I refuse to spend another $10 on a latte. I am done with Starbucks.
I refuse to spend another $10 on a latte. I am done with Starbucks.
Have they also banned M A G A hats? If they do I don’t wanna see any liberal tears.
Cancel Starbucks because their coffee sucks and is burnt. That's enough for me.
To be fair, employers have long had dress codes for employees. If you don't like the dress code, get a different job.
Their stance is the right stance. I expect them to bend the knee and reverse it very soon.
sbeefyk2 wrote:
To be fair, employers have long had dress codes for employees. If you don't like the dress code, get a different job.
Leftists don't have principles such as this, so that argument will go nowhere.
You spend $10 on a latte?
Portland Hobby Jogger wrote:
You spend $10 on a latte?
$10 sounds cheap for a hippster Portlander.
interesting. i finally may have a reason to go back to starbucks.
sbeefyk2 wrote:
To be fair, employers have long had dress codes for employees. If you don't like the dress code, get a different job.
For real, you need to quit whining Bartholomew Maxwell
Every post you make is complaining about something
Great for Starbucks for not supporting such a stupid political group. Buy the stock. Funny what affect losing has on people
cancel fartholomew
I'll be going to Starbucks now
wow who knew i was so cutting edge i have been boycotting starbucks for years(never been to one)
Good for them. However, I’m not holding my breath that they will eventually cave in.
For all of you who support BLM. Do you know the biggest cause of black deaths is abortion? In cities like NYC more black babies are aborted than born. One of the leading cause of black male deaths is from black on black murder? BLM doesn’t care about these issues? Why don’t the black lives lost to abortion or black on black crime matter to BLM? And what about BLMs stand against the nuclear family? One of the biggest predictors of disadvantage and poverty is being born out of wedlock and being raised by a single mother, and yet this is something BLM supports. This is one big thing that is keeping many black repeating the cycle of poverty.
Before you jump on the “support BLM” virtue signaling bandwagon maybe you should do some research and really educate yourself on what they stand for.
bartholomew_maxwell wrote:
I refuse to spend another $10 on a latte. I am done with Starbucks.
https://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2020-06-11/starbucks-prohibits-employees-from-wearing-clothes-supporting-black-lives-matter
What a non-issue this is. Any business has a right to have an employee dress code. This doesn't mean Starbucks doesn't agree with Black Lives Matter or racial inequality. Just means they want to sell coffee and not piss off 40% the customers.
Venti lattes are $4.75, not $10.
Try again. .
Noyankee wrote:
Great for Starbucks for not supporting such a stupid political group. Buy the stock. Funny what affect losing has on people
I don’t see at as either supporting or opposing a political group.
It’s about being neutral and non political on a topic.
And that’s makes them more inclusive.
They feel employees wearing BLM attire is similar to the Confederate flags at NASCAR events.
They are banning those flags because it makes some people uncomfortable and they want to open up their fan base.
Looks like Kaepernick won,t get a job at Starbucks either. Politics at work is a bad idea.
[quote]bartholomew_maxwell wrote:
I refuse to spend another $10 on a latte. I am done with Starbucks.
Did you think for a second that individuals with the disposable income to pay $6 for coffee each day may not be huge fans of the riots and burning of banks, cop cars, drug stores, etc. that the BLM movement has inspired.
RIP: D3 All-American Frank Csorba - who ran 13:56 in March - dead
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
Running for Bowerman Track Club used to be cool now its embarrassing
Hats off to my dad. He just ran a 1:42 Half Marathon and turns 75 in 2 months!
Great interview with Steve Cram - says Jakob has no chance of WRs this year