
Why Boycott?
Democrats have weaponized federal agencies and use public officials and prosecutors
to go after their political and cultural opponents.
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Many companies have joined in on this "soft tyranny"
and push the radical Democrat agenda with their funding and influence.
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If you step out of line, they will try to cancel you, debank you, or destroy you.
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Why would you give your money to pro-Democrat organizations?
It makes no sense to fund this tyranny against conservatives.
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Democrats have been boycotting Republican and conservative organizations for years.
Why would we not do the same?
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Only when it’s painful to the bottom line will woke organizations and public figures
finally listen and be neutral.
Types of Boycotts

Traditional Boycotts
Be an informed buyer
and use our
Liberty Score Lookup
to stop funding tyranny

Counter-Boycotts
Stop supporting cities, states,
and other entities that boycott conservative cities, states,
companies and organizations

Un-Boycotts
Support conservative
companies and organizations
that are under attack
from Democrat boycotts
What We Stand For
In everything we do at Boycott Democrats,
you can trust that we will adhere to these 3 pillars:

NEUTRALITY
We only ask that corporations
stay neutral.
They don’t need to pick a side,
but they do need
to stand aside.

LIBERTY
We uphold the Founding Fathers' view of liberty:
unalienable rights are endowed by our Creator,
not by our government.

MORALITY
We believe that our Constitution was made for a
moral and religious people.
This is seen in faithful, ethical, incorruptible, virtuous living.
What is a Liberty Score?

Our Rating System
We give each organization or individual in our system a special rating, which we call a "Liberty Score".
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These scores are based on open-source information,
not hearsay, emotion, or hyperbole.
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How do we calculate our scores?
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Ratings are calculated according to 10 categories
listed in our "How We Score" section below.
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Our ratings are independent. This means:
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We will never accept compensation or pressure from an organization to skew their rating toward a more favorable outcome, or to skew a competitor's rating toward a less favorable outcome.
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We will never cave to social pressure or persecution. If you don't like our website or what we do with our ratings, then just don't use it - move along. It's still a free country, at least for a little while longer.
Verification
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Since we believe it's important for you to be able to verify information and think for yourself, we'll include links, screenshots, and other resources within each rating profile.
How We Score
Hyperbole-Free and Trustworthy Evaluation
Across 10 Key Categories:
Freedom of Speech
This analysis examines how a company or entity’s policies, products, or public actions impact the free exchange of ideas. Key areas include content moderation practices, deplatforming or silencing of individuals or viewpoints, support for government-imposed speech restrictions, political bias in communication platforms, and the company’s stance on protecting or restricting speech in both digital and real-world contexts. The analysis assesses whether the company promotes open dialogue or contributes to censorship and suppression of expression.
Life
This analysis evaluates the company or entity's positions and actions regarding the sanctity of human life. This includes scrutiny of corporate involvement in abortion, such as funding or support for pro-abortion organizations, political activism promoting pro-choice or anti-life policies, contributions to Planned Parenthood, and endorsement of practices like euthanasia or assisted suicide initiatives. The analysis highlights whether the company’s policies and activities align with or oppose the protection of human life at all stages.
General Rights & Freedom
This analysis evaluates a company or entity’s stance on fundamental individual liberties and constitutional rights. Key areas include support for freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the Second Amendment, property rights, economic freedom, freedom of assembly, healthcare freedom, and digital privacy. It examines corporate policies, advocacy, and public statements that may promote or restrict these rights, such as support for gun control, surveillance practices, or restrictions on religious expression. The analysis highlights whether a company upholds personal liberty and constitutional protections or engages in practices that undermine them.
Sovereignty
This analysis considers whether the evaluated company or entity’s actions support or undermine the United States’ ability to exercise independent policy decisions, protect its citizens, and maintain territorial and economic integrity. Key areas of evaluation include stances on border control and immigration, respect for national laws and regulatory frameworks, handling of data and digital sovereignty, supply chain practices in sensitive regions, engagement with foreign governments, and adherence to national security considerations.
Political Activism
This analysis evaluates a company or entity’s involvement in political matters and advocacy. This includes corporate contributions to political campaigns or PACs, lobbying efforts, public statements on policy issues, alignment with particular parties or ideologies, and support for political movements or initiatives. The analysis considers how the company’s actions influence the political landscape and whether they reflect partisan engagement or neutrality.
Organizational Culture
This analysis examines whether a company or entity prioritizes merit over identity-based agendas. Key areas include mandatory DEI programs, corporate messaging and imagery, employee affinity/identity groups and clubs, commercials and advertisements, mission and value statements, events hosted by the company (i.e. company-wide employee events and conferences), emphasis on identity over merit in hiring or promotions, political activism or partisanship in the workplace, messaging that enforces social or cultural conformity, and restrictions on employees’ freedom of expression.
View of Government
This analysis assesses a company or entity’s stance on the role and size of government. Key areas include support for regulation versus free markets, taxation policies, government intervention in business, and advocacy for expansive versus limited government programs. This can also include stances on law enforcement and criminal justice, public health mandates, education policy, encroachment on individual liberties (gun ownership, speech, privacy), social programs, and more. The analysis highlights whether the company aligns with big-government approaches or favors limited, small-government principles.
Family Friendly
This analysis evaluates whether a company or entity’s products, services, or contributions support content and environments appropriate for children. Key areas include exposure to profanity, sexualized or vulgar material, adult-themed entertainment, and events like drag shows targeted at minors. It also assesses whether the company respects parental rights in education, including opposition or support for LGBT-focused sex education and medical interventions such as gender transitions for children. The analysis highlights whether the company promotes family-friendly values or content and policies that may undermine children’s innocence and safety, as well as parental authority.
Financial Activism
This analysis evaluates a company or entity’s fiscal decisions and priorities, including political contributions, charitable giving, executive compensation, corporate investments, tax practices, and shareholder returns. It highlights how these financial choices reflect the company’s values, influence, and social or political impact. Key issues could include climate or social activism, funding political candidates, donating to activist organizations, and shareholder pressure to support or reject woke agendas.
Business Practices
This analysis evaluates how a company or entity operates and the ethical, economic, and national implications of its decisions, as well as the political ties of company or organizational leadership figures. Key areas include labor practices, such as use of cheap, forced, or exploitative labor and preference for foreign workers over U.S. employees; supply chain and manufacturing choices, including production in countries with poor human rights records versus domestic production; outsourcing and offshoring of jobs; ethical sourcing of materials; good environmental stewardship; tax strategies, including use of offshore tax havens; corporate governance, transparency, and accountability; intellectual property and support for domestic innovation; and product safety and quality standards. The analysis highlights whether a company conducts business responsibly, ethically, and in alignment with human rights, national interests, and consumer protections.
