Americans have already started noticing a decline in toilet paper rolls in their local stores as customer apparently bulk buy - despite the majority of paper being produced domestically

Toilet paper ‘panic buying’ has been reported in parts of the country, as Americans fear the impact of the ongoing port strike.

Roughly 45,000 members of the International Longshoremen’s Association walked out on Tuesday morning after their contract with the ports expired. News that the strike could impact 36 ports appears to have led some consumers to buy rolls upon rolls of toilet paper in a panic, with shoppers posting pictures of their local stores with empty shelves.

Social media users in New Jersey, Colorado, Virginia and other states reported shelves cleaned out of toilet paper.

  • Codex@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I truly do not understand my fellow countryfolks’ minds. Why toilet paper, again?

    A quick search can tell you what goods might be affected, and paper products don’t even make the list! https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/transportation/2024/10/01/strike-at-the-port-of-ny-and-nj-what-imports-are-affected/75468183007/

    Imports into the Port of NY and NJ

    • Furniture
    • Appliances, machinery and parts
    • Plastics
    • Beverages, spirits and vinegar
    • Electric machinery and parts
    • Apparel and accessories, knit
    • Rubber
    • Vehicles and parts
    • Iron and steel
    • Toys, games, sports equipment

    So as you’d expect: cars, furniture, electronics, fast fashion, some raw materials

    In other words, very little that is essential or that you’ll miss in the next few months, but a lot of luxury things that cheap importers make a lot of money on.

    Honestly, we’d be better off as a country if we permanently stopped importing a lot of this shit and went back to making it outselves.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      we’d be better off as a country if we permanently stopped importing a lot of this shit and went back to making it outselves.

      Of course.

      But there’s more short-term profits to be made for a select few if we close even more factories where they have to pay (more-or-less) a living wage and outsource to low wage countries.