i live down south and keep seeing local business owners posting in local groups pleading people to come buy shit at their stores prior to this winter storm because if they have to close for a few days it’s apparently detrimental for them. like they’re entitled to exist. in any other context this behavior would be considered desperate and begging. but we’re conditioned to think small business tyrants are some class above us all who are entitled to not have to work a job like the rest of us. worst case scenario they lose their business and that’s what happens, and working people are conditioned to feel sorry for them. “please don’t let me become underpaid by some asshole exactly like myself!!!”

  • Soot [any]@hexbear.net
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    8 days ago

    Is this an America thing? Or like a big city thing maybe? A good majority my local businesses are run by very caring people who really give a shit. Yeah they’re out to make money. And as always, there’s a range of types, but overall they are way better.

    The cafe owner down the road literally opens once a month just to give free food and coffee to people who want to be warm and eat stuff but can’t afford it. (In fact, two local cafes do this). The convenience store round the corner is run by a workers’ cooperative, it donates a good percentage of their stuff to an open food larder so that anyone can come and get free food without even having to ask. The restaurant gives out their car park so the town can do a bonfire there and the local school can use their land for events. A tourist driving through town crashed their car, and the mechanics on the other side of town came over, fixed him up, and sent him on his way, all for free. Many local places know the local people, and give them discounts or free goods solely on the knowledge that said people are hard up for cash. These places pay decent wages, have flexible working, whatever the fuck basic concessions.

    Yeah, materially, the petit bourgeois have conflicting interests, and I’m never going to support them over the workers themselves. But I will quite happily make effort to support my local businesses over the large ones, because they do indeed give a shit, extract less surplus value (though absolutely, still extract it), help local communities and provide for people in need, while the large companies do none of those things.

    I’m guessing other people here have had a very different experience, but in my life, my locals will absolutely get my ‘critical support’.

    • SevenSkalls [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      8 days ago

      I do try to help local businesses over big ones as a personal rule, but if the local one openly sucks or is openly MAGA, which a lot in my area are, then they’ve lost the priority of my business.

      If they’re openly kind, I will go out of my way to go there more often, though.

    • godlessworm [comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      8 days ago

      i live in america where small businesses are venerated by the government and media while they pay their employees starvation wages, using “we’re just a small business” as an excuse while they take vacations and live this wealthy person’s lifestyle. because they’re apparently more entitled to that than their employees are to healthcare or a house. i can only speak from an american perspective, tho i did live over in europe for a few years i can’t say i know enough to comment on this subject. there are good small businesses but it’ll be like one out of every 5000 or some shit. almost none of them.