Vote with your dollars. Invest in justice.

See who’s behind what you buy and invest in - and gain the power to effectively exercise your right to choose differently.

How it Works

Your Boycott List is simple. It collects, vets, and surfaces public financial and political relationships for companies, products, and individuals. Wherever possible, it maps those connections to public records, investment filings, lobbying disclosures, etc. Then it shows you — simply and visually with sources as you just browse like you normally do — what you’re supporting, and what you could support instead.

How It Works

  1. Get instant alerts while you browse. When you land on a company site (e.g., Palantir), a small banner appears noting ties to the Trump administration. Tap Details to see sources.

  2. See risky products right in search. On shopping pages (e.g., Amazon), items like Angel Soft are flagged because it’s owned by Koch Industries, which funds Project 2025.

  3. Decide in the moment. The overlay lives on your device, so you can avoid harmful brands—or jump to vetted alternatives—without leaving the page.

  4. Track and learn. Open the panel anytime to review sources, see your impact over time, and fine-tune the alerts you receive.

Placeholder

Why this matters

Why This Matters

  • Hold power accountable — money is influence.

  • Reduce complicity — stop unknowingly funding harmful agendas.

  • Support alternatives — back ethical businesses, socially aligned enterprises.

  • Amplify collective action — when many vote with dollars, systems shift.

Recent example

In September 2025, Disney suspended Jimmy Kimmel after pressure over a bit he made about the killing of Charlie Kirk. Threats from Trump FCC Chair Brendan Carr heightened free-speech concerns with clear threats to stations and ABC/Disney. The message was clear — silence another voice criticizing the Trump administration. Conservatives once again betrayed decades of their own purported principles to support the move and Donald Trump, as usual, bragged about the suppression of another critical voice on social media and in interviews.

Public backlash erupted. But increasingly the voices of the people, reflected in polls and other settings, don’t matter. It can seem as if we are powerless. Reports noted a sharp, same-day market cap dip for Disney during the backlash window, though no official, verified figures on subscription cancellations or direct revenue losses have been released. What is confirmed: Disney reversed course and brought Kimmel back just six days later.:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

This shows what’s true: boycotts work — when people choose where they spend money, they reclaim a voice that our modern systems have tried to silence. It’s no longer enough just to vote at the ballot box. We have to vote with our wallets too.

Don’t pay to support a world you won’t love living in.