribe from a lot of online services and sailing the great seas. I even thought my mom how to use steamio to get her to save money on her netflix subscription. I wish there were more alternatives for computers; our Chinese phones are great; I dropped my huawei phone (in a protector case) from a 5 meter roof and not even a scratch.
cool :3 just saying, if youd like a phone thats european/OSS i use fairphone with e os. which is rlly good from my experience.
also linageos sounds good, never used tho so idk
The problem with these OSS phones (all of them, basically) is that ... what apps do you use?
If I want to buy something on Taobao there's not a single OSS phone that has a Taobao app. If I want to use WeChat to talk to former students, coworkers, friends, and family ... there's no WeChat app.
Having "great tech" only helps if said tech has credible alternatives for things people use all the time. That is the sad power of "network externalities".
Definitely doing it. Not travelling to the US until he's dead. Hasn't been perfect, but most food staples I check labels for USA origin, and pick anything else.
I'm currently looking for a Canadian alternative for good quality playing cards that aren't cheap plastic souvenir garbage, I want to give some to a relative that loves Bridge. Might post about it soon.
Why start up again after he dies?
This is a serious question.
People keep mistaking Trump as the source of the problem in the USA. He isn't. He's the symptom of a deep cultural rot that was decades in the making. If you had your eyes open very widely you could even spot today's USA in the late '70s. By the '90s even someone with cataracts could have seen what was coming around the bend. (I pledged never to set foot on US soil myself in 1999 after what I saw in Houston.)
Trump's death will solve nothing; indeed it might make things worse: the Redcaps will have their conveniently dead saint, and smarter people will be where Trump is, using his effigy to effectively manipulate his Redcap following. Picture in your head President J.D. "Peter Thiel's Puppet" Vance.
I apologize for the nightmares I've just induced.
I'm with you. I started boycotting tourism (and shopping) travel to the US when they re-elected Bush.
I drove through the US a few times to save hours of driving when Obama was president, but otherwise I haven't been south of the border in over 2 decades.
The Republican Apparatus is the problem, and Trump is one of many symptoms. As much as it will be painful in the short term, I have high hopes for the end of American hegemony. It's been a long time coming.
Absolutely agree with you on the fact that America's problems don't start nor end with Trump, and there's a lot beyond that, that needs to be done for the world to lend its trust back to it. I've said my piece on that within this comment.
I'm just being realistic and thinking ahead of time with what can temporarily suspend or fully call off my boycott. There's a long list of things I need to see before I would even consider incorporating the USA back into my vacation plans. There's a shorter list keeping me from stepping foot there whatsoever.
Even if absolutely nothing else changes, Seattle will be out in the streets celebrating like crazy. It's one of the few events I'm willing to break my boycott just for a night to share the joy, before I go back to boycotting again.
ETA: I went to the USA last at the start of 2025 before Trump took office so I could get one last look of a pre-Trump2 baseline... going for a day can give me a another snapshot before things go from bad to worse, if what you're predicting pans out, or better if Americans manage to clean house with a Reconstruction 2.
I like to drink alcohol and I live in a city that is famous for beer. So I am not feeling any pain in choice of alcohol. If anything the replacement of American beer and Whiskey has made more room for Canadian brands I didn't know existed.
There is at least one craft microbrewery in almost every medium sized city in Canada, there's so much to try.
Also I find Canadian rye to be superior to most American rye
I've never really found a rye I actively liked. For me it's best as a mixer at best.
I'm going to miss bourbon.
But I will be missing it. There's no going back to it ever again. The world is full of good hooch. I'll make do.
I was never a bourbon guy. As for rye, when I tried lot 40 rye I was impressed by just how good it tasted. Canadian club rye was good, but not as good. I got a different brand to try out this Friday.
These days for the hard stuff I drink almost exclusively baijiu.
I never tried Chinese liquor. Maybe next time.
Still going with it. I would say my spending on US products/services and use of US platforms is down probably 90%-95% from what it was 18 months ago.
Absolutely and it's going even stronger!
As a Canadian, I watch Guard the Leaf and it strengthens my resolve every day!
For Life..
Yup
canadians are still buying canada
Yep! As much as I can.
100% and it's fully normalised now, I've even switched to UK English spelling myself and on all my devices.
My parents' iMacs are running Linux and everyone is drinking local Kola. My focus is now on encouraging friends and family to join in and helping where I can. (mostly the tech stuff) I also like to throw US and Israeli products to the back of the shelves in supermarkets. Even made some 'Buy European' stickers to put over barcodes.
It is less of a true boycott to me as I live in the US that would be hard lol and more of a sustained campaign to convince people not to continue serious relationships with my government until we fix how wildly dangerous shit has become here.
I will keep advocating for moving off dependency on US companies and services because I can see first hand the danger and destruction happening here with my own eyes while the center of this country still clings to the comfort of condescending people like me for being worried....
...as the iceberg that sunk the ship clearly looms over their shoulders with ship paint scraped clear across it.
"Why are you being so alarmist? Nobody can even prove that paint was from our ship yet." - they say with their arms crossed
I am doing my best
Yep, boycotting everything that is from the Yanks or the Zionists
As much as possible
Moving to linux, 3/5 done. Jordan toothpaste. Meira ketchup. Looking for new favourite jeans. Going to degoogle. Switched fast food chains or rather going to non fast food altogether. Market brand cola. Soda machine, co2 and concentrates not made on stolen land. LV shaving cream. Planning to switch razor blade, electric toothbrushes and buy 3rd party parts until the switch. Changed remote desktop software. European hosting. I don't think I have need for an American booze bottle ever again. Much more that I forget now. Bit by bit finding the alternatives.
I'm doing my part, but i've also been doing it for a few years now
I boycotted almost everything corporate for years and got to where I physically couldn't boycott any harder, then when that became not enough to satisfy me I moved out of the country entirely. American owners and government have lost at least six figures of my money due to ghoulish behavior, and I'm just one person. 10,000 of me (only 0.002% of the population) lost this way in the last few years is already a billion dollars lost. It certainly must be adding up even if most people are too blind to see their own power
Yes - quite successfully, the only thing I haven’t switched over yet is my Office365 to OpenOffice but thanks to some account sharing we’re down to 1/3 of a family subscription.
Its stopped being a boycot for me, and a style of life. I still buy far fewer American products than i used to, and always check where its made.
For stuff that I cannot avoid, I have been doing a good job patiently waiting to buy them second hand. Plus it's cheaper and better on the environment.
Well, the stuff I replaced the American stuff with is just better.
Yes totally on it and won't go back using them again. Degoogled, deleted all US based social media, Moved from those fedi instance that uses US hosting provider, Still blocking ads, Still pirate stuff, and stopped buying stuff that i know are from US
It became my New normal. AS an example: i am currebtly in holidays (Portugal) in the past i would habe ordered Coke in Restaurants - now i order local lemonade (sumol)
I changed my ROM to e/OS am using Debian on my PC and obviously made a lemmy account and now have stopped using reddit completly.
Most oft the changes i made now come natural
Okay so this is something I've been thinking about for a while and I found this community. The names you find for DRM-free digital PC games are GOG, itch.io and Zoom-Platform - only the first is Polish, the other two are American. There are smaller stores like the Swedish Fireflower Games, but the three up top are the big names.
I already don't spend money on the various DRM launchers, of which the majority are American. Don't get the point of buying a game if I need to use some online launcher connecting to a third party service to even be able to run it (unsurprisingly an idea grown in the US), I like owning my stuff, thanks.
But should I keep not actively spending money on itch and Zoom-Platform as long as the US is not even trying to get rid of its fascism? Not that I'm a big spender in any case, but it's still worth thinking about.
You should do what you're comfortable doing. Everybody has their own line for what is and isn't acceptable.
I'm hard core. I use no product or service that I pay for that comes from an American company or producer of any size. (I'll let you read between the lines on that.) I don't have a Google account, nor a Xhitter one, nor any Meta products, etc. But I also don't buy artisanal (is it really?) goods from small producers in the USA either. There's artisanal stuff available all over the world; one country is easy to avoid.
Right now literally the last American product I use is Android, and that will be corrected when I get my next phone. Since it's a Chinese phone (in China) there's nothing that will profit Google anyway, so it doesn't matter to me. The damage, in the form of Google getting money from me, has already been done. But my next phone will not have an American system on it.
That being said, I know that's not realistic for everybody and honestly, even 10% boycott is better than 0%. The disease of expecting everything to be all or nothing is part of what got the USA into the mess where everybody wants to boycott it, so ... that purity angle is ridiculous coming the other direction. Boycott what fits into your life and what you're comfortable with. No more, no less. If you think paying small producers is OK but not the megacorps and such? Fine. If you think you can't really stop using Windows or Android or iOS or whatever for reasons, that's also fine. It's your line, you draw it.
And every little bit of American stuff you cut out of your life: I think you deeply for your efforts.
My thinking about it is if I pay even a dollar to say itch.io, I know they mean well and I know they won't directly support US fascism, but they still pay taxes which would inevitably go to all the actively harmful faces making our lives worse. I wanted to know whether or I'm being overkill for that, but in all honesty there doesn't seem to be anything overkill about this, it's just the appropriate response.
I use a Xiaomi phone as well with Android, but with Google already planning to screw us over in the most """advanced flow""" possible, I'm only hoping Linux phones catch up and maybe it would be the next one. I did try to also migrate out of Google Docs but it seems my only decent European alternative is Proton which is not easily accessible in my country, what's with them offering a VPN service and all that.
Likewise, I appreciate every little bit of effort you make in boycotting the USA, and even 5% is better than 0%. Thank you.
I went to Vegas recently. And I plan on visiting Hawaii. But other then that I buy canadian when possible and if something big I need too purchase comes from the states I try to find one made in canada instead, or literally anywhere else.
You'll spend more money on US goods by each of those vacations than any purchase over a whole year.
I mean you do you, please just don't give yourself an illusion. This is not "boycotting 80%" - if your vacation spending is anywhere close to the median it's more than you'll buy in goods throughout the rest of the year combined.
This right here. "I'm boycotting US goods except for the HUGE amounts of money I spend on vacations in the USA" is not the flex people seem to think it is.
Why Hawaii? There's a myriad of non-US tropical islands to visit that aren't filled to the brim with crass assholes. Hell, Hawaii was a grossly capitalistic Hellhole back when I went there as a child in the '80s. What's next? "I'm boycotting the USA except for my annual trip to Disneyland"?
Cool story bro