Amazon Smile shuts down

2023-Jan-19, Thursday 10:53 am
mellowtigger: (money)

Not many people knew of it, but anything you could buy at Amazon.com could also be bought at Smile.Amazon.com, with a portion of the sale money being donated to the charity you selected. At work, I always tried to direct products to that url when people asked me for tech items. Well, I just saw the email from Amazon that they are shutting down this charity service. Why it was a separate service instead of baked-in to the main corporate webpage, I don't know.

Media this morning report that people are surprised, like me.

The news has been met with a mix of disbelief, anger, and confusion from charities and consumers. For example, the SquirrelWoord Enquine Sanctuary tweeted a copy of the announcement along with the comment "What???? Seriously @amazon." One reply points out that AmazonSmile was a way to support small charities who are "innovative and creative," while another says they made purchases through Amazon because of the donation and that will not be the case in the future. https://www.pcmag.com/news/amazon-is-closing-down-amazonsmile-on-feb-20

The slow collapse continues, I guess. Exponential-growth capitalism must be fed at all costs. (Or such is the inevitability, we're sternly told. ("The beginning is near."))

mellowtigger: (hide)

I'm not in the best mood today. Let's blame it partially on the monkeypox vaccine 2nd dose and feeling "not my best" again, like last time. I'm checking out of civilization for the rest of today, I think. Sit under an electric blanket and read and eat and otherwise just be a bum.

  • On my trip to Aldi's grocery today, the hot sauce section of the shelf was empty. *sigh* First time I've ever seen that, I think. But they had eggs this time.
  • Someone famous has commented on the skyrocketing price of lettuce. Raw food is expensive now, and prepared food is outrageously expensive.
  • Home Depot's co-founder is on my naughty list again after blaming socialism for making people not want to work. At wages that won't pay rent and barely buys food, while corporate profits soar, maybe has something to do with it? Bring on the socialism, please.
  • The IRS audited poor taxpayers in 2022 while ignoring rich ones. *grrrrr*
  • USA police set a new record in 2022 for killing our own citizens, since records began in 2013.
  • Minneapolis police seized 31 guns after what started as a traffic stop. In 2022, they removed about 1,100 guns from city streets. That's some useful progress, I guess.
  • My Jordan neighborhood ranks only 7th in areas of Minneapolis measured by violent crimes per capita. For once, I also have data that says other areas are worse than Minneapolis. Search this blog for "The worst contiguous", and see the chart that places a Minneapolis area (not even mine) as 3rd of the worst so far analyzed.

So... bad mood. It's bad here, but there are worse places to be. I want to see a comparison of wealth inequality now in 2023 with that of other periods of world history when the peasants killed their economic overlords in desperation and outrage. It was bad before, and I'm sure it's worse now.

I'm tired of human civilization. The status quo is awful. I want to start over with new rules.

mellowtigger: (lowered expectations)

I have a few thoughts on today's holiday. I've done it once before, telling people to expect bad things from a calendar year. I'm doing it again now for 2023.

See empty grocery shelves and read the forecast...

Food: Last week, I went grocery shopping again, and prices are still high. The egg shortage has more to do with an epidemic (chickens, non-COVID) than the usual supply chain problems that keep other shelves low on stock. The store shelves were entirely or almost empty of egg cartons at both Aldi's and Cub Foods. People are going online to try to find affordable eggs in Minneapolis. I bought my usual cage-free eggs at Cub, but they cost 0.8 hours of US minimum wage for a dozen eggs. Expect it to grow increasingly difficult to afford the calories to feed your body while you work to afford more calories. Forget about reserving any money for rent. (Shelter is a luxury in Amurrika. The police returned to evict that homeless camp. Merry Christmas, from Mayor Frey. Still no word yet if my pictures helped that lawyer get information from the city, at long last.) I blame capitalism for my low expectations on this topic. I don't think government lip service will help this cost inflation problem.

Climate: It is unusual for our climate to experience a "triple dip" of 3 consecutive La Niña years. When it finally ends in a few weeks/months, expect El Niño to just be hot. Expect more trouble with water supply and crop production.

Pandemic: I predicted that 2022 would be the year when the world finally realizes what's at stake with this pandemic. I was wrong about that realization. I wasn't wrong about what's at stake. More data arrived that infection is permanent. It's still not the ideal study to prove my point, but it's just one more piece of evidence in a continuing trend with the same conclusion. SARS-CoV-2 infection is permanent, like chickenpox. As with Hepatitis C, we should just assume that people who got infected are still infected, unless we find some compelling evidence that a particular individual escaped that fate through luck... or nasal neutralizing vaccines, maybe. The problem with this particular permanent infection is that it's much less benign. It damages the immune system (like HIV in several details, including recently reported dendritic cell damage, plus something new about CD14+ white blood cells) and causes blood clots throughout the body. I still expect global mortality to rise significantly over time. It is not doing so at the moment. In the USA and elsewhere, excess mortality appears to be stabilizing. That's against my prediction. But HIV takes about 10 years to progress to AIDS, so I may have to wait a long time for society to reach my level of worry. We know the damage is happening, but it's not killing people en masse yet, so "nobody cares".

Sure, it's hard to stay realistic in tough times without becoming cynical. I'll try to keep the bad news to Moody Mondays, and I'll try to bring more good news to my posts on other days. I still hold great hope for humanity's future and the Earth's. Good luck to everyone with surviving until that good future unfolds.

mellowtigger: (money)

Over the years, I've been the online leader for 2 different groups at Meetup.com. It's a great place to organize calendars of activity, and it's free to use for attendees. They charge meeting organizers for the service, but it's way too expensive for what it costs Meetup to provide that service. They charged US$150/year for each group, the last I knew a year ago. That's too rich for my blood, so I eventually stopped paying both of them.

Twin Cities Powershell Automation User Group is looking for a new leader, but it may not get one. It'd be a shame to lose it. I created that group back in 2014 October 14. (I got the date from the earliest copy at the wayback machine.) The powershell group had previously used EventBrite for RSVPs, but it wasn't reaching a large audience. Attendance definitely improved after switching to Meetup. I paid for that group for several years, before handing off the finances of it to Tim Curwick, the group president at the time. I hope it finds a new leader, but it seems unlikely. This group focuses on in-person meetings (with pizza!) rather than online meetings, which are available everywhere. There are probably more people like me who simply don't attend group events any more due to health risks.

Star Citizens of Minnesota found someone else to take over, which is good. I paid the bills for a few years, which is too much money gone. But I still haven't attended any of their indoor events since the pandemic started. This group is based on the Star Citizen game which has been in development since 2012, and still isn't in release yet, although some functions are playable (if you're on Windows).

I received the notice today that Twin Cities EcoClub is also looking for a new leader. I attended only one of their events. We listened to the person organizing the hydroponics container at the North Market grocery. (Aside: I know I edited photos of that event. Did I really never post it? I certainly can't find it now in Dreamwidth searches.) I remember that one was post-pandemic, because we stayed in a large spaced-apart circle outdoors to listen.

I know I've seen notices of other groups losing their leadership. Meetup will eventually delete the groups if nobody else steps up to pay the bills. It's sad to see the groups disappear, but maybe Meetup will finally stop "printing money" and reduce their rates (by a lot) to something more reasonable.

mellowtigger: (economy)
poster "You chould be more upset about insulin prices than gas prices"As an appropriate sign of the times, a news story about people now unable to afford shopping at Walmart is paywalled behind a news site that costs $415/year. I didn't subscribe.  People can't afford such costs.  I'm doing better at this moment, but I've been there.  I expect that Biden won't help.

In the continuing hypocrisy of privatizing the profits but socializing the costs, the fossil fuel industry got $5.9 trillion in subsidies globally in 2020.  The pharmaceutical industry continues to overcharge on products we paid them to develop.  Considering how well it works for the gun lobby to pay politicians to create market demand for their product, what does it mean to pandemic healthcare policy?  Turn everyone into a pharmaceutical consumer thanks to persistent infection and long term disability?  Good plan.

In the continuing greed-is-good tragedy, 60 Minutes broadcast a story about essential life-supporting products being intentionally kept in short supply to prop up their prices.  Seriously.  Mother Jones created a whole series of reporting on how USA wealth is being looted by vulture capitalism. You can scroll down and just read the titles to learn how bad it is.

In the continuing growth-until-collapse cycle, wealth consolidation by the already wealthy keeps rising in low income neighborhoods even though mass theft and infrastructure cannibalization continues.  Nobody at the helm is paying attention.  Or worse, they're making the wrong decisions.  And that's without even mentioning gas prices.

If you have the hours to spare, I recommend watching the entire Wealth & Poverty playlist of the class lectures of professor Robert Reich. If you have less time, then I recommend the single lecture, "The Future of Inequality (& You?)." I've embedded it below.  Separately, I also recommend his short video, "This One Thing Is Making Your Life More Expensive".


I've been advocating for a different kind of economy for a long time, at least since Occupy, and I vote that way too. You know how I feel about worshiping wealth.  I want a new way forward.

Now, time to go outside and do a bit of gardening.

Profile

mellowtigger: (Default)
mellowtigger

About

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    1 2 3
45 6 78910
11121314151617
18 19 2021 222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Syndicate

RSS Atom
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
Page generated 2025-May-23, Friday 11:55 am