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I Haven’t Used Amazon For Almost 3 Months And I Don’t Miss It One Bit
The Federalist ^ | 03/04/2021 | Joy Pullman

Posted on 03/04/2021 6:53:35 AM PST by SeekAndFind

My husband and I have been Amazon users for about 15 years. In college, I used it to buy and sell books, rolling the cost of last semester’s books I didn’t plan to keep into the next semester’s set.

We became Prime members in July 2017 and delighted in two- and even one-day shipping of everything from diapers to canned goods to dry erase markers to work boots, eliminating the annoyance of running to the store over one or two items. I developed Prime Day and Black Friday strategies for getting loads of deals, eagerly watching sales on coveted items open and filling my online shopping cart. It seemed fun, easy, and exciting.

And then it wasn’t fun, easy, and exciting any more, because Amazon became evil—and I learned how evil they had really been all along. Using it to indulge my own greed and materialism was one problem. Amazon’s use of its market power is another. Both are a big deal.

Amazon now claims the right to bar all books that are "inappropriate or offensive."https://t.co/marbANIvjM

Of course, nearly *every book* worth reading could be characterized as 'inappropriate' or 'offensive' to someone. /2 pic.twitter.com/TRALPVao0C

— Abigail Shrier (@AbigailShrier) February 26, 2021

For one thing, it just became tiring and gross to spend so much time paging through piles of cheap Chinese products that I had learned would break and go bad quickly. The consumerism, envy, and greed felt yucky to participate in, and they conflict with my religious beliefs.

Maybe on Thanksgiving it was better to linger over the pie and pull out a board game than rush to Black Friday online sales of stuff I didn’t really need and was more of a cheap thrill for my kids than an investment in their long-term happiness.

I am also extremely uneasy about Alexa surveilling and recording my children in friends’ homes and supplying them unparented access to the garbage of the internet, which we severely restrict in our home on purpose. My children’s voiceprints, life patterns, friendship networks, and search queries don’t belong to Amazon or any other entity, thanks.

In addition, I noticed Amazon pilfering from the work and ingenuity of smaller sellers by making or inserting cheap overseas imitations of highly popular goods, undercutting their price point.

“No competitor is too small to draw Amazon’s sights,” the Wall Street Journal noted in December. “It cloned a line of camera tripods that a small outside company sold on Amazon’s site, hurting the vendor’s sales so badly it is now a fraction of its original size, the little firm’s owner said.” An earlier WSJ investigation found Amazon targets popular products and vendors to take over their market share, often with inferior products. I was finding that true all the time.

When I searched for this or that, instead of finding quality and American-made goods, I’d have to wade through piles of cheap stuff from weirdly named companies that I wasn’t sure I could trust to send me good products. I was using Amazon for convenience, not to get scammed and waste money and time on stuff that would break fast.

WSJ reporting and a congressional investigation allege Amazon deliberately seeks monopoly status over numerous market segments by purposefully price-gouging on products until it wins control of the market. This is now under investigation by federal antitrust regulators. Meanwhile, Jeff Bezos has become the world’s richest man thanks partly to worldwide lockdowns cheerled, among other leftist outlets, by the Washington Post he owns.

Amid this, the news that Chinese factories sometimes use slave labor, and that slave labor has been directly linked to an Amazon supplier, made me increasingly uncomfortable buying products from unknown and Chinese sources, which flood the Amazon market. In China slaves are raped, forcibly sterilized, ripped from their families, and tortured.

Many of the things I bought on Amazon I couldn’t be sure had not been wrung from slave labor somewhere. I simply could not continue to buy cheap stuff knowing it could have been made at the expense of such human suffering. So I stopped. I haven’t bought anything from Amazon since mid-December 2020 (my husband has, but he’s weaning himself off the site and just canceled our Prime subscription—thanks, babe!). And I don’t miss it.

It was easy to stop the quick little purchases of items I forgot to buy at the store or ran out of between shopping trips. I just added them to my shopping list or learned to do without and practiced more patience. A bit trickier was figuring out how to source all the random things I had started to grab by default on Amazon.

An early larger purchase I struggled to make off Amazon was a gift of baby carriers to some new parents. That is the sort of thing I would have by default clicked over and bought on Amazon in three minutes. After consulting with a friend who used to run a babywearing shop (the industry has been hollowed out by big companies pushing for unnecessary “safety” regulations that small, independent providers cannot meet because mom and pop Etsy shops can’t afford 24/7 lawyers), I learned about these three from smaller sources.

Then I learned to buy what I wanted direct from the supplier. For example, my husband’s favorite dress socks are from Dockers. Now he just buys them straight from the Dockers website instead of on Amazon. For our many, many book purchases (the item we are always over-budget on) I now start at Better World Books or IndieBound.

We buy hardware supplies at the local hardware store and office supplies at local office stores. I buy our kids’ voluminous art supplies and gifts from homeschool suppliers such as Rainbow Resource and Miller Pads and Paper, which have great selection and prices. I also like sending my money to family-run companies instead of international conglomerates who use the excess to lobby against my desired way of life.

Over the past year I’ve started to buy more and more food locally through small, family-run farms and our farmer’s market. At first I worried about the higher prices, but then I decided I needed to wean myself off slave labor and factory-farm prices made possible by stuffing foreign workers into un-American living and working conditions and that enable companies’ demand for opening our borders to people our nation no longer assimilates.

I needed to adjust to paying people an American living wage for their hard, high-quality labor, just as I want to be paid a family-sustaining wage for my labor. The money saved from buying less cheap Chinese crap that kids break quickly was redirected into our food budget. I like living this way for multiple reasons—less waste and consumerism and higher quality of fewer goods chief among them. The taste and health benefits are clear as well.

In January, my desire to avoid Amazon was again reinforced by the web services giant’s decision to ban Twitter competitor Parler on false grounds. Amazon is one of the world’s largest web hosting services and claimed it cut ties with Parler because Parler hosted riot planning. Court documents later showed that Facebook and Twitter did the same thing to a far larger extent, showing the ban wasn’t about “violence” at all, but about enforcing leftist hegemony over public discourse and commerce.

Now Amazon has apparently decided their power is so great they can move into banning conservatives from the areas of the internet they control. Besides defenestrating Parler from their servers, Amazon apparently yanked a documentary about African-American Supreme Court titan Clarence Thomas in February.

I watched the documentary; it is wonderful. Thomas’s story of moving from revolutionary black power Marxist to the nation’s most constitutional jurist powerfully jams leftist narratives. It is a stunning oral history from one of the nation’s crown jewels. Thomas’s only “crime” is being a smart, black, powerful conservative.

Now Amazon is openly attempting to ban conservative ideas from ever getting published. Who knows what it will do next, but this trail of power abuses indicates it’s not going to be anything good. Whatever they’re going to do, it won’t be funded by me.

I’m not even three full months into weaning myself off Amazon, and each week reinforces that it was the right decision. The only thing better would have been to quit much earlier.


Joy Pullmann is executive editor of The Federalist, a happy wife, and the mother of six children. Sign up here to get early access to her next book, "How To Control The Internet So It Doesn’t Control You." Her bestselling ebook is "Classic Books for Young Children." A Hillsdale College honors graduate, @JoyPullmann is also the author of "The Education Invasion: How Common Core Fights Parents for Control of American Kids," from Encounter Books.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; Society
KEYWORDS: amazon; boycott; shopping
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1 posted on 03/04/2021 6:53:35 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I used it once a few years ago. I’ve found you can get the product you’re looking for cheaper elsewhere. Mainly for the principle of the matter. I hate Bozos.


2 posted on 03/04/2021 6:56:09 AM PST by HighSierra5
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To: SeekAndFind

No fakebook, amazon or googlevil here for almost 2 years.

Never twatted or paid a cable tv bill.


3 posted on 03/04/2021 6:56:54 AM PST by Uncle Miltie (American gun owners number more than the top 10 armies combined. What's Biden's enforcement plan?)
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To: SeekAndFind

Gave it up in mid-December. I’ll use it for research to find the products and locate alternate ways of buying items. Making a conscious effort to identify if the product is Chinese-made, and then use their data to find non-Chinese products.


4 posted on 03/04/2021 6:57:01 AM PST by pepsionice
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To: SeekAndFind

Amazon is one of the few places run by oligarchs/a..holes that I still use and I will not stop. I’ve cancelled so much I can’t keep up. I’m an Amazon Prime member and get free delivery and discounts.


5 posted on 03/04/2021 6:57:29 AM PST by albie
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To: SeekAndFind

I look for items on amazon and often buy them directly from the seller. Many have their own site off amazon.


6 posted on 03/04/2021 6:58:34 AM PST by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I liked amazon because of free shipping and the “one stop shopping site that I could trust (at least with my money) aspect. But I’ve started to move away from it. And I’m saving quite a bit of money doing it - even paying for shipping.

I needed egg cartons because my chickens are producing too much. The cheapest I could find on Amazon was about $.50 a carton even in bulk (over a hundred). But I went to a site that, though they charged me about $10 shipping for every 250 egg cartons, the cartons were only $48. That works out to $.23 per carton.

And I didn’t feed Amazon.

But we live in the sticks. Amazon makes it as convenient as living in a city. This means that we buy a LOT from amazon simply because they are like our “Costco”, Sears, etc.

But as we get more comfortable with finding products on other sites, we will continue to spend less and less on Amazon.


7 posted on 03/04/2021 6:59:39 AM PST by cuban leaf (We killed our economy and damaged our culture. In 2021 we will pine for the salad days of 2020.)
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To: SeekAndFind

amazon is tough to give up BUT i’ve managed to delete my FB account.


8 posted on 03/04/2021 6:59:57 AM PST by ronniesgal (Hillary wants to be Governor of New York!!)
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To: SeekAndFind
I Haven’t Used Amazon For Almost 3 Months And I Don’t Miss It One Bit

Funny how that statement sounds like one made in rehab...

9 posted on 03/04/2021 7:00:17 AM PST by Magnatron
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To: pepsionice

Is there a specific field or toggle in Amazon that tells you where (not China) a product is made?

Or do you have to scan Q & A?


10 posted on 03/04/2021 7:01:05 AM PST by Uncle Miltie (American gun owners number more than the top 10 armies combined. What's Biden's enforcement plan?)
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To: SeekAndFind

I don’t do Amazon for the same reason I don’t do Hollywood. Why in the hell would you Finance the very People that want to Destroy your Life and tear this country down??


11 posted on 03/04/2021 7:01:05 AM PST by eyeamok (founded in cynicism, wrapped in sarcasm)
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To: SeekAndFind

There are other internet options for shopping than Amazon.


12 posted on 03/04/2021 7:01:16 AM PST by Bayard
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To: pepsionice

excellent


13 posted on 03/04/2021 7:01:40 AM PST by ecomcon
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To: eyeamok

True dat.


14 posted on 03/04/2021 7:02:03 AM PST by crusty old prospector
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To: SeekAndFind

Same here...except I abuse them.
I abuse them by searching for what I’m looking for, find the vendor and purchase directly from their site bypassing Amazon completely.


15 posted on 03/04/2021 7:02:27 AM PST by lgjhn23 (Pray for America....)
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To: cuban leaf

Back when I shopped amazon I noticed many items were listed with free shipping. You could go direct to the store that listed the item and buy it cheaper and then pay for the shipping. Guess what? The final price was about the same. Amazon’s free shipping is a scam. They just up the price to pay for the shipping. At least that is what I noticed on most of my online purchases.


16 posted on 03/04/2021 7:03:17 AM PST by 728b (Never cry over something that can not cry over you.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I miss Woot shirts, but not so much that I’ll go to the site.


17 posted on 03/04/2021 7:03:27 AM PST by null and void (The media decides what news you can see and NOT SEE. But don't you dare call 'em Not-Sees)
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To: pepsionice

I’ll use it for research to find the products and locate alternate ways of buying items.


OK, I just thought that was funny. Don’t get me wrong. I do that too. But it hit me that a decade ago people (like me) were using their smart phones and an app to click on the SKU of an item in a store (with their phone camera) and the app would tell them where they could get it cheaper online. I would go to best buy to look at and try out the stuff and then go online to buy it - and maybe at Amazon.’

And not we are doing it to Amazon! The irony is kinda precious. :)


18 posted on 03/04/2021 7:03:28 AM PST by cuban leaf (We killed our economy and damaged our culture. In 2021 we will pine for the salad days of 2020.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Live far enough from town that travelling there and searching local stores for items is not cost effective. I’ll also point out there is no certainty that a local business isn’t liberal as all get out too.


19 posted on 03/04/2021 7:03:35 AM PST by Mr Rogers
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To: SeekAndFind

A lot of times they are by far the cheapest, but I’ll still pay more just to get away from them.


20 posted on 03/04/2021 7:04:08 AM PST by Bloodandgravy (So this is how liberty dies, with thunderous applause...)
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