Open discussion based on some thoughts I had today. I had a collection of errands I needed to run, all of which could be accomplished at either Big Box Dispensary #1-7 or Local Business. I've long been a proponent of supporting the little guy. In a perfect world, I'd BE the little guy, happily slaving away pounding on my rock to sell shards to others looking for what wares I have to sell.
Stop #1 was a hardware store. My choices were my locally owned Ace Hardware (for those unaware, they're all individually owned and operated. Technically all small businesses, operated as a co-op) and team orange/team blue. I'm sort of morally opposed to team blue for personal reasons, so they're out. We ended up at team orange. I wish we had gone to Ace. I was looking for a specific set of sandpaper that I KNEW Ace carried, but I was gambling on Home Depot's spray paint selection and price, because rattle can has gotten obnoxiously expensive and somewhat hard to find. My LOCAL LOCAL Ace is also brutal to get in and out of, and that definitely plays a factor. They're also sort of obnoxiously helpful, to the point of please leave me alone. But that's a personal preference thing. They're good at what they do. If you need the old school hardware guy, they have it in spades there. Pricing in my experience is kind of all over the map. MY old job was brutally expensive compared to the apron and vest- to the point sometimes even with my discount I'd go into the box. Hell, sometimes we'd walk the store amex into the box, buy THEIR E36 M3, mark it up, and turn around and sell it to our business accounts, especially if it was something they wanted right away. It was a bizarre world.
Stop#2 was the liquor store. I had read about a specific bottle of bourbon I needed to get my hands on. (Larceny BP batch A124) that had JUST been released. A new bottle store had opened up in town some weeks prior (oddly enough in an old True Value) and they've got a pretty deep bottle selection, and seem to be able to keep some good stuff on the shelves, plus they donate to local causes with every sale. My choice was either them or Total Wine. Total Wine would have been about $10 cheaper. Total Wine is also where all the hunters go to get the allocated stuff, so they get cleaned out almost immediately- finding this may not have happened, especially since it just won some award somewhere. Sure enough the local (goodpour.com for those interested) had what I needed. They're also headquartered out of Maitland, they donate to the cat shelter we got one of our morons from, and I'm gambling on building a relationship with these guys so they call me when the hot ticket comes in. PLUS- I've started hearing some things about the way Total Wine plays ball that I don't like, and I may be done shopping with them.
Stop #3 was the book store- Bright Light books- and sort of what prompted this whole thread. This was totally an optional stop, brought on by my need to see this place after Mr. Wallens stopped there the other night. I had assumed it was a Christian bookstore and subsequently, not for me. (they do have an extensive theology section, if that's your game) While in there I stumbled across several books of interest (including a first edition Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde) and a coffee table book with a VERY comprehensive pictorial history on video game consoles up to and including the ps5. Cool book. Listed at $30 for a brand new copy. I was maybe going to buy it, and decided to do a bit of research to see more about the book- it was listed as a second edition, and there was some other information I wanted. That of course, led me to google targeting me and listing that one tropical river. It is nothing, if not efficient. OF COURSE, the river is 30% cheaper and will drop it on my doorstep in like, a day. This isn't a right now purchase, or even something I was looking for. This is purely an "ooh, shiny object". I ended up not buying the book from either place, on the auspice that I didn't need another coffee table book I wasn't going to look at- especially when I'd literally just ordered a video game I am never going to open the day before. (NES World Championships LE....I'll buy a digital copy to play, but I'm archiving stuff these days) and I have a whole bedroom of E36 M3 I need to sort through.
There is also of course, my REGULAR local businesses. I've bought three bikes locally. (Well...one in pieces, and two whole ones) and one from an online bike shop. Mr. B's has gotten far more of my duckets than I'd like to admit to. We also bought a cruiser for swmbo from a place called Retro City that's opened a shop basically across the street from my house. I try to shop as local as I can on any given basis, but sometimes, $$$ wins, and after all my four paragraphs of rambling, brings me to the question-
Where do you draw the line? How do you define when to shop local and when you're going to pony up to corporate consumerism? Is it a dollar amount? Is it the customer service? There are obviously places I won't shop at no matter the cost (I won't shop at Walmart. Has nothing to do with corporate policy, people of walmart, or anything. They put a Walmart where the Cottage Grove MN drive in used to be. It's not even Walmarts fault- The drive in couldn't keep up with the switch to digital. I don't care. No walmart). I won't support Kroger because of how the whole Lucky's thing went down.... etc etc. But this isn't me grinding an axe. This is me asking, how do you make your choices?