this post was submitted on 23 Mar 2025
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Buy Canadian

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A community dedicated to buying Canadian products.

Une communauté dédiée à l'achat de produits Canadiens.


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Related communities: Communautés connexes :

!buyeuropean@feddit.uk !buyafrican@baraza.africa !boycottus@lemmy.ca !canada@lemmy.ca !canada@lemmy.ml

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according to a recent Ipsos Canada study, the Buy Local movement is largely bolstered by older Canadians. Gen Z consumers, on the other hand, are almost six times more likely to switch to an American service such as a bank or telecommunications company, according to the survey.

Carleton University economics professor Frances Woolley noted more than a quarter of youth aged 25-34 are food insecure already. University of Victoria theatre student Samantha Frew said she has heard the calls to buy local. But she still tends to do most of her shopping at Walmart for financial reasons. She also struggles to figure out which companies are wholly Canadian.

“As much as it felt dystopian to go into the liquor store and see posters over all the American liquor, I was like ‘Oh, I wouldn’t have known that unless that poster was directly over it.‘ ”

In Montreal, National Theatre School student Owen Carter said they have boycotted corporations and products for other causes in the past, but cutting out all American goods is proving to be much more difficult.

...

Prof. Woolley advises students trying to buy local to shop seasonally.

“Canada grows a lot of things in the summer, not so much in the winter,” Prof. Woolley said. “In winter that means eating things that keep like root vegetables and frozen food.”

She said buying locally does not have to be expensive. She referenced butternut squash and Canadian cabbage, two pieces of produce that can keep all winter and won’t break the bank.

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[–] Perhapsjustsniffit@lemmy.ca 90 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (11 children)

I am disabled. Three kids under 12. We live in an economically depressed area. Our family income is less than half of what is considered extreme poverty for a single person in our province. Less than $20,000/year for a family of five. We are fortunate because our house is paid for and so is our 15 year old vehicle.

Do without. Change products. Buy frozen blueberries over a $6 package. Don't eat blueberries. Eat in season. Look for local food producers. If you live in a city they're literally everywhere and you're being lazy. Rural, grow a garden. Pick your blueberries and freeze them for winter. Learn about food. There are many ways.

Quit being defeatist. Change is possible.

[–] RutabagasnTurnips@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 week ago (9 children)

That's the thing though. You own your vehicle and house. For those that don't have a car, paying 100-180/month on transit and living in an apartment you can barely fit a couch in, let alone a deep freeze, bulk buying and storing when things are in season isn't feasible.

[–] lasersharkshark@sh.itjust.works 21 points 1 week ago

The theme of the top comment is don't be defeatist and you come in and reply with a defeatist comment. Your own comment history mentions having a Costco membership to buy laundry detergent. If you're buying from Costco you are buying in bulk so who is your comment even for?

That's all before we get to the disabled with family of 5 part you glanced over. Sure lots of people may not own their homes but most of them are not disabled supporting a good sized family either.

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