Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
To boycott or not to boycott Disney, that is the question
To boycott or not to boycott Disney, that is the question
Nov 30, 2025 1:00 PM

The answer, however, depends on what role Disney and its products play in your life.

Read More…

Disney, world famous entertainment and media conglomerate, is now at the center of controversy—in all kinds of ways.

The state of Florida recently enacted the Parental Rights in Education bill, which has proven to be orders of magnitude more controversial than its name implies. It monly derided by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. It contains several parts, one of which mandates that schools notify parents “if there is a change in the student’s services or monitoring related to the student’s mental, emotional, or physical health or well-being and the school’s ability to provide a safe and supportive learning environment for the student.” The most controversial part of the bill states that “classroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards.”

Much of the discussion of the bill in the media has brought far more heat than light. Mary Ellen Klas, in an excellent piece appearing in the Miami Herald, has written prehensive account of the bill itself as well as many arguments made by those both supporting and opposing the bill. It was also recently a topic of discussion on the podcast Acton Unwind.

The bill was the catalyst for employee walkouts at Disney by some employees who felt Disney did not do enough to oppose the bill, which they believed detrimental to the rights of persons who identify as gender or sexual minorities.

In response, Disney held an “all-hands” meeting with employees to address these concerns. Footage from this meeting was then obtained and released on Twitter by Manhattan Institute fellow Chris Rufo. Andrew Mark Miller of Fox Business has piled some of the most controversial footage, which “appear to show multiple Disney officials pushing a progressive LGBT agenda” to employees as well as its audiences.

This edy of errors is reminiscent of that around Disney’s 2020 live-action remake of its animated film Mulan. Disney was widely criticized by human rights activists when the film’s star, Yifei Liu, took the side of Hong Kong police over pro-democracy protesters. It was also later revealed that portions of the film had been shot in Xinjiang, the region in which there is an ongoing and horrific series of human rights abuses being perpetrated by the munist government against Uyghurs and other ethnic and religious minorities. The controversy over Mulan led to widespread calls for a boycott of Disney by human rights activists.

The controversy over Disney’s actions and response to Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill have led to similar calls for boycotts from both America’s political left and right. Some on the left have called for boycotts of the state of Florida, including businesses in Florida such as Disney, hoping to place enough economic pressure to prompt a repeal of the bill. Some on the right have called for boycotts of Disney itself, hoping to prompt Disney to abandon mitments to a progressive LGBTQ agenda.

The record of such boycotts affecting the sort of change both the left and right hope for, in the way they wish to affect it, is not at all encouraging.

From 1997 to 2005, Disney was the target of a similar boycott campaign by America’s largest evangelical denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, which was joined by many other evangelical groups, including Focus on the Family. In the resolution ending the boycott in 2005, the Southern Baptist Convention maintained it had municated effectively our displeasure,” while Disney claimed it never changed any of its policies or practices in response to the boycott.

Was the Disney boycott a failure? Yes and no.

It was a failure insofar as it did not lead to any change of policy by the leverage of “economic pressure.” It was, however, a success insofar as it raised awareness of Disney’s stance on issues of gender and sexuality.

As Brayden King, professor of management and organizations at Northwestern Kellogg, has observed: “The typical boycott doesn’t have much impact on sales revenue.… The no. 1 predictor of what makes a boycott effective is how much media attention it creates, not how many people sign onto a petition or how many consumers it mobilizes.”

The power of boycotts, in other words, is cultural and not economic, but culture is not as distant from economics as we might suppose.

In his frequently cited and equally frequently misunderstood New York Times Magazine article The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits, the Nobel Laureate economist Milton Friedman argues that the purpose of business is to make the greatest profit possible “while conforming to the basic rules of the society, both those embodied in law and those embodied in ethical custom.” Both law and custom play a vital role in the economic order.

These past few years have been a revelation regarding Disney’s underlying understanding of human anthropology and the value the corporation places on the dignity of the human person. This makes the political privileges they have lobbied for and received in the forms of ever increasing copyright extensions and the unique legal jurisdiction in which Disney World operates subject to greater scrutiny as the crony capitalism it embodies.

The American writer Annie Dillard once remarked, “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.” Disney’s cultural sway will remain only as long as we spend our time in front of our screens, as long as we deem what’s happening on those screens worthy of our attention. Custom arises from the aggregate of individuals acting according to conscience, and we can renew our social order by heeding the wisdom of Solomon, “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life” (Proverbs 4:23).

This article originally appeared in The Detroit News on April 13, 2022.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Is education signaling or skill building?
Note: This is post #55 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. Do you learn about things, because the learning itself matters, or is education all about the signal you—and your degree—send out to the world? Is education really about building skills, or does it serve only to transmit intangible traits, like your level of talent or your persistence? In this video by Marginal Revolution University, economists Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok debate these questions and consider education’s effect...
5 facts about the Russian Revolution
This week is the hundredth anniversary of the second Russian Revolution, one of the most transformative political events in the history of the modern world. Here are five facts you should know about the world’s most destructive revolution: 1. The second Russian Revolution (the Bolshevik Revolution) began on November 6 and 7, 1917. (Because the Russians were still using the Julian calendar, the date for them was October 24 and 25, which is why the event is often referred to...
From the Reformation to Austrian economics
The implications of the Reformation are more than ecclesiastical or theological, says Timothy Terrell,professor of economics at Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina. They include shifts in economic thought as well, and Protestant ideas have had a lasting impact on our way of thinking about markets and liberty. There is, of course, no one religious—or irreligious—group that can claim to have birthed Austrian economics, and certainly Protestants, Catholics, Jews, atheists, and others have had a part in its development. However,...
Rev. Sirico and R.R. Reno to debate the merits of the free market
Over the past year there has been an ongoing debate carried out online in outlets like the Acton Institute blog, Public Discourse, and First Things magazine over the legitimacy of free markets. Many of us advocates of the free market have been dismayed at the openness—if not outright embrace—of socialism as a better option than free enterprise by conservative Christians. A prime example is the recent essay by First Things editor R. R. Reno revisiting Michael Novak’s 1990 classic The...
100 years of false religion
Today – November 7, 2017 – marks the hundredth anniversary of the Russian Revolution, touching off worldwide events mourning or celebrating the event. At its centenary, Communism deserves to be remembered as the most successful false religion to take root in the West in two millennia, unparalleled in the swiftness of its destruction and unequaled in its potential to generate misery from abundance. Communism determined to overthrow the entire Judeo-Christian cosmology 100 years ago today. Karl Marx’s promise of an...
Renewed covenant or populism? Rabbi Lord Sacks on the West’s alternatives
The deepest division running through the West is not between Right and Left, or liberty and collectivism. Western civilization must choose this day whether it is grounded in a covenant or a degraded and authoritarian form of populism, according to the former Chief Rabbi of the UK. While receiving AEI’s highest honor, Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks distinguished between two rival views of society derived from his exegesis of I Samuel 8. A social contract creates a government, while a covenant...
Millennials in America have a troubling view of communism and socialism
“We discovered a rampant amnesia about the crimes munist regimes,” says Marion Smith, “and a growing inclination among younger Americans toward favorable views munism and socialism.” Their latest survey was recently released—and the responses are just as troubling: • 7 in 10 Millennials (like most Americans) either don’t know the definition munism or misidentify it for socialism. • 7 out of 10 underestimate number killed munism. Less than one third know more than 100 million people were killed munism. •...
Edmund Burke, free marketer
It’s not just millennials and other young people who are souring on free markets (44 percent according to a new poll) — there’s also a growing disenchantment among some conservatives. Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg explains the conservative angst as rooted, among other things, in the threat that upheaval in market economies presents to the “permanency, order, tradition, and strong and munities.” Conservatives who advocate for free markets should take this critique seriously and “rethink about how to integrate their...
Spain: Remembering the forgotten Red Terror
As the world remembers the hundredth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, memorates the thousands of Christians martyred by the Communists during the Spanish Red Terror. Historian Stanley G. Payne calledthis periodthe “most extensive and violent persecution of Catholicism in Western history, in some way even more intense than that of the French Revolution.” Every November 6, the Roman Catholic Church in Spain remembers those martyred for their faith by socialists during this anti-Christian persecution, whichpeaked at the outset of the...
Beyond consumer Christianity: Equipping the church for cultural transformation
Modern evangelicalism’s recent fondness for “church shopping” (or “church hopping”) has led to plenty of perpetual daydreams about the “perfect church” that checks the right boxes fortability and convenience. In turn, many are falling prey to consumeristic tendencies and attitudes that influence their thought and action well beyond Sunday mornings. Indeed, the deleterious impacts of Spectator Christianity are not just confined to the pews of the church or avenues of “formal” or “full-time” ministry. They disable and disempower the church...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved