To: JPII Be Not Afraid
Unless the CEOs of the advertisers receive overwhelming amounts of letters (and smailmail letters are most effective, they effect logistics), writing to them will have little effect. A corporation that has, say, 30 million customers, receiving even 30K letters is likely to see that only 0.1% of their customer base are unhappy and are likely to slough off a large portion of that group to an even smaller group involved in an organized campaign.
A far more effective way might be to list the advertiser on a site describing them as companies supporting the media attempt at destroying the U.S. and our Constitution. Wording should avoid the word "boycott" but should emphasise avoiding doing business with these companies. A separate listing should be compiled of the top ten or fifteen affiliates and the same approach used for them. By not hitting the smaller markets, you avoid hurting the smaller businesses who advertise there. We're conservatives, no economic terrorist.
At this point, the corporations should be notified they're noted a the web site and not in a good way. This is only viable if the site is actually getting hits. It is a nice dream.
49 posted on
10/10/2008 7:00:22 PM PDT by
Free_SJersey
(THE GOVERNMENT THAT GOVERNS LEAST, GOVERNS BEST.)
To: Free_SJersey
Spoken like and I do not mean in a negative sense: a true community orgainzer!!!!!/Just Asking - seoul62......
98 posted on
10/12/2008 7:15:32 AM PDT by
seoul62
To: Free_SJersey
108 posted on
10/12/2008 8:12:18 AM PDT by
Faux_Pas
("If I know the answer I'll tell you the answer, and if I don't, I'll just respond, cleverly." ~R.)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson