May 1: Blackout Day – Steering the Economy Toward Justice

History isn’t always made in tall buildings by people in expensive suits. Some of the time, history is made in the checkout line.

Tomorrow, May 1, is Blackout Day. No Work. No School. No Shopping. It is the next massive phase of the movement that started with the “Three No Kings” protests, which brought a record-breaking 8 million people into the streets this past March. While those rallies were about being seen, tomorrow is about being felt. It’s built on a simple idea: If they don’t respect our voices, they don’t get our dollars.

The Power of the Friday May Day

Why May 1? Because it isn’t just a date; it’s May Day, also known as International Workers’ Day.

  • The History: This day commemorates the 1886 Haymarket Affair in Chicago, where workers went on strike to fight for the 8-hour workday. It has always been a day of international solidarity for people who keep the world running.
  • The Friday Effect: Choosing a Friday is a tactical choice. Protests on a Saturday can sometimes feel like a “weekend activity,” but an economic blackout on a Friday hits the system right in its most productive gears. By stopping the flow of money on a workday, the impact is felt instantly across every balance sheet in the country.

The “United Front”: Who is Behind This?

This isn’t just a hashtag; it’s a coordinated economic shutdown. The May Day Strong coalition has organized over 3,000 events across the country – from the biggest cities like Los Angeles and Chicago to small towns in Idaho and Wyoming. This movement is a “United Front” of the people who keep the country running:

  • The Teachers: The National Education Association (NEA) and the Chicago Teachers Union are calling on students and parents to join the pledge. They know that a “sick-out” or a “day of absence” proves that the system cannot function without our cooperation.
  • The Workers: Major labor unions like the AFL-CIO, SEIU Healthcare, and the Roofers Union Local 36 have officially endorsed the “No Work, No School, No Shopping” pledge. When the people who build the roofs and heal the sick stop spending, the billionaires in charge have to pay attention.
  • The Organizers: National groups like Indivisible (led by Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin), the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA), and Organized Power in Numbers (led by Neidi Dominguez) are the engines behind this. They’ve spent months making sure this isn’t just a one-day event, but a demonstration of collective power.
  • The Political Voices: Tomorrow, you’ll hear from leaders who are done with “business as usual.” Bernie Sanders – fresh off his “Fighting Oligarchy” tour – is set to speak at major rallies, along with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar. Their message? The economy only works because we do.

This Works: The “Ah-Ha” Moments in History

If you think one day of not spending doesn’t matter, look at the receipts. History is full of moments where a collective “No” changed everything.

  • The 381-Day Walk (Montgomery, Alabama, 1955): When Rosa Parks and the Black community in Montgomery stopped riding the buses, they didn’t just make a moral point – they hit the city where it hurt. The bus company lost 65% of its revenue. It turns out, you can’t run a segregated city if you can’t pay the electric bill.
  • Operation Breadbasket (1960s): Led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the SCLC, and Reverend Jesse Jackson, this program used “selective patronage” to target companies like Coca-Cola that sold to Black neighborhoods but refused to hire Black workers. By staying away from those products, they forced major corporations to hire thousands of Black employees and use Black-owned suppliers. Dr. King called it his “most spectacularly successful program.”
  • The Five-Year Grape Strike (Delano, California, 1965-1970): Filipino and Mexican-American farm workers, led by Larry Itliong, Dolores Huerta, and Cesar Chavez, walked out of the vineyards in Delano. They asked every family in America to stop buying grapes. For five years, families from New York to London just… stopped. By 1970, the growers were so broke they finally signed contracts giving workers health benefits and fair pay for the first time.
  • The Global “No” (South Africa, 1980s): This was the ultimate “divestment” movement. Students at colleges like UC Berkeley and Columbia forced their schools to pull billions of dollars out of companies doing business in South Africa. That international economic pressure is what finally broke the back of the Apartheid regime and led to the release of Nelson Mandela.

Why Tomorrow Matters

We live in a world that feels like it’s set to “Auto-Pay.” We pay for subscriptions, we pay for apps, and we pay for big brands that don’t always have our best interests at heart. Sometimes, we forget that we are the ones with the power. Without our labor and our money, these giant systems are just empty buildings and silent computers.

Blackout Day is a reminder that you aren’t just a “customer.” You are a citizen. When you choose not to spend, you are casting a vote for a better future. You’re saying that your hard-earned money won’t go toward a system that puts billionaires and senseless wars over real people.

The Takeaway

Every time you spend a dollar, you’re basically saying, “I support how this world is running.” Tomorrow, we’re choosing to stay silent.

It might feel small to skip a snack or wait a day to buy those new shoes. But when millions of us do it together? That’s not just a trend. That’s a movement.

Tomorrow, let’s see how loud our wallets can be when they stay closed.


Related: The Power of Protest: Why Showing Up Still Works

The Millions Behind Me: 2026 Reversal

A Shout Out to Bernie Sanders: Always for the People

Related Me We Too polls:

ICE should not be wearing masks to hide their identity

More often than not, video is the only thing standing between a lie and a life being ruined by it.

Believe your eyes. Not the lies of the Trump admin.

F*** ICE and F*** Trump

ICE does not have immunity (no matter what J.D. Vance says)

Attorney General Pam Bondi letter to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz is a ransom note – asking for voter rolls, welfare data to “help bring back law and order” in wake of shootings #impeachtrump

Impeach Kristi Noem

United States Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem is such a liar.

Just like her boss Trump

Border Patrol Commander at Large Greg Bovino is a liar.

ICE is so messed up, it needs to be crushed and rebuilt from scratch.

Anybody who has watched the videos of ICE committing the illegal acts to peaceful protestors should know that.

Abolish ICE

ICE should be defunded until there is MAJOR reform.

Looks like Trump’s government thinks the second amendment is only for those who support Trump.

At this point, if you are a Trump supporter you are against humanity.

Impeach Trump. Make America Great Again!

Hopefully Trump will be impeached soon and out of office

The U.S. under Trump is becoming unrecognizable – except for the people’s response and standing up for each other

Trump ’25 has been the worst presidency in U.S. history

I can’t imagine anyone wanting to be with an ICE agent – inhumane actions are the fastest turn off

Things are getting so expensive now

Trump tariffs on allies are totally stupid and bad

Stupid policies in the USA right now.

College and grad school in the US is sO expensive

Why is gas in California so expensive?

My health insurance rates have jumped by a lot

Imagine healthcare as a right – that would be great

Trump’s “Great Healthcare Plan” is also a joke – it really is no plan and won’t help people get and afford healthcare

The Republicans don’t want us to have healthcare and don’t care.

I am glad the democrats are standing up for the US people to have healthcare

Healthcare should not be cut.

I agree with Bernie Sanders and the 5% Billionaire Tax.

Bernie Sanders would have been an awesome president

Bernie Sanders is for the people

I am glad the Republican-led Oversight Committee has subpoenaed Pam Bondi regarding the Epstein files.

It was clear from Hillary Clinton’s deposition for the Epstein files that she would have made an awesome President, if it wasn’t clear already.

House Speaker Mike Johnson is refusing to swear in Representative-elect Adelita Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona, because he (Trump) doesn’t want the Epstein files released and she will be the signature needed to force it.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson should have the Republicans show up and work

The US and Israeli strikes on Tehran’s oil infrastructure should be illegal – it is so dangerous and unhealthy – they are targeting civilians without “targeting” civilians.

Trump is very power hungry.

I don’t think Trump should have started the Iran War.

War should be a last resort – not first resort.

Not to mention, it was totally illegal for Trump to unilaterally decide to wage war – that is what Congress is for.

And Trump should not have ripped up the Iranian agreement in 2018.

Trump shouldn’t have said he has the Iranians’ back and will support and help when he does not have any plan to do so.

Iranian people are some of the strongest people in the world #freeiran #iranrevolution #womenrights

A whole World War Three is about to happen but people are worried about who got what filler injected

Wow to this: White House defends Hegseth’s comments that media coverage of U.S. troop deaths are intended to make Trump “look bad”

Trump makes himself look bad.

Trump is the biggest liar.

The most hilarious thing White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt has said: President Trump does not lie.

It is ridiculous that Trump expects to be involved in who Iran chooses as their next leader.

Trump obviously does not care about democracy or freedom in Iran

Trump just cares about whether he can control Iran’s leader or not and tell them what to do (like in Venezuela)

The White House video promoting the Iran bombings by using “Call of Duty” and in another video a Pitbull song with Marco Rubio is so gross. They are way too nonchalant on what war is.

This entry was posted in In the News and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to May 1: Blackout Day – Steering the Economy Toward Justice

  1. humanity says:

    May 1: Blackout Day ✊💸

    No Work. No School. No Shopping.

    History proves when we stop spending, the system listens. From the Montgomery Bus Boycott to the Delano Grape Strike, unity changes the world.

    🔗 azipurl.app/blackout

    #BlackoutDay #MayDay #ThreeNoKings #EconomicJustice #LaborRights

Leave a Reply to humanity Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *