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The Boycott Mania
The Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | April 22, 2003 | William L. Anderson

Posted on 04/22/2003 4:39:33 PM PDT by Jason Kauppinen

The Boycott Mania

by William L. Anderson

[Posted April 22, 2003]

When I click onto the Drudgereport.com site these days, I often am greeted with an advertising bar at the top of the page that declares, "Boycott France." As we have heard ad nauseum, France was against the war, so France is against the United States, so we should not buy French products to punish the insolence of those people.

For the past few decades, the boycott has been a tool of choice by interest groups seeking to spread the impact of their various causes. During the 1980s, we were told to "boycott Nestle" because that company sold infant formula in Third World countries, which supposedly was bad. We are instructed to boycott Nabisco products, since the parent company is RJ Reynolds, which we all know produces "killer" tobacco.

Boycotts supposedly are a free-market approach to making a point about social issues. After all, they are voluntary and simply permit firms to know that consumers ultimately direct not only the where's and why's of production, but also the very choices of governance within a firm. Thus, if consumers are unhappy with the wages Nike pays the workers who produce its shoes in Vietnam, while they cannot be in the boardroom in person to force Nike to give those employees a raise, at least they can express their displeasure by refusing to purchase Air Jordans or whatever Nike is selling these days.

Leftists are not the only ones making statements about corporate policies. Take the boycott against Target stores, for example. About 10 years ago, Target's parent company, Dayton-Hudson Corporation, notified Planned Parenthood that it would no longer contribute its annual $50 thousand to the organization, as it wanted to move away from contributions that could be deemed political.

Planned Parenthood's leaders, which permit no dissent, immediately swung its public relations machine into highest gear and announced it would organize a boycott of Target unless Dayton-Hudson relented and gave Planned Parenthood the $50 grand that was rightfully theirs. The threat was successful and Dayton-Hudson gave in and continued its "donation."

That was hardly the end of the story. Pro-life activists then swung their PR machines into high gear and called for a boycott of Target. To make matters worse, the singer Amy Grant, who started her career in Christian pop music, did endorsements for Target, so it was not long before the anti-abortion groups pointed their big guns at her. Thus, we saw the "logical" chain of causality: Dayton-Hudson gives $50 thousand to Planned Parenthood, Dayton-Hudson must support abortion on demand, Dayton-Hudson owns Target, Target's profits enrich Dayton-Hudson, with some money going to Planned Parenthood, and since Amy Grant does commercials for Target, Amy Grant is wittingly or unwittingly supporting abortion on demand. Therefore, if pro-lifers refuse to purchase Amy Grant CDs and if Christian radio stations say no to her music, then Grant will back down and pro-lifers supposedly will have won a Great Victory over abortion on demand. And all of this is based upon voluntary choice, so it falls completely within the domain of a free society.

Of course, Planned Parenthood and right-to-life groups hardly are the only participants. Jesse Jackson has made a career out of threatening boycotts and lawsuits against firms for ostensibly "racist" practices. These companies, however, can make it all go away in return for a sizeable donation to Operation PUSH, Jackson's base of operations. In fact, after he made such threats against beer distributors in the Chicago area several years ago, one of the companies created a lucrative distributorship—and gave it to one of Jackson's sons.

Like the current French boycotts, all of these examples point to something that ultimately destroys any free society, not to mention a free market. The modern boycotts come about precisely because modern society has been poisoned by politics, and a politicized society is inherently not free. In such a society, every choice—and I mean every—is examined not from the perspective of the individual, but rather from the collectivist viewpoint. To put it another way, when Gloria Steinem three decades ago declared that "the personal is political," she was saying that all choices that individuals make must ultimately be judged by the political impacts they create, or at least the political effects Steinem and her allies believe they are creating.

For example, if one purchases Nike shoes, according to the anti-Nike activists, one is implicitly supporting all of Nike's employment policies, since one chooses to give money to that company. Of course, in a free market, one is not giving money to anything in the process of purchasing a good. Economic exchange is not an act of donation; it simply is the exercise of a choice to give up something in one's possession in order to gain something else.

That a boycott of Nike products means that those poor, "underpaid" workers of the Third World will receive nothing in the wake of loss of demand for shoes means nothing to the activists. In fact, given their support for government policies that prevent workers from freely contracting with employers over things like pay and benefits, the ultimate beneficiaries of such actions are not the workers themselves but the boycotters, who can claim "victory" in their quest for political hegemony.

Boycotters do not wish to target only business firms; they also are trying to influence the political process by directing political campaigns against people and causes that the pressure groups want to marginalize. Take the current anti-French boycott, for example. Not only are private organizations urging Americans not to purchase French products, but politicians are also introducing legislation either to ban or heavily tax goods that happen to have originated from France. Notice that there is not a peep of dissent from the anti-France groups for this political intrusion into personal choices. Indeed, the politicians are carrying out part of the boycotters' agenda. So much for "voluntary" action.

In a free society, individuals are free to choose (and refuse) whomever they will patronize. If a waiter at a local restaurant gives me surly service and insults my ancestry, I am free to decline to eat at that establishment in the future. However, my choice not to eat there anymore might likely involve the self-imposition of a cost that I will have to bear, but it is my choice and mine alone.

Boycotts, however, do not operate in that manner. First, they usually are politically motivated, which means that individuals are supposed to live their lives based upon politics über alles, something that ultimately threatens free choice. Second, it is rare that boycotters do not enlist the support of politicians to aid them in their righteous causes, thus bringing the ugliness of politics to the fore.

Politics by its very nature is coercive, and is inimical to a free society. Yes, by all means if I do not wish to purchase goods from certain people, I should be free to do so. However, do not disguise a process that ultimately is based upon coercion and tell me that it is all voluntary. Boycotts, then, are not the product of people who respect the choices of other individuals, but are nothing more than the continual slide of a society into the sewer of politics. ---------------------------------------------------------

William Anderson, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches economics at Frostburg State University. Send him MAIL. See his Mises.org Articles Archive.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: boycott; boycottabcdisney; boycottcnnaoltwarner; boycottfrance; boycotthollywood; boycottseebsviacom; snopes; snopesbias; snopessucks
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1 posted on 04/22/2003 4:39:33 PM PDT by Jason Kauppinen
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To: Jason Kauppinen; Ff--150; 4ConservativeJustices; stainlessbanner; sheltonmac
Like the current French boycotts, all of these examples point to something that ultimately destroys any free society, not to mention a free market. The modern boycotts come about precisely because modern society has been poisoned by politics, and a politicized society is inherently not free. In such a society, every choice—and I mean every—is examined not from the perspective of the individual, but rather from the collectivist viewpoint.

BUMP!!!

2 posted on 04/22/2003 4:43:39 PM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: billbears
So we should sell rope to the person who is going to hang us?

I don't think so.

Viva la boycott.
3 posted on 04/22/2003 4:49:24 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: Pikachu_Dad
Notice that there is not a peep of dissent from the anti-France groups for this political intrusion into personal choices. Indeed, the politicians are carrying out part of the boycotters' agenda. So much for "voluntary" action.

So you see no problem with this. If you choose to not buy a product fine, but the author has a point. When it comes to the point that politicians are intruding on my choice then it is limiting the freedom we hold dear

Viva la freedom

4 posted on 04/22/2003 4:53:45 PM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: Pikachu_Dad
"So we should sell rope to the person who is going to hang us?
I don't think so.
Viva la boycott."
YOU ARE SO RIGHT. William Anderson provides NO reasoning for his directive re boycotts, he just thinks they are "poltical", Isn't that the point of an election or a boycott?
5 posted on 04/22/2003 5:03:14 PM PDT by BilLies
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To: Jason Kauppinen
"Politics by its very nature is coercive, and is inimical to a free society."

No, every decision that ever gets made in any organization is political. It all comes down to who has the authority and influence to make a decision.

Politics is only evil if the tactics used are unethical. There is nothing unethical about boycotts. It is individuals exorcising their free rights and it might even become representative government excorcising the will of the people. That's ok.

Tactics like Jesse Jackson's where he is using his political base to shake down corporations for his own personal gain are unethical. However, spineless corporate leaders participated in it and allowed him to do it, instead of fighting him in the arena of politics. Eventually, companies teamed up and exposed him for what he is. That too is politics.

You can't remove politics. You play fair. You point out when others don't. And you use the tools available to you appropriately. Boycotts are just one of those tools.

6 posted on 04/22/2003 5:04:09 PM PDT by DannyTN (Note left on my door by a pack of neighborhood dogs.)
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To: Jason Kauppinen
I've been discussing similar things in other threads lately. I don't think that the problem is so much that boycotts are inherently bad. I'm quite fond of the concept. I think the problem, more often, is that they are simply used poorly.

The Amy Grant story above is an excellent example of this. From the way it is portrayed, purchasing a CD of hers is, what, 5 steps removed from the actual abortion procedure? And how many more steps should you take it? Boycott stores that stock her CD? Boycott other business that deal with those stores? Boycott business that deal with those businesses? Do we at any point decide that we're getting so far away from what we're trying to stop that our show is greater than our effect?

If the reaction to this message is the same as any others in which I've tried to make this point, then I'll get swarmed with a "It's our right, hit 'em where it hurts, wallet power ho!" responses, which miss the fact that I'm not disagreeing with any of that. I'm saying that if they are to be used, we need to think carefully about our targets: who they are, and how we respond to their individual case. If we fired off missles the same way that we fire off boycotts, we'd take down half of our 747 fleet.

7 posted on 04/22/2003 5:06:59 PM PDT by pupdog
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To: DannyTN
"You can't remove politics. You play fair. You point out when others don't. And you use the tools available to you appropriately. Boycotts are just one of those tools."
Agreed and it bears repeating. My choices are not being limited when I choose them myself.


8 posted on 04/22/2003 5:13:17 PM PDT by Bahbah (Pray for our Troops)
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To: Jason Kauppinen
NEVER FORGET!

Gotta keep this alive. Share this link with all like minded family and friends. They are feeling the heat.

15000 french products that you can boycott:

http://howtobuyamerican.leethost.com/b-db-boycottfrance.shtml
9 posted on 04/22/2003 5:29:05 PM PDT by schaketo (french people $uck)
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To: Jason Kauppinen
A short refresher course:

A list of French companies products to boycott. Some are well known, but many are not. Here goes.

It lists French products to boycott. You will probably be surprised to learn the French own everything from Wild Turkey to Car & Driver to Motel 6 to cheesy Spencer Gifts to disgusting Democrat schlock-show host Jerry Springer.

Air France
Air Liquide
Airbus
Alcatel - Based in Paris France
Allegra (Allergy Medication) - Produced by Aventis Pharmaceuticals based in Strasbourg, France
Aqualung (Including: Spirotechnique, Technisub, US Divers, and SeaQuest)
AXA Advisors
Bank of the West - Owned by BNP Paribas
Beneteau (boats)
BF Goodrich - Owned by Michelin
BIC (Razors, Pens & Lighters) - Started in 1945 by Marcel Bich. Originally based just outside of Paris. Began trading on the Paris Stock Exchange in 1972. 40.5% Publicly traded. Bich family still owns 33.5%.
Biotherm (Cosmetics)
Black Bush
Bollinger (Champagne)
Car & Driver Magazine
Cartier
Chanel
Chivas Regal (Scotch)
Christian Dior
Club Med (Vacations) - Owned in part by Paris based CDC (Caisse des Dépôts
et Consignations)
Culligan (owned by Vivendi)
Dannon (Yogurt & Dairy Foods)
DKNY - LVMH acquired 100% of Gabrielle Studio Inc., the privately owned licenser of Donna Karan trademarks back in 2001.
Dom Perignon
Durand Crystal
Elle Magazine
Essilor Optical Products
Evian
Fina Oil - Billions invested in Iraqi Oil fields
First Hawaiian Bank
George Magazine
Givenchy
Hennessy
Houghton Mifflin (books)
International Herald Tribune - 181 ave Charles-de-Gaulle - F-92521 Neuilly - FRSource:World Business Council for Sustainable Development '00 [Domain Registration], [Corporate Profile]
Jacobs Creek - Owned by Pernod Ricard since 1989
Jameson (wiskey)
Jerry Springer (talk show)
Krups (coffee and cappaccino makers)
Lancome
Le Creuset (Cookware)
L'Oreal (Health & Beauty Products)
Louis Vuitton
Marie Claire
Martel Cognac
Maybelline
Méphisto (Footwear & Apparel)
Michelin (Tires & Auto Parts) - Their phone number is: (33) 1 45 66 15 53 in France
Mikasa Crystal and Glass (purchased by ARC int'l in 2001)
Moet (Champagne)
Motel 6 - 33, Avenue du Maine- 75755 Paris Cedex 15 France
Motown Records
MP3.com
Mumms (Champagne)
Nissan (Cars) - Majority owned by Renault
Nivea
Normany Butter
Parents Magazine
Peugeot (Automobiles) - Pronounced "Pooh Joe", must be French
Pierre Cardin
Playstation Magazine
ProScan - Owned by Thomson Electronics, France
Publicis Group (Including: Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising) - Here's a French connection that'll tick ya off--a couple years ago Publicis bought the Leo Burnett Advertising agency and that agency does the "Go Army" campaign. Sickening ain't it?

RCA (televisions & electronics) - Owned by Thomson Electronics, France
Red Magazine
Red Roof Inns - Owned by the Accor group based in France
Renault (Automobiles)
Road & Track Magazine
Roquefort Cheese - All Roquefort cheese is made in France
Rowenta (Toasters, Irons, Coffee makers, etc)
Royal Canadian
Salomon (Skis)
Seagram's Gin
Sierra Software and Computer Games
Smart & Final
Sofitel (Hotels) - Owned by the Accor group based in France
Sparkletts (Water) - Owned by Danone, based in France
Spencer Gifts
Sundance Channel
Taylor Made (Golf)
Technicolor
T-Fal (Kitchenware)
The Glenlivet (Scotch
Total Gas Stations
UbiSoft (Computer Games)
Uniroyal
Uniroyal Tires - Owned by Michelin
Universal Studios (Music, Movies & Theme Parks) - Universal Studios is owned by Vivendi-Universal, headquartered in Paris France
USFilter
Veritas Group
Veuve Clicquot Champagne
Vittel
Vivendi - Vivendi Headquarters, Paris France
Wild Turkey (bourbon)
Woman's Day Magazine
Yoplait - France-based Sodiaal owns a 50% stake of Yoplait
Yves Saint Laurent
Yema watches
Zodiac Inflatable Boats
Hutchinson Tires (bicycle) www.hutchinson.fr
Mavic (bicycle) rims www.mavic.com
Zefal (bicycle accessories) www.zefal.com

Please add to the list and email to your like-minded friends.
10 posted on 04/22/2003 5:29:44 PM PDT by schaketo (french people $uck)
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To: billbears
BOSH. The pols have no say in what we boycott. Grow up.
11 posted on 04/22/2003 5:35:16 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: schaketo
Please add to the list and email to your like-minded friends.

So you're encouraging anyone who gets this to add whatever else they personally feel fits here before forwarding it on, with no evidence demanded, and yet I'm supposed to trust its authenticity?

Tell me: can you go down this list, one by one, and tell us exactly why every single item here is listed there, without looking it up? If you can't, then what are you going to tell someone who asks you why you chose that company to boycott? Because you heard on the internet that the French owned them, and that was enough proof for you? And you want others to do the same?

Please see what I wrote in post #7. I have (I'll probably have to say this many more times) no problem with boycotts. None. But is there any reason they have to be done this haphazardly?

12 posted on 04/22/2003 5:54:01 PM PDT by pupdog
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To: Pikachu_Dad
Take the current anti-French boycott, for example. Not only are private organizations urging Americans not to purchase French products, but politicians are also introducing legislation either to ban or heavily tax goods that happen to have originated from France

If laws such as these are even introduced then yes, politicians are having a say in what 'we' boycott. In effect, we are no different from liberals. We are just choosing to use the machine known as the federal government to our means instead of theirs. And I thought the general purpose of being a conservative was to limit the government's intrusion into personal lives. Silly me. It's just two sides of the same coin now

Look, you have the right to boycott what you want. Boycott 'till the cows come home for all I care. But I don't 'buy American' just because it's 'American'. I buy the best product, even if it's been priced higher to protect industries that either refuse to make a better product because of costs or industries that are affected because of unions. I could care less where it comes from. That's what capitalism is all about. To produce the best product and gain the most market share. Or at least I thought.

As to your call to grow up, I suggest that I have. I'm not the one calling on politicians to join on a boycott of an entire nation's products of their private industries just because the nation's government has made decisions that I do disagree with. Your aspect, while admirable at the personal level, is no less despicable than Jesse Jackson's when at the federal level. Boycott the live long day, but when federal, even state, politicians call for boycotts to be passed into law, a conservative would remind them that they have no place in doing so. To allow them to do that would limit our freedom of choice. To boycott or not boycott

13 posted on 04/22/2003 6:08:37 PM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: Jason Kauppinen; billbears
In such a society, every choice—and I mean every—is examined not from the perspective of the individual, but rather from the collectivist viewpoint.

Double BUMP!

14 posted on 04/22/2003 6:15:48 PM PDT by sheltonmac
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To: schaketo; billbears
Uh, schaketo, you forgot to add the Statue of Liberty to your list of French products to boycott. And don't forget milk. Milk is pasteurized, and we all know where Louis Pasteur was from.

Please. This whole boycott thing is getting a little too...oh, what's the word...stupide.

15 posted on 04/22/2003 6:24:54 PM PDT by sheltonmac
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To: schaketo
Wow! I've been boycotting 99% of that list and didn't even know it! Talk about being ahead of the curve. I'm going right out tomorrow and trading in my Michelins for a good ol' set of Goodyears.

And just for good measure I am going to do what I can do to reduce the French food supply by tossing some extra snail bait into my flowerbeds.

16 posted on 04/22/2003 6:59:09 PM PDT by Texas Eagle
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To: billbears
the author has a point. When it comes to the point that politicians are intruding on my choice then it is limiting the freedom we hold dear

That's exactly what the author wants you to think. This is a typical diatribe from the The Ludwig von Mises Institute. I'm about ready to organize a boycott of them. Here's their shtick, and I see it in every article posted from their web site:

  • A few introductory paragraphs leading you to believe that they are reasonable people who know what they are talking about.
  • A sudden leap into something very bad and scary, which concerns a parallel, but fundamentally unrelated phenomenon. In this case it's that grandstanding politicians have been playing to anti-French sentiments by proposing "tough sanctions" that will go nowhere in the legislature but are red meat for a screaming mob.
  • A few paragraphs of sesquipedalian tergiversation that so mix up the two phenomena in an avalanche of jargon and bulls**t that unless you're careful, the Von Mises Boys will convince you that they are one and the same, or even causally related.
  • The conclusion: Item B is bad. Therefore unrelated Item A is bad. In this case, politicians using law to coerce behavior is bad, therefore voluntary boycotts undertaken by citizens that involve no coercion whatsoever are bad.
I don't know what the deal is over at the Von Mises Institute, but the stuff I see posted here from their site is not just poorly reasoned crap, it's deliberately misleading crap, and quite often it sells a leftist agenda while claiming to be doing just the opposite.

I don't think those guys are what they say they are.


17 posted on 04/22/2003 7:25:08 PM PDT by Nick Danger (The liberals are slaughtering themselves at the gates of the newsroom)
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To: Nick Danger
They're convincing to the easily misled, it would appear.
18 posted on 04/22/2003 7:30:53 PM PDT by RabidBartender (Hi!)
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To: billbears
Wrong.

The sanctions on IRAQ were essentially an enforced boycott. That was a good enforced boycott.

The same goes for the Frogs.
19 posted on 04/22/2003 7:34:04 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: sheltonmac
So what about trade restrictions on goods from Nazi Germany? Supposedly they made lampshades from concentration camp victims. Would not allowing goods from there be unethical?
20 posted on 04/22/2003 7:49:24 PM PDT by Dat
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