According to statistics and polls, Black Friday will soon be a thing of the past and these three campaigns are helping bring about its demise.

As people in the United States prepare for Black Friday several activist groups are proposing ways to boycott big corporations on the day and instead turn to small businesses and local stores owned by people of color.

Black Friday, as the day after Thanksgiving is called, has traditionally started the holiday shopping season in the United States with major corporate stores such as Wal-Mart, Best Buy, Target and Home Depot purportedly selling stock at discounted prices. However, controversy has surrounded the day in recent years, with major stores accused of concocting "bargains" in cahoots with retailers, abusing consumer faith by offering goods tagged with mostly fake discounts.

One boycott campaign is being hosted by Blackout for Human Rights under the banner #BlackoutBlackFriday, which is the group’s third effort against the most popular day of shopping in the country.

On its campaign page, the group is calling on all U.S. citizens “to refrain from shopping on Black Friday at major retail chains and to instead stand with the citizens of Ferguson, Standing Rock, Baltimore, Flint, Chicago, D.C., New York City, Oakland and all those who have suffered atrocious race-based and class-based acts of hate.”

#RedistributeThePain is another campaign calling for a boycott of Black Friday, extending to the whole of the holiday season throughout January. This action is being pushed for by Nation of Islam-driven Justice or Else movement.

Instead of not shopping at all during the holiday season, the campaign is calling for an exclusive focus on Black business nationwide. “We must continue to #RedistributeThePAIN! Boycott Black Friday & all holiday shopping at White corporations 11/25-1/2. Support Black-owned!” the movement said in a tweet last week.

The tweet also included a video showing the arrests and killings of Black people at the hands of police and white criminals and racists.

Interest in Black Friday has been falling over the past few years. The number of Thanksgiving weekend shoppers fell to 102 million in 2015, from 147 million in 2012, according to the National Retail Federation.

A Reuters poll of 1,639 adults showed that 63 percent do not plan to shop on Black Friday this year. Some 32 percent said they plan to finish about half of their holiday shopping on that day.

Another campaign is calling for a boycott starting this Black Friday and lasting indefinitely.

#GrabYourWallet, a cheeky reference to President-elect Donald Trump’s comments describing his sexual encounters with women, calls on people to refrain from spending money in any retailers that deal with Trump’s businesses, have endorsed his run for the presidency, or gave money to his campaign.

Campaign co-creator Shannon Coulter tweeted last week: “I vote with my wallet every day. If your company does business with the Trump family, it will NOT be doing business with me. #GrabYourWallet”

The campaign provided a list of all the companies involved with Trump in any way, which includes Amazon, Nordstrom and Scion Hotels, which he owns alongside his older line of Trump Hotels.