Buy Nothing Day Winter Coat Exchange: You should have been here


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2014-11-28 Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange 7600The idea is simple: give away donated coats to people who need them, while at the same time challenging the consumerism that marks Black Friday, an annual sales frenzy fomented by big box and mall retailers the day after Thanksgiving. The Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange, set up on the lawn of the State House, acts as a conscience and counterpoint to the sales driven capitalism inside the Providence Place Mall.

Greg Gerritt, who has been organizing the annual Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange for 18 years, told me that I had missed the big rush at the 8am opening when I arrived at 9am. Hundreds of people had preceded me and received free coats and winter wear. Dozens of volunteers had arrived to organize the chaos as best they could. When I showed up at 9am, it still seemed pretty busy, but Gerritt assured me that the pace was settling down and that the rest of the day would be much easier.

As I was preparing to leave, a woman arrived with a bag of donations and her teenagers in tow. “We’re here to volunteer,” said the woman. The teenagers were smiling. That’s the kind of holiday spirit even an atheist appreciates.

Was there anything I should tell the public about the event I asked, given that by the time this piece hits the Internet, it will be all over?

“Yeah,” says Gerritt, smiling, “Tell them they should have been here.”

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Black Friday Walmart protest in Providence


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2014-11-28 Wallmart Protest 7334About ten people turned out in the freezing cold in Providence Friday morning to protest the low wages and immoral business practices of Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer. Organized locally by members of Occupy Providence and attended by group members and allies, the small protest made an oversized impression with the public, if the honking of horns and positive response of the passing motorists was any indication.

The eye catching paper maché wolf, which made its first public appearance at the People’s Climate March in New York City in September was brought by Pia Ward of FANG (Fighting Against Natural Gas.)

This year’s Black Friday Walmart protests were organized nationally by OUR Walmart (Organization United for Respect at Walmart), a group fighting for a $15 minimum wage and fair scheduling practices of the kind recently enacted into law as the Retail Workers Bill of Rights in San Francisco. The organization of Walmart workers in Rhode Island has been lagging as compared to efforts in some states.

Marcia Taylor entered the store and attempted to deliver a letter to the store manager. She tells her story in the video below.

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Thoughts on Black Friday/Buy Nothing Day


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Buy Nothing DayToday is Black Friday. Shopping malls and major retailers across the U.S. have deals to incite a holiday shopping frenzy. Thanksgiving, a day meant for family and reflection, becomes a memory as we head into the frigid night air to stand in line and fight crowds to get a $200 LED television or a $50 blu-ray player.

Is that what all the excitement is about? Is it a competitive drive to be first, to get the best deals? And is it worth taking part in denying low-wage workers the opportunity to have a day with friends or family? Or worse, being part of the mayhem that is responsible for taking a life, just to save a few dollars?

In 2008, a Walmart worker was trampled to death at a Long Island, NY store, and two men shot each other to death in California.  In 2011, shoppers walked over a man who had the audacity to lay dying in an aisle in Target, and in Los Angeles, a woman pepper sprayed other shoppers. Stores in Connecticut, New York, North Carolina, and several other locations reported fights, as well. Last year was no different, with stabbings, shootings, and a myriad of fights.

This does not seem to faze the investors or CEO’s; stores are opening earlier than ever this year, drawing underpaid workers away from a family holiday that is sacred to many. In an effort to increase profits for those who least need them, many large retailers are opening as early 5 or 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, and a few are open as early as Thanksgiving morning.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JAxow6NQwg&feature=youtu.be

Still, the allure of excitement and energy around Black Friday shopping can be contagious. If you find that is the case, consider shopping at a locally owned business. While the specific numbers may vary, there is no question that shopping at a locally owned business is good for your community. Some estimates suggests that nearly 70% of each dollar spent at a local business stays in the local economy. By contrast, only 40% or less of each dollar spent at non-local businesses remains in the local economy. It is also more likely that your local shopkeeper will offer direct benefits to his or her community.

And for those who find this consumerism generally disconcerting, there is the Buy Nothing Winter Coat Exchange at the Rhode Island State House. Events like this help our neighbors, help our environment (by not making more stuff and not filling landfills with old stuff), and are representative of what this season is supposed to be about: kindness, thoughtfulness, and caring.

Rhode Islanders stand up, say no to Walmart


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DSC_8066Members of Occupy Providence, supported by the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, along with representatives from a wide range of progressive groups such as DARE, the Progressive Democrats of Rhode Island and others, gathered at the entrance to the Walmart on 51 Silver Spring St in Providence to demand living wages for workers and to encourage customers to shop locally. The protest was held in consort with 1,500 similar protests across the United States.

DSC_8059Over 800,000 Walmart “associates” work for wages that keep them well below the poverty line. Walmart, like many other national retail and fast food corporations, encourages their employees to make up their wage gap by applying for public assistance, meaning that taxpayers to help subsidize these corporations through SNAP and other government assistance programs. The money Walmart saves in underpaying their employees is used, as part of a vicious cycle, to directly lobby Congress to pass laws that benefit Walmart, at the expense of everyone else.

Walmart made $17 billion in profit last year, but it is estimated that each 300-employee Walmart superstore coasts taxpayers about $1,000,000 in public assistance programs. With 4,135 stores in the United States, and more opening seemingly every week, well, you do the math.

What is clear is that Walmart could more than afford to pay it’s employees a living wage, not raise prices by so much as a penny and still make billions in profits.

walmartIn addition to advocating for fair wages, the protesters also wanted to remind shoppers that shopping locally, at small businesses, is better for our local economy. Occupy Providence calls this a Solidarity Economy, and the concept is simple: “By refusing to shop at Walmart and shopping locally, Rhode Islanders’ money can stay here in Rhode Island, growing our local economy with better jobs that can help feed and support Rhode Island families.”

walmartAbsent from today’s protest were any current Walmart employees. Given that current employee protesters across the country may face harassment and arrest, never mind the prospect of losing out on wages, desirable shifts or even their jobs, this is not surprising. One man, a Rhode Island College student and former Walmart employee, did arrive at the protest. Not only did he agree with all the goals of the protesters, he assured those in attendance that every Walmart employee he knows feels the same way.

The employees at Walmart know they are getting a raw deal, and if they had options, they would take them. Unfortunately, the game is rigged against them, and its up to all of us to change the rules.

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16th Annual Buy Nothing Day Winter Coat Exchange


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The 16th Annual Buy Nothing Day Winter Coat Exchange will take place at 9 locations in Rhode Island on Friday November 23.  Winter Coats will be given away starting at 9 or 10 AM at locations in Bristol, Cranston, East Providence, Newport, North Kingstown, Pawtucket, Providence, Wakefield, and Warwick.

In the age of Wall St crashing the economy and climate change, we have raised overconsumption to an art form that is tearing apart the ecosystems of the planet and our communities.  To remind us of the madness many years ago people started celebrating Buy Nothing Day to protest basing our society on consumerism.  This year for the 16th year people in Rhode island will gather to collect winter coats from those who no longer need them, and distribute them to Rhode Islanders who can use them.  Over the years we have grown to 9 sites and hundreds of volunteers (thanks to the YMCA for adding a number of sites to the network this year) that collect and give away winter coats instead of heading to the malls, We are sending a message of rethinking consumerism while actively providing a resource for our communities.

Anyone who can donate a coat is asked to donate a coat.  Anyone who needs a coat is invited to come get a coat.  Vist   http://prosperityforri.com/2012-bnd-sites/ for the sites near you. Or contact Greg Gerritt  at 401-331-0529 or  gerritt@mindspring.com

America Says No Christmas Before Thanksgiving


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Nope, it’s not just you. It turns out most Americans don’t want to deal with Christmas until after Thanksgiving, according to a new poll by Harris Interactive.

According to the survey, a whopping 75 percent of people surveyed don’t want to see holiday decorations in stores until after Thanksgiving. Similarly, 78 percent said they didn’t want to hear holiday music in stores until after Thanksgiving.

“The results of our Holiday Readiness Survey show that Americans think stores shouldn’t ‘Deck the Halls’ until after Thanksgiving,” said Tom Lounibos, the CEO of SOASTA, the online testing company that commissioned the poll.

I’d think that would mean we generally don’t want to start shopping before Thanksgiving either, let alone on Thanksgiving – as the retail industry would have you believe.

Oh, and by the way, I stand corrected … there may be some labor protests at local Walmarts after all. According to this Facebook page, there will be actions at the Walmarts in Fall River at 11am, Seekonk at 1pm and at the Providence Walmart at 2pm.

According to a press release, here’s the methodology for the poll: “This survey was conducted online within the United States by Harris Interactive on behalf of SOASTA from September 17, 2012 – September 19, 2012 among 2,346 adults age 18+. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated.

Anti-Blue Law Spin Is Walmart Propoganda


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Photo courtesy of Slate.com.

Black Friday, America’s annual homage to rampant consumerism, is not only the day after Thanksgiving, it’s also the perfect enemy of the day we give thanks to all the things that really matter in life: family, health and harvest. Conversely, Black Friday celebrates stuff we don’t need, and so often shows just how ugly we can be when trying to obtain it.

And now Black Friday wants to move in on Thanksgiving’s mojo by infringing on the original holiday. Local retailers are complaining that local blue laws won’t allow them to open on the most widely-celebrated and uniquely American of holidays.

The Providence Journal strips the story across the top of A1 this morning, while down page you can, if you look closely, see this headline: Record number in RI seek food assistance. In one of its typically right-skewing online polls, more than 80 percent of respondents say stores should stay closed on Thanksgiving.

RI Public Radio last week let a little astroturfing slide on the subject, calling Paul DeRoche the director of the Rhode Island Retail Federation. In reality, he’s the lone member of that “federation” and is better known as a lobbyist for the Providence Chamber of Commerce.

Ted Nesi inadvertently amplified the poor-Black-Friday narrative with an Executive Suite interview of the owner of longtime local not-quite-as-big box store Benny’s.

And Patch, which broke this non-story locally, didn’t try to hide its bias at all and just turned its coverage into a free ad for Walmart.

Which is what it is.

The retail giant wants more opportunities to sell its junk to consumers, so it sent out a couple press releases and whispered in the ear of some local pro-business groups and just waited for the the media to do it’s thing.

But as the rest of the country is learning that employees at thousands of Walmarts from Washington D.C to Seattle are planning a strike to protest being forced to work on Thanksgiving, the media here is largely simply parroting Walmart’s talking point that Black Friday is being oppressed by anachronistic blue laws.

If anything, as a society, we should be working on ways to extend the Thanksgiving mojo not the Black Friday vibe. One way to do this is to , where Greg Gerritt will be collecting clothes to be shared with those who can’t afford to participate in the Black Friday madness.