Okay, I found this article through a forum that I visit often and thought it was interesting. Please feel free to comment on this article. I mean, should those of us who go to Star Bucks boycott it or not? It is pretty distressing stuff, assuming it is true.
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Wednesday, August 10, 2005
It’s been two weeks since my last Starbucks coffee. Admittedly, I am one of those who don’t think twice about dropping $4 for a cup of coffee that costs less than $.50 to make. I am a self-proclaimed coffee house junkie and need that wonderful yuppie, intellectual “atmosphere” and freshly brewed aroma as much as the caffeine. When I moved to D.C. right out of college, I encountered my first Starbucks drink, or should I say “experience”? Growing up in a military family, I loved chain restaurants because of the sense of familiarity they offered in every new town we moved to. So, to be able to get the same type of specialty coffee - grande, iced, skim, sugar-free vanilla, latte - everywhere, was an addiction waiting to happen. Fast forward four years, and about 800 lattes later - I’m a Starbucks addict! When a report came out earlier this year showing that none of Starbucks’ charitable contributions went to conservative causes, I didn’t blink—I bought a latte. When I walked by a liquor store in Northeast D.C. with a big advertisement for Starbucks liquor, I kept walking, stopped in at Starbucks and bought a latte! When I was at work a couple weeks ago, reading an e-alert from our California organization (yes, latte in hand), I finally had a wake-up call.
The alert described the annual “gay” pride events which are scheduled in San Diego each year:
OK, yes, that is all pretty disturbing, but daily, I read, write about and edit papers dealing with the homosexual agenda, so I was not at all shocked that this was going on. I was a little upset when I read that Starbucks was a sponsor. I took a sip of my latte as I read on:
OK - STOP, WAIT A MINUTE AND PUT THAT CUP OF COFFEE DOWN! Not only is Starbucks sponsoring “Pride” week, but an event that places innocent children in the middle of sexually explicit materials ... and registered child molesters will be there running the show? If Starbucks is doing this knowingly, it is blatant irresponsibility, and if they are doing it unknowingly, it is irresponsible of them not to have done their homework. I started pacing back-and-forth, and all I could think was “Starbucks hates children.” For the first time, I stepped away from my latte, faced my denial about this company and started to do some serious soul searching - I needed to find out what they really supported. Fortunately, I didn’t have to search very long because I have the Internet at my fingertips and one of the nation’s top experts, Robert Knight, just down the hall from me. Less than 30 minutes of research revealed the following:
So what do I do now? I am not a big fan of boycotts. A friend once told me if we boycotted everything we disagreed with, we would be naked and hungry. I’ve also heard something like, “It doesn’t matter what’s on the cup, but what’s in it.” I love Starbucks coffee and as I worked through this problem, I wasn’t about to give up without a fight - and I didn’t give up, but rather, I failed miserably. I overestimated, but discovered that if I drink five grande lattes a week for a year, the total number of lattes would equal 260, coming to a total cost of $1,040. So, in my four post-college years, I could have contributed as much as $4,160 to a company that supports the volunteer work of child abusers, “Pride” events, abortionists, and do I really need to go on? Back to that marketing director’s quote: “We’re committed to supporting things that matter to our employees and our customers.” Um ... HELLO, I am a customer, too! As I was searching the Internet, I saw a link to a site with words no Christian girl should repeat. I didn’t have to enter to read this: “Folks, if Starbucks is ‘too liberal’ for you then don’t buy their @#$# percent*# coffee.” Thanks for the tip! “Folks,” what you do is up to you, but as for me and my habit, I will no longer support Starbucks. Yes, I started as a Starbucks coffee snob, but I am very open-minded now - if you know any good coffee houses, please let me know!
Meghan Kleppinger is assistant to the national field director at Concerned Women for America.
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