SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

probably illegally copied from an A.P. article, this is inspiring!! i would have a very very hard time doing this myself. i wonder if anyone would be willing to try a month with me? i , also would have to excempt food and toiletries. dang this is cool.


By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Wed Jan 3, 4:12 AM ET

SAN FRANCISCO - It began, as grand ideas often do, over a dinner — risotto, artisan cheese and wine. What would it be like, 10 environmentally conscious friends wondered as they discussed the state of the planet, to go a year without buying anything new?
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Twelve months later, the results from their experiment in anti-consumption for 2006 are in: Staying 100 percent true to the goal proved both harder and easier than those who signed on expected.

And while broken vacuum cleaners and malfunctioning cell phones posed challenges, some of the group's original members say the self-imposed shopping sabbatical was so liberating that they've resolved to do it for another year.

"It started in a lighthearted way, but it is very serious," said John Perry, 42, a father of two who works for a Silicon Valley technology company. "It is about being aware of the excesses of consumer culture and the fact we are drawing down our resources and making people miserable around the world."

The pledge they half-jokingly named The Compact, after the Mayflower pilgrims, spread to other cities through the Internet and an appearance on the "Today" show.

As it turned out, The Compact was modest as far as economic boycotts go. Several cities in the United States and Europe have communities of "freegans," people whose contempt for consumerism is so complete they eat food foraged from Dumpsters whenever possible, train hop and sleep in abandoned buildings on principle.

The San Francisco group, by contrast, exempted food, essential toiletries like toothpaste and shampoo, underwear and other purchases that fell under the categories of health and safety from their pledge.

But perhaps because its members included middle-class professionals who could afford to shop recreationally, their cause caught on. Nearly 3,000 people have joined a user group Perry set up on Yahoo so participants could swap goods and tips.

Besides thrift stores and garage sales, participants found a wealth of free or previously owned merchandise in online classifieds and sites where people post stuff they want to get rid of, such as http://www.freecycle.org and http://www.garbagescout.com.

After going through an initial period of retail withdrawal, discovering just how easy it was to score pretty much anything with a little time and effort was an eye-opener, according to participants.

Rachel Kesel, 26, who works as a dog walker, said she was astonished by how often the items she needed simply materialized — the friend who offered a bicycle seat when hers was stolen, the Apple store employees who fixed her laptop at no cost.

Similarly fortuitous timing happened often enough that group members came up with a name for it — "Compact Karma."

After postponing purchases such as a new wind breaker and a different stud for her pierced tongue — she couldn't bring herself to buy a used one — Kesel broke down only twice.

Once was when she was planning a trip to
Israel and couldn't find a used guidebook that reflected current political realities. The other was after her commuter coffee cup suffered a fatal crack.

"I really found a lot of times there were things I thought I needed that I don't need that much," she said.

The pledge provided unexpected dividends as well, such as the joy of getting reacquainted with the local library and paying down credit cards. Gone, too, was the hangover of buyer's remorse.

Perry got satisfaction out of finding he had a knack for fixing things and how often manufacturers were willing to send replacement parts and manuals for products that had long since outlived their warranties.

"One of the byproducts of The Compact has been I have a completely different relationship with the things in my life. I appreciate the stuff I have more," he said. "I don't think I need to buy another pair of shoes until I'm entering Leisure World."

Over the holidays, Compact members gave homemade gifts or charitable donations in a recipients name instead of engaging in the usual Grinch-making shopping crush. Kate Boyd, 45, a set designer and high school drama teacher, visited a new downtown shopping mall and felt like she had just stepped off a flying saucer.

"It was all stuff that had nothing to do with me, yet for so many people that's how they spend their weekends," she said. "It's entertainment and it is the opposite of where I've been for a year."

Now that they know they can do it, Boyd, Kesel and Perry are ready to extend the pledge into 2007. But first, they plan to give themselves a one-day reprieve to stock up on essentials — windshield wipers, bicycle brakes and tongue studs.

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Comments

  • System2
    System2 Posts: 6,290 admin
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    Hey Matt,

    Did you get anyone to agree to boycott purchasing new stuff for a month with you?

    I might consider it...

    Matt
  • System2
    System2 Posts: 6,290 admin
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!


    I could do that, but my wife now thats a different story.

    brad
  • System2
    System2 Posts: 6,290 admin
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    ill try it! of course i would have to excuse gas and food as i am in no position to barter those things.
  • System2
    System2 Posts: 6,290 admin
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    Ive been looking into this a bit more, found this:
    http://adbusters.org/the_magazine/71/Breaking_the_Consumer_Habit_Living_the_Buy_Nothing_Life.html

    and also have been reading up on freecycle.org
    a very very cool concept, my chapter is run via a yahoo group and is surprisingly big for a small arts city. i havent yet joined up since yahoo is notoriously not so careful with their email addresses but if i were to do something like this it would probably be a good idea. ill probably signup with my junk email address i use at yahoo.

    can i get 5 people to do a week? food/toiletries and gas excepted. it would be fun to me, needless suffering to others (apparently most others seeing the response i'm getting here)

  • halfcrazy
    halfcrazy Solar Expert Posts: 720 ✭✭✭
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    Mattl i could do a week i think if you are exempting gas and food?
  • System2
    System2 Posts: 6,290 admin
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    yea thanks what i meant, cool, thats 2 of us.

    once we get 5, or as many as we can within a little while (how long do you think?), then we can agree on start date.


  • halfcrazy
    halfcrazy Solar Expert Posts: 720 ✭✭✭
    Re: SF group boycotts purchasing for a year!

    Well our family could do this pretty much any week we do very little already. andthe years chickens and pigs are bought so whenever it is good for everyone except the week that Midnite solar has a new product available :-D