ujkhsjkdhf234 11 hours ago

You have a group of shoppers that are boycotting brands they feel have backtracked on positions they previously held and you have income inequality getting worse so people can't afford the things they used to. Companies will feel the squeeze on both sides of those things.

  • layoric 10 hours ago

    Inequality getting worse is definitely going to start impacting company sales more and more. IMO we are watching the math of perpetual "growth" hit a finite world.

    • gruez 7 hours ago

      Recessions happen all the time. What makes you think it's not that but "perpetual "growth" hit a finite world"? What bottlenecks are we running into that's causing growth to stop?

      • quickslowdown 7 hours ago

        I mean, the extremely obvious answer is tarrifs at the moment.

    • andrewjf 7 hours ago

      I mean, the middle class finally died a decade ago and all the money was siphoned off to the top. I don’t think is has much to do with growth in it of itself

      • trilbyglens 4 hours ago

        The upper classes have extracted growth from a slowing curve by carving more and more out of the middle and lower classes. To them it looks like growth, but it's really just stealing from the bottom to pad the curve.

  • apwell23 8 hours ago

    i think things they are producing are not that tempting anymore.

roxolotl 7 hours ago

It’s pretty wild to me that if a US political party were to genuinely try to and implement a degrowth policy this would be a very good start. Increased uncertainty to cause pullback in corporate investment. Large tariffs to reduce consumption and shorten supply chains. Major reductions in government spending.

Cypher 8 hours ago

I don't have money so it's not a boycott by choice... just incredibly poor, depressed and under water

stevage 10 hours ago

One small silver lining in all this is perhaps that it is such a clear cause and effect that people will remember in future. So many economic levers take many months or years to really play out, but everyone can grasp that the president imposed big tariffs on every country and the economy instantly tanked.

  • genter 10 hours ago

    I doubt it, people will forget in a generation or two. How many people have actually read The Jungle? How many people have actually seen our rivers on fire? How many people remember when the air was so polluted going outside would kill you? How many people remember corporations hiring private armies and literally killing their employees because they dared to strike? The people that benefit from so many of our laws are cheering their removal without understanding why they're there.

    • stevage 7 hours ago

      A generation or two (25-50 years) would be an incredible result. These days it's a miracle if anything has consequences more than a year or two down the track.

    • alphabettsy 8 hours ago

      People are unaware that companies were so daring to add chalk to milk and random dark substances to coffee. Unregulated capitalism is not something we should want to return to.

    • trilbyglens 4 hours ago

      I mean we Americans have literally already forgotten Nazi Germany, or maybe we were never really taught it in a way that was meaningful.

  • jerlam 9 hours ago

    It may make less of an effect that you hope, especially this early in the election cycle. People's memories aren't great and if things look like they are improving at election time, people may choose the incumbent even if the same person caused all the problems.

mberning 10 hours ago

I already told my wife and family this is going to be a dramatically pared back summer. Try not to get laid off. Try not to die. Try to not sow the seeds of your own demise.

  • 6stringmerc 10 hours ago

    You should get a beat and make this a TikTok as a theme song for the inevitable market crash.

    Pared back summer

    No gas for the Hummer

    • euroderf 3 hours ago

      Inevitable... market... crash! bang! boom!

      I got Spam cans 'n Twinkies piled high in my room

    • nop_slide 9 hours ago

      Recession creepin while you sleepin

      Next 2008 gonna be a bummer

mindslight 8 hours ago

oops. Maybe corporate America should have taken the fascist candidate with the proven track record of destruction at his own words, and donated money to conservative (aka Democratic) candidates instead.

Honestly after resuming use of Aliexpress for last minute stocking up of industrialish goods, and seeing how much stuff on there now ships direct from US warehouses, I'll likely keep checking them in addition to Amazon/eBay.

  • gruez 7 hours ago

    >Maybe corporate America should have taken the fascist candidate with a proven track record of destruction at his own words, and donated money to conservative (aka Democratic) candidates instead.

    Putting aside the laughable implication that "corporate America" is some sort of monolith that can agree on one party to support, is there even evidence that they supported the Republican Party more? The Democratic Party out raised them in the last cycle.

    • moshun 7 hours ago

      A quick glance at the front row of the inauguration seems to imply they are in fact a monolith. Not to mention how many corporations immediately bent the knee for this administration before even being asked.

      • palmotea 5 hours ago

        The GP is talking about before the election, but you seem to be talking about after the election. Those are very different situations.

    • watwut 3 hours ago

      It certainly seems so. They thought the annoying consumer protection, environmental and safety regulations will go. They thought they will be able to defraud more and with inpunity. That there will ve more corruption and they will venefit from it.

      Stock Market went up after Teump being elected, because the above allows for short term enrichment and they know it.

      Plus, quite a few support project 2025, Musks conpanies cant work without him being in goverment, plus quite a few (including Musk) are genuine far right.

ludicrousdispla 12 hours ago

Most people in the US have some orientation towards independence and self-reliance, which economically translates to curtailing superfluous expenses.

  • wyatt_dolores 10 hours ago

    Most people in the US live beyond their means through credit card debt.

  • Etheryte 11 hours ago

    I don't really see how that holds, historically it clearly hasn't?

    • ludicrousdispla 2 hours ago

      True, I should clarify that I meant that the US economy is currently (and historically) based on a high level of consumer spending. Therefore companies are in for a shock when that level drops due to people spending less.

  • stevage 10 hours ago

    You're either saying something obvious and universal, or something blatantly false.