CORP/BIZ Your Jeans Could Be Funding The Abortion Industry

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
Your Jeans Could Be Funding The Abortion Industry

The Levi Strauss Foundation, which is wholly funded by the clothing corporation bearing the same name, donated millions to nonprofits that facilitate or promote abortions, tax forms and public statements show.

Levi Strauss’ philanthropic arm approved over $4 million in donations to groups like the Abortion Care Network and the International Planned Parenthood Federation between December 2021 and December 2023, according to tax filings and charity documents. Funds The Levi Strauss Foundation donated to pro-abortion organizations came from the corporate coffers of Levi Strauss & Co., one of the largest apparel companies in the United States.

One hundred percent of the contributions to The Levi Strauss Foundation between Dec. 1, 2021, and Nov. 30, 2022, or $9.3 million, came from Levi Strauss & Co., tax forms show. Levi Strauss & Co. has consistently been the sole funder of its charity.

The Levi Strauss Foundation lists “reproductive justice” as one of its four focus areas on its website. The foundation seeksto “advance the rights and power of those who most experience reproductive oppression and face the greatest barriers to reproductive freedom and justice.”

Those rights encompass ensuring “access to direct services, including abortion,” according to the foundation’s website.

The Levi Strauss Foundation paid out $650,000 in 2022 to organizations that provide, facilitate or pay for abortions, according to tax forms.

The foundation also invested heavily in pro-abortion activism.

One of the largest grants paid out by The Levi Strauss Foundation, worth $507,000, went to the Center for Reproductive Rights to support the organization’s “efforts to protect women’s reproductive rights” in the United States, according to tax forms.

The center “works to protect and advance abortion rights around the world by removing restrictive laws and policies, promoting measures to improve access to safe and legal abortion and countering efforts to undermine access to abortion care,” according to its website. The organization vowed to “advocate in all ways to advance stronger legal protections for abortion in the future” after the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade in 2022.

The Levi Strauss Foundation spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on other pro-abortion activism programs.

Neo Philanthropies received $100,000 from the foundation to “destigmatize abortion” by “elevating the voices of diverse storytellers,” according to tax filings. Spark Reproductive Justice Now received an additional $100,000 to “provide leadership training for young queer and trans people of color in the reproductive justice movement.”

The Levi Strauss Foundation has yet to release its 2023 tax filings, so the specific pro-abortion groups it donated to that year are unknown. A summary document produced by the charity, however, indicates that it gave $2 million to “reproductive justice” groups in 2023.

One of the foundation’s goals in 2023 was to “strengthen the capacity and effectiveness of organizations providing financial, logistical, and emotional support for individuals seeking [abortions],” according to the summary document.

In addition to pouring millions of dollars into abortion, The Levi Strauss Foundation bankrolled several left-of-center advocacy groups in 2022 and 2023.

Tax forms show that the foundation gave $150,000 to Fair Count, an organization founded by then-Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, for its civic engagement operations in 2022, a midterm election year. The Levi Strauss Foundation also gave $120,000 to the American Press Institute that year to “amplify the voices of journalists of color.”

The foundation focused heavily on making grants that worked toward racial and gender justice in 2023, according to the summary document.

“Racial justice is essential for bringing into view the confrontation of power, the redistribution of resources, and the systemic transformation necessary for real change stemming from a history of white supremacy,” according to The Levi Strauss Foundation.

The Levi Strauss Foundation did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.
 

moldy

Veteran Member
I do love Levi's - have since I wore button fly shrink-to-fit ones in the 80s (and sat in a bathtub of cold water so they would 'shrink to fit'). Used to wear them so tight they could have been used as MAST trousers. I mean, hey - if they don't cut off the circulation to your lower legs and feet they are too loose! Haven't bought a pair new in at least 20 years - all of mine come from thrift stores.
 

KFhunter

Veteran Member
I wear Wranglers, but I realize they too have issues, still wearing stockpiles I bought years ago

Carhardt made its employees get the jab

US companies like Jocko’s Origin is too expensive and perpetually out of stock
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I buy most of my jeans in thrift stores second hand.

In fact, I buy most of my clothes second hand.

I might spend $50 to $100 a YEAR on my clothes, and most of that is spent buying new undergarments and socks. I INSIST on purchasing brand new undergarments - would NEVER consider buying used undergarments. Same with socks. I wear socks even after I have to darn holes, but I will not buy used socks.

Other than undergarments and socks, just about every piece of clothing I have comes from a thrift store. And I do find good quality, second hand stuff to buy.

So even if I buy a pair of Levis, I personally will not be supporting their woke agenda. The original owner might have. But not me.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I don't buy used shoes for basically the same reason, Barry.

And I'm not going to stress over my few clothing purchases. I'm not buying trendy clothes each season, spending hundreds of dollars. I'm so glad that I don't have to dress up for work. That alone saves a lot of money in this economy. I can't wear holey jeans, but I can get by with khaki pants and a polo shirt. The rest of the time, it's generic jeans and a plain tee shirt. The latter is an "Iowa uniform." It renders me invisible, which is a Good Thing.
 

dioptase

Veteran Member
I hadn't worn jeans for decades, but a couple of years ago I was forced to buy a pair for a trip to a mine (and ended up NOT wearing them down in the mine, lol). They were some odd brand or other from Amazon, NOT Levi or Wrangler or anything else. (It is hard to find any kind of pants that fit me, and I hate jeans and really any pants with zippers and belt loops; I wear pull-on knit pants and shorts and am comfy, and look good enough for all practical purposes.)

It'd be nice if this news gets out and hurts them (boycott backlash and all that), but I rather doubt that it will.
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I don't buy used shoes for basically the same reason, Barry.

And I'm not going to stress over my few clothing purchases. I'm not buying trendy clothes each season, spending hundreds of dollars. I'm so glad that I don't have to dress up for work. That alone saves a lot of money in this economy. I can't wear holey jeans, but I can get by with khaki pants and a polo shirt. The rest of the time, it's generic jeans and a plain tee shirt. The latter is an "Iowa uniform." It renders me invisible, which is a Good Thing.
Oops…. I forgot to mention that I do not buy used shoes.

In fact, I am Mr. Frugal in every way but one - shoes.

Because I was, until the last year or so, a marathon runner, I have regularly bought pricey running shoes.

Running shoe stores will professionally evaluatte you, your feet, your regular walking gait and your running style to figure out the absolute best fit in running shoes for your feet.

Runners keep up on the different models of running shoes, even to the point of keeping up on suble changes in the structure of the “same” model shoe from one year to the next.

If we find the “perfect” shoe for our particular body build, foot structure, regular walking style and running speed/style, we will buy multiple pairs because - inevitably - the manufacturer will change SOMETHING about that shoe next year.

I used to wear the Hoka Clifton, the Hoka Bondi, or the Nike Pegasus when I ran.

But then, a few years back, I discovered the Under Armour Speedform Gemini 1.

To this day, no shoe has ever felt as good on me as the UA Speedform Gemini 1. For me to run in those shoes is like running in the clouds.

That shoe came out in 2015.

It was so perfect for me, that I ended up purchasing 14 pairs of the $129 a pair shoes over the next two years.

Actually, I bought most of those pairs of shoes for between $79 and $109 after the Speedform Gemini 1 was superceeded by the Gemini 2 in 2017. On clearance.

Then, I just left most of the new shoes in the shoebox, knowing that I would have brand new Speedform Gemini’s for years to come. When I have a pair of Speedform Gemini shoes that has put on too much mileage, I just crack open a new, unused pair. And I am set to go.

I still have seven pairs of brand new, unused Speedform Gemini’s in their original box.

And I am so glad of that. I was still working when I bought all those shoes, and my wife was still healthy.

Now I am retired on a fixed income, and I spend an ungodly amount of money on my wife’s cancer treatments.

I could never spend that kind of money on shoes today.

In part, because I cannot afford it nowadays.

But also because Under Armour has gone all “Bud Light” when it comes to trans crapola.
 
Last edited:

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
I found out even new athletic shoes
can be no good after a couple of years just sitting in the box.
I bought some PROPET expensive waking
Shoes off ebay, and they were new, but must have been "old stock" and the first time i walked in them the rubber
soles cracked and split into several pieces!
So check those shoes that the rubber hasn't
HARDENED!
 

West

Senior
I'm a cheap basterd. Started buying my own pants at 14. Back then it was wrangler bell bottoms. Now it's cheap cargo work pants.

Like these...

 

meezy

I think I can...
I buy mine at the thrift store.

Yet another reason to shop secondhand. I can buy any brand I want with no guilt about sweatshops, slave workers, fast-fashion wastefulness, or political influence.

As for the shoes -- I often find then at thrift shops never worn or very lightly worn. I found a pair of nice hiking boots with the store tag on them. I have no problem with used shoes as long as they're like new. I do buy new ones though, too, because I love Hey Dude and Crocs.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
Oops…. I forgot to mention that I do not buy used shoes.

In fact, I am Mr. Frugal in every way but one - shoes.

Because I was, until the last year or so, a marathon runner, I have regularly bought pricey running shoes.

Running shoe stores will professionally evaluatte you, your feet, your regular walking gait and your running style to figure out the absolute best fit in running shoes for your feet.

Runners keep up on the different models of running shoes, even to the point of keeping up on suble changes in the structure of the “same” model shoe from one year to the next.

If we find the “perfect” shoe for our particular body build, foot structure, regular walking style and running speed/style, we will buy multiple pairs because - inevitably - the manufacturer will change SOMETHING about that shoe next year.

I used to wear the Hoka Clifton, the Hoka Bondi, or the Nike Pegasus when I ran.

But then, a few years back, I discovered the Under Armour Speedform Gemini 1.

To this day, no shoe has ever felt as good on me as the UA Speedform Gemini 1. For me to run in those shoes is like running in the clouds.

That shoe came out in 2015.

It was so perfect for me, that I ended up purchasing 14 pairs of the $129 a pair shoes over the next two years.

Actually, I bought most of those pairs of shoes for between $79 and $109 after the Speedform Gemini 1 was superceeded by the Gemini 2 in 2017. On clearance.

Then, I just left most of the new shoes in the shoebox, knowing that I would have brand new Speedform Gemini’s for years to come. When I have a pair of Speedform Gemini shoes that has put on too much mileage, I just crack open a new, unused pair. And I am set to go.

I still have seven pairs of brand new, unused Speedform Gemini’s in their original box.

And I am so glad of that. I was still working when I bought all those shoes, and my wife was still healthy.

Now I am retired on a fixed income, and I spend an ungodly amount of money on my wife’s cancer treatments.

I could never spend that kind of money on shoes today.

In part, because I cannot afford it nowadays.

But also because Under Armour has gone all “Bud Light” when it comes to trans crapola.

I wear Brooks running shoes for the same reason, with Merrell women's Moab hikers during the winter. Yes, I'm frugal, too and watch for sales and avoid buying this year's models, but I totally agree with what you wrote.

Proper support and fit ensures that I'm not adding unnecessary foot or back problems to my other woes.
In addition, I no longer go barefooted, except on selected areas on a sandy beach or carefully raked garden.

But that's part of being truly frugal: you know where you can cut corners (where it really doesn't matter) vs. what is false economy. What I might save on cheap shoes could get spent in treating foot problems. On the other hand, a purse that I crocheted is as good or better as those $125 handmade models from some foreign country.

And name brand jeans? Only if they are on sale at the thrift store. I wouldn't pay $69 (or more for fashion jeans).
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I found out even new athletic shoes
can be no good after a couple of years just sitting in the box.
I bought some PROPET expensive waking
Shoes off ebay, and they were new, but must have been "old stock" and the first time i walked in them the rubber
soles cracked and split into several pieces!
So check those shoes that the rubber hasn't
HARDENED!
Thus far, the shoes are doing fine. I cracked open a new box when I had my knee surgery last August, and that pair is still good.
 

herbgarden

Senior Member
I wear jeans daily. Nothing else holds up on the farm. I did not know that about Levis. Thank you for posting it. Currently,I do not own any. But, I have a couple pair that are a bit breezey. And need to get a new pair.
 
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