Boycott Starbucks

annie bachand • Oct 24, 2023

"Empowering Change: Supporting the Starbucks Boycott and Voting for Workers' Rights"

Boycott Starbucks

Supporting the Starbucks boycott and voting with our money to stop union busting is a powerful way to champion workers' rights and fair labor practices. As consumers, we have the privilege and responsibility to choose where we spend our hard-earned money, and this can be a potent tool for change. The recent revelations of union-busting tactics at Starbucks, as reported by The Guardian, underline the importance of collective action.


According to the Guardian, "Calls for a consumer boycott of Starbucks are growing amid mounting criticism of the coffee chain’s aggressive union-busting activities.


A boycott, supporters say, would aim to use consumer power to pressure Starbucks to stop its union-busting and illegal actions and to finally negotiate its first union contract.


The baristas’ union, Starbucks Workers United, is having internal discussions about when and whether to mount a boycott. At the moment, in addition to organizing stores, it is focused on increasing consumer support."


By refraining from patronizing a company that engages in such practices, we send a clear message that we stand in solidarity with workers seeking to exercise their right to organize and advocate for better working conditions. Our purchasing decisions are not just about a cup of coffee; they are an expression of our values and our commitment to a more just and equitable world.


Calls for a Starbucks boycott increased after Cornell University, facing intense student pressure, announced in August that it would kick the company off campus by no longer serving Starbucks in its dining halls. That came after students occupied Cornell’s main administrative building and after Starbucks closed all three of its stores in Ithaca, New York. All three were unionized, making Ithaca the first American city where every Starbucks was unionized.


“When we heard that Starbucks was closing all those stores, we asked, What can we do?” said Nick Wilson, a Cornell sophomore and a leader of the effort to oust Starbucks. “We thought if Starbucks is going to get out of Ithaca, we should get them all the way out. They shouldn’t be profiting off our campus and our community.”


Wilson said students from nearly 30 colleges had contacted him about launching efforts to kick Starbucks off their campuses. If the Starbucks union launches a consumer boycott, Wilson said, “young people would certainly be in favor. Young people’s support for unions is second nature at this point.”

Students at the University of Washington and across the University of California system have also called for ousting Starbucks from campus. Starbucks union members say they know of such efforts at a dozen other campuses.


“We’re seeing Cornell and other student actions popping up,” said Michelle Eisen, a Starbucks barista in Buffalo. “We welcome that. We think that’s amazing.”


Those calling for a boycott say they hope it will be as successful as the United Farm Workers’ famous 1960s grape boycott under the civil rights activist Cesar Chavez.


Marshall Ganz, who was that union’s organizing director under Chavez, told the Guardian, “I think a Starbucks boycott could be great. But it would take a lot of work.”


Ganz said the grape boycott succeeded because not just farm workers backed it, but because “it was students, civil rights groups, churches, labor unions. We organized constituencies to back us in this city and that city.”


Ganz, now a professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, said: “If they try driving Starbucks off campuses, that would be hell of a campaign. There’s a lot of leverage there.”


More than 350 Starbucks have been unionized, the first ones 21 months ago, but Starbucks hasn’t reached a contract with even one of them. The US labor law watchdog, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), has filed 100 complaints against Starbucks, an extraordinarily high number, that accuse it of more than 1,000 illegal actions, including illegally firing dozens of pro-union baristas, closing recently unionized stores and not bargaining in good faith.


In the face of corporate misconduct, this boycott is a means to hold companies accountable and promote a culture of respect and fairness in the workplace. It's a call to action, reminding us that change begins with our wallets, and it's time to use them for the greater good.



**https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/13/starbucks-boycott-union-busting

By annie bachand 01 Dec, 2023
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Annie Bachand Liberty Justice For All Phone: (605) 389-3122‬ Email: annie@libertyjusticeforall.org Website: http://www.libertyjusticeforall.org Liberty and Justice for All Urges Public to Observe World AIDS Day and Advocate for PEPFAR Reauthorization Rapid City, SD – December 1, 2023 – Liberty and Justice for All, a leading advocate for human rights and human health, is calling upon the public to mark World AIDS Day today by joining the initiative to contact Congress and request the reauthorization of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). With its remarkable achievements in HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, PEPFAR has played a pivotal role in the fight against this global health crisis. PEPFAR, initially proposed by President George W. Bush in 2003, has consistently demonstrated its ability to save lives and make a measurable difference in combating HIV/AIDS. The program has not only saved 25 million lives but has also prevented millions of mother-to-child transmissions of the virus. Furthermore, it has significantly strengthened healthcare systems in many countries, bolstered the United States' standing and trust in global health initiatives, and set the world on the path to eliminating AIDS by 2030. Former President George W. Bush recently emphasized the tangible impact of PEPFAR, stating, "American taxpayers' money is making a huge difference, a measurable difference in saving lives: 25 million people. This program needs to be funded. For the skeptics, all I ask is, look at the results. If the results don't impress you, nothing will impress you." [ Source: NPR ] One striking example of PEPFAR's success is Botswana, which became the first country to achieve WHO's "silver level" recognition on the path to ending AIDS. In 2021, Botswana reached over 95% of pregnant women with anti-retroviral therapy (ART), up from 77% in 2010, and reduced its mother-to-child transmission rate to a remarkable 2.2% in 2022, down from 40% in 1999. PEPFAR's monumental accomplishments in global health have transcended partisan boundaries, serving as a testament to its effectiveness as a bipartisan success. However, the work is far from over, and it is imperative that Congress reauthorizes PEPFAR this year to ensure its continued success in the fight against HIV/AIDS. To make a difference and show your support for PEPFAR's reauthorization, Liberty and Justice for All urges individuals to contact their congressional representatives via phone or email through their respective websites. The following are the contact details for South Dakota's congressional representatives: - Sen. John Thune - Phone (DC): 1-866-850-3855 - Phone (Local): 605-334-9596 (Sioux Falls) - Email: Sen. Thune's Email - Sen. Mike Rounds - Phone (DC): 1-844-875-5268 - Phone (Local): 605-336-0486 (Sioux Falls) - Email: Sen. Rounds' Email - Rep. Dusty Johnson - Phone (DC): 1-855-225-2801 - Phone (Local): 605-275-2868 (Sioux Falls) - Email: Rep. Johnson's Email Liberty and Justice for All extends its heartfelt gratitude to all those who choose to be a vital voice in the campaign for PEPFAR's reauthorization. Together, we can continue to make a significant impact on the global fight against HIV/AIDS. For more information about Liberty and Justice for All and its advocacy efforts, please visit our website. About Liberty and Justice for All: Liberty Justice For All works in the intersectionality of public health outcomes and civic engagement. Liberty and Justice for All recognizes South Dakota as a state that has been a launching pad for some of the craziest legislation in the country. And we recognize that the people living within the designated territory identified as South Dakota have a rich history of deeply committed individuals and advocacy groups who have fought tirelessly to ensure that the voices of all South Dakotans are heard. We honor their work and commit to learning from them and working with them to expand our collective impact. It is only through civic engagement and active participation in the democratic process that we can achieve true liberty and justice for all. ###
By annie bachand 18 Nov, 2023
America’s Poor Are Worse Off Than Elsewhere
By annie bachand 18 Nov, 2023
People much smarter and me have been writing alot on Israel and Palestine. I appreciate how Heather Cox Richardson provides insight, information and an opportunity for considering a larger picture, Annie Bachand, Liberty Justice For All November 17, 2023 HEATHER COX RICHARDSON In an NPR piece yesterday, Bill Chappell noted that “the war between Israel and Hamas is being fought, in part, through disinformation and competing claims.” Khalil al-Hayya, a member of Hamas’s leadership team currently in Qatar, told Ben Hubbard and Maria Abi-Habib of the New York Times that Hamas’s goal in their attack of October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists crossed from Gaza into Israel and tortured and killed about 1,200 people, taking another 240 hostage, was to make sure the region did not settle into a status quo that excluded the Palestinians. In 2020 the Palestinians were excluded from discussions about the Abraham Accords negotiated by then-president Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner that normalized relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain (and later Morocco). More recently, Saudi Arabia and Israel were in talks with the United States about normalizing relations. Al-Hayya told the reporters that in order to “change the entire equation and not just have a clash,” Hamas leaders intended to commit “a great act” that Israel would respond to with fury. “[W]ithout a doubt, it was known that the reaction to this great act would be big,” al-Hayya said, but “[w]e had to tell people that the Palestinian cause would not die.” “Hamas’s goal is not to run Gaza and to bring it water and electricity and such,” al-Hayya said. “This battle was not because we wanted fuel or laborers,” he added. “It did not seek to improve the situation in Gaza. This battle is to completely overthrow the situation.” Hamas media adviser Taher El-Nounou told the reporters: “I hope that the state of war with Israel will become permanent on all the borders, and that the Arab world will stand with us.” Hamas could be pretty certain that Israel would retaliate with a heavy hand. The governing coalition that took power at the end of 2022 is a far-right coalition, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu needs to hold that coalition together to stay in power, not least because he faces charges of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust. Once it took power, Netanyahu’s government announced that expanding Israeli settlements in the Palestinian West Bank was a priority, vowing to annex the occupied territory. It also endorsed discrimination against LGBTQ people and called for generous payments to ultra-Orthodox men so they could engage in religious study rather than work. It also tried to push through changes to the judicial system to give far more power to the government. From January 7 until October 7, 2023, protesters turned out in the streets in huge numbers. With the attack, Israelis have come together until the crisis is resolved. Netanyahu’s ability to stay in power depended in large part on his promises that he would keep Israelis safe. The events of October 7 on his watch—the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust—shattered that guarantee. Polls show that Israelis blame his government, and three quarters of them think he should resign. Sixty-four percent think the country should hold an election immediately after the war. Immediately after the attack, on October 7, Netanyahu vowed “mighty vengeance” against Hamas, and Israeli airstrikes began to pound Gaza. On October 8, Israel formally declared war. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said the country’s retaliation would “change the reality on the ground in Gaza for the next 50 years,” and on October 9 he announced “a complete siege on the Gaza Strip. There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel, everything is closed…. We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly.” Israel and the U.S. have strong historic and economic ties: as Nicole Narea points out in Vox in a review of their history together, the U.S. has also traditionally seen Israel as an important strategic ally as it stabilizes the Middle East, helping to maintain the supply of Middle Eastern oil that the global economy needs. That strategic importance has only grown as the U.S. seeks to normalize ties around the region to form a united front against Iran. For Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, and other envoys, then, it appeared the first priority after the October 7 attack was to keep the conflict from spreading. Biden made it very clear that the U.S. would stand behind Israel should Iran, which backs Hamas, be considering moving in. He warned: “[T]o any country, any organization, anyone thinking of taking advantage of this situation, I have one word: Don’t.” The movement of two U.S. carrier groups to the region appears so far to be helping to achieve that goal. While Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters from Lebanon and Yemen’s Houthis have fired missiles and drones at Israel since October 7, Iran’s leaders have said they will not join Hamas’s fight and are hoping only to use the conflict as leverage against the U.S. Militias have fired at least 55 rocket and drone strikes at U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria since October 7 without killing any U.S. soldiers. In retaliation, the U.S. has launched three airstrikes against militia installations in Syria, killing up to seven men (the military assesses there were not women or children in the vicinity) in the third strike on Sunday. The U.S. keeps roughly 900 troops in Syria and 2,500 troops in Iraq to work with local forces to prevent the resurgence of the Islamic State. At the same time that Biden emphasized Israel’s right to respond to Hamas’s attack and demanded the return of the hostages, he also called for humanitarian aid to Gaza through Egypt and warned Netanyahu to stay within the laws of war. Rounds of diplomacy by Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who flew to Israel and Jordan initially on October 11 and has gone back repeatedly, as well as by Biden, who has both visited the region—his second trip to a war zone—and constantly worked the phones, and other envoys, started humanitarian convoys moving into Gaza with a single 20-truck convoy on October 21. By early November, over 100 trucks a day were entering Gaza, the number the United Nations says is the minimum needed. Yesterday the Israeli war cabinet agreed to allow two tankers of fuel a day into Gaza after the U.N. said it couldn’t deliver aid because it had run out of fuel. The U.S. has insisted from the start that Israel’s military decisions must not go beyond the laws of war. Israeli officials say they are staying within the law, yet an estimated 11,000 civilians and Hamas fighters (the numbers are not separated out) have died. Gaza has been crushed into rubble by airstrikes, and more than a million people are homeless. That carnage has sparked protests around the world along with calls for a cease-fire, which Israel rejects. It has also sparked extreme Islamophobia and antisemitism exacerbated by social media. In the immediate aftermath of October 7, Islamophobia inspired a Chicago man to stab a 6-year-old Palestinian American boy to death; more recently, antisemitism has jumped more than 900% on X (formerly Twitter). On Wednesday, Elon Musk agreed with a virulently antisemitic post on X. White House spokesperson Andrew Bates responded: “We condemn this abhorrent promotion of Antisemitic and racist hate in the strongest terms, which runs against our core values as Americans.” Advertisers, including IBM and Apple, announced they would no longer advertise on Musk’s platform. While calling for humanitarian pauses in the fighting, the Biden administration has continued to focus on getting the hostages out and has rejected calls for a cease-fire, saying such a break would only allow Hamas to regroup. In The Atlantic on November 14, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, who negotiated a 2012 cease-fire between Hamas and Israel only to see Hamas violate that agreement two years later, explained that cease-fires have only kicked the can down the road. “Israel’s policy since 2009 of containing rather than destroying Hamas has failed,” she said. Clinton called for the destruction of Hamas on the one hand and “a new strategy and new leadership” for Israel on the other. “Instead of the current ultra-right-wing government, it will need a government of national unity that’s rooted in the center of Israeli politics and can make the hard choices ahead,” she wrote. Central to those choices is the long-neglected two-state solution that would establish a Palestinian state. Biden and Blinken and a number of Arab governments have backed the idea, but to many observers it seems impossible to pull off. Still, at the same time Clinton’s article appeared, King Abdullah II of Jordan published his own op-ed in the Washington Post titled: “A two-state solution would be a victory for our common humanity.” “[L]et’s start with some basic reality,” he wrote. “The fact is that the thousands of victims across Israel, Gaza and the West Bank have been overwhelmingly civilians…. Leaders everywhere have the responsibility to face the full reality of this crisis, as ugly as it is. Only by anchoring ourselves to the concrete facts that have brought us to this point will we be able to change the increasingly dangerous direction of our world…. “If the status quo continues, the days ahead will be driven by an ongoing war of narratives over who is entitled to hate more and kill more. Sinister political agendas and ideologies will attempt to exploit religion. Extremism, vengeance and persecution will deepen not only in the region but also around the world…. It is up to responsible leaders to deliver results, starting now.” — Notes: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/08/world/middleeast/hamas-israel-gaza-war.html https://www.npr.org/2023/11/16/1212889717/satellite-images-us-israel-gaza https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/irans-axis-resistance-against-israel-faces-trial-by-fire-2023-11-15/ https://www.thedefensepost.com/2023/11/16/us-troops-iraq-syria-attacked/ https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/up-seven-killed-us-air-strikes-syria-us-official-2023-11-14/ https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2023/10/10/remarks-by-president-biden-on-the-terrorist-attacks-in-israel-2/#:~:text=Let%20me%20say%20again%20%E2%80%94%20to,but%20our%20resolve%20is%20clear . https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/saudi-arabia-puts-israel-deal-ice-amid-war-engages-with-iran-sources-say-2023-10-13/ https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/03/world/middleeast/netanyahu-corruption-charges-israel.html https://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/history-its-importance-and-irrelevance-plus-some-books https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/9/17/three-years-on-how-have-the-abraham-accords-done-for-the-uae https://www.usip.org/publications/2023/09/saudi-israel-normalization-agreement-horizon https://apnews.com/article/west-bank-benjamin-netanyahu-israel-government-e36ed7260e0398406d9a8ba319b0b741 https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/protesters-outside-israeli-pm-netanyahus-house-anger-grows-2023-11-04/ https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israels-netanyahu-vows-mighty-vengeance-against-hamas-2023-10-07/ https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/defense-minister-announces-complete-siege-of-gaza-no-power-food-or-fuel/ https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-tells-gazans-move-south-or-risk-being-seen-terrorist-partner-2023-10-22/ https://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/who-takes-over-gaza https://www.vox.com/world-politics/23916266/us-israel-support-ally-gaza-war-aid https://il.usembassy.gov/secretary-blinkens-travel-to-israel-and-jordan/ https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/17/politics/inside-joe-biden-israel-trip-planning/index.html https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/attack-gaza-hospital-unprecedented-scale-who-says-2023-10-17/ https://www.state.gov/humanitarian-assistance-for-gaza/
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