I donโt know much about the Nestle example, but in principle yes I think so.
I think the same would apply to any case where the production of each individual product does marginal harm. In that case a single individual can choose not to purchase the product and therefore have a marginal impact.
And maybe these kind of boycotts are more common than I suggested in the original answer, but it definitely applies to veganism.
I donโt know much about the Nestle example, but in principle yes I think so.
I think the same would apply to any case where the production of each individual product does marginal harm. In that case a single individual can choose not to purchase the product and therefore have a marginal impact.
And maybe these kind of boycotts are more common than I suggested in the original answer, but it definitely applies to veganism.
But boycotts where you are trying to make a policy change require mass organization then?