Details from https://www.reddit.com/r/loblawsisoutofcontrol/comments/1bff9rm/boycott/?rdt=54646

For those looking to participate in the community boycott starting May 1st

  • We are boycotting Loblaw and Loblaw owned stores for the entire month of May 2024 (obviously you can boycott past this point in time)

  • We are asking for a reduction in prices by 15%

  • We are asking Loblaw remove “member only pricing” where customers are forced to sign up for a PC optimum card in order to receive sale prices

  • If shopping is taking place at Loblaw stores, we are focusing on purchasing loss leaders

  • DerisionConsulting
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    7 months ago

    Because this chart is labelled “Loblaws brands” it is going to mislead some people to think that all the stores in the picture are to be boycotted, which might make them just give up because they might not have any options.

      • jadero
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        7 months ago

        My first thought was “wait, Sobey’s is owned by Loblaws?!” I think there should have been a distinction between “we’re boycotting these guys” and “we’re not boycotting these guys.”

      • DerisionConsulting
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        7 months ago

        Loblaws doesn’t profit directly from them, and are not owned by Loblaws.

        Is the Loblaws boycott actually a “Boycott all non-co-op/mom-and-pop stores”?

        • Cows Look Like Maps@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          7 months ago

          Loblaws does not have a $33B valuation from loblaws supermarket alone. They include NoFrills, Shoppers Drug Mart, etc in their quarterly and year-end financial reports.

          • DerisionConsulting
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            7 months ago

            But they don’t own Sobeys, Safeway, IGA, Metro, or about 2/3 of stores in the picture

  • Hector
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    7 months ago

    I already avoid Metro because of how they treat their employees and because the judgemental stares I get at Adonis when wearing pride items, Walmart is greedy as hell. That leaves me with Costco and Farmboy for the moth of May? I actually liked shopping at the Real Canadian Superstore. It felt like a calm, organized place.

  • Beaver
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    6 months ago

    Just saved to my phone thanks!

  • IninewCrow
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    7 months ago

    A better way would be to create an online group of organizers to boycott Loblaws in strategic ways.

    They tried to do similar things in the early 2000s when the price of gas was rising quickly and fluctuating all the time. It was a big deal at the time because before 2000, the price of gas seldom rose or fell and would only rise about a penny at a time every year or two. In northern Ontario, the price of gas at the time in 2000 was about 56 cents a litre. There were online groups in 2005-2010 who did their best to organize and make a big deal about price hikes that went from 56 cents to 66 cents to 90 cents then back down to 70 cents on a monthly basis … we had never seen that before and it was big shock to people at the time.

    I remember friends of mine enthusiastically joining online groups to boycott companies because of a one cent rise in gas prices.

    The price of gas was so stable decades ago that when I went to a small town in northern Ontario … near Timmins once and there was an old gas station from the 60s with a painted on (emphasis on ‘painted on’) sign that said gas was 44 cents a litre. It had stayed that way for years so there was never a need to change it. Sure there was a gas crunch in the 70s but after that period, gas went back to being pretty cheap after - not the same as before but still cheap.

    The way they organized the 2000s gas boycotts was to organize everyone and get everyone participating in manipulating company profits by who and where they buy product. It didn’t matter who you boycotted, it mattered when and where you boycotted and for how long.

    For example with the gas price boycotts … one month, everyone in a given group would all agree to just buy from Esso and completely boycott Shell. Then the next month, boycott Esso and just buy PetroCan … then next month boycott PetroCan and just buy Shell. It created pressure on companies because it would screw with their regular profits. One brand would dip for no reason one month, then rise again and then a few months later their profits would go down again.

    It didn’t last very long but there were moments where boycotts like this in the big cities really affected company profits.

    Then with Facebook and Twitter and other platforms, everything became a seething mess of information / disinformation / misinformation and infighting with everyone … part of it was from shills and company supporters … part of it was just human nature and people just not wanting to get along.

    But for a brief moment at the time … it felt like it almost worked.

  • Rentlar
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    7 months ago

    Very easy for me as I generally shop at Costco and sometimes Save On Foods (the British Columbia one rather than the Alberta one with a bootlicking union). Problem is both have already instituted “member price”.

  • Mongostein
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    7 months ago

    Don’t they all do this? Why is this protest against grocery corps always focused on Loblaws?