Guns on display at the Dick’s Sporting Goods store in Danvers, Mass., on Wednesday. (C.J. Gunther/EPA/Shutterstock, courtesy of The Los Angeles Times)
Here we go again. There’s a school shooting, then a lot of tears and hand-wringing, then nothing happens.
But wait, maybe, just maybe, this time is different.
I’m of course referring to the recent mass shooting in Parkland, FL that killed 17 people, including 14 students, a geography teacher, an assistant football coach and the school’s athletic director. In response, three major U.S. retailers—Walmart (one of America’s largest firearm retailers), Dick’s Sporting Goods and Kroger—have “voluntarily restricted gun sales to make a policy statement and manage their image with consumers,” reports The Los Angeles Times.
According to the article, these retailers “are responding to the national uproar that followed the shooting…especially the feverish debate on Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms. They are not waiting for legislative action to improve matters.”
But now, in the aftermath of this horrific event, the actions of big retailers like Walmart and Dick’s have taken on a deeper and more urgent meaning, and consumers’ demands that companies demonstrate they are good community citizens have gotten louder.
“Retailers are recognizing that society and consumer demands are changing,” Beahm said in the article.
And to that, I say bravo. It’s about time.
From Observation to Innovation,
Andi Simon, Ph.D.
Corporate Anthropologist | President
Simon Associates Management Consultants
Info@simonassociates.net
@simonandi
Check out our podcasts.