Depends on the issue, and it depends on how close you are to it, and how much of a sacrifice you can responsibly make. Nobody can tell you who to boycott, or when, or how. It's not so much a "slippery slope" as it is an optimization problem: how can your spending dollars have as much of an impact as possible, without causing harm to those uninvolved.It's a very slippery slope when you start boycotting, do you just boycott the one thing or do you boycott the whole company and everything related and how far down the money road are you willing to go?
It's a very slippery slope when you start boycotting, do you just boycott the one thing or do you boycott the whole company and everything related and how far down the money road are you willing to go?
Or the slope the other way where you never boycott anything no matter how heinous?It's a very slippery slope when you start boycotting, do you just boycott the one thing or do you boycott the whole company and everything related and how far down the money road are you willing to go?
I mean...that's what I did, but you do you.So I guess I should throw away and tell some people not to buy Battlefield Earth despite it being a decent imo book.