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Hey Bud Light Boycotters, Protesting Beer Is Actually Really Gay
Bon Appetit ^ | May 10, 2023 | Alma Avalle

Posted on 05/11/2023 11:21:53 AM PDT by nickcarraway

Transphobes are protesting Bud Light after its partnership with actress Dylan Mulvaney. But 50 years ago queer activists organized the original beer boycott against Coors.

Amid 2023’s wave of anti-trans hate, right-wing beer drinkers are calling for a boycott of Bud Light—a beer that gay people definitely love—over its recent brand partnership with transgender actress Dylan Mulvaney. In the ad Mulvaney holds five cans of the beer and says she is excited for March Madness. She has since been subject to unrelenting harassment and truly unhinged reactions. Kid Rock has shot cases of Bud Light; country singer Travis Tritt banned the beer from his tour; and an executive at Anheuser-Busch who oversaw the brand partnership has gone on leave as conservatives openly attempt to erase queer and trans people from public life.

American beer has been politicized since before Prohibition—after all, that’s how we got Prohibition. But as a queer person, witnessing this moment in the beverage’s foamy history feels particularly ironic. For starters, the mob’s only complaint seems to be that Mulvaney is a trans woman—a crime I commit every day—but the current movement against Bud Light doesn’t seem to know that, historically speaking, boycotting beer is one of the gayest things you can do. In fact, just 50 years ago, a legendary boycott of Coors beer kicked off the queer labor movement.

Long before corporations sponsored Pride parades, existing publicly as a queer person often meant being shut out of the job market entirely. On the heels of the Lavender Scare, when gay and lesbian government employees were forced from their jobs in 1950, protections for queer people in the workplace were virtually nonexistent (the first statewide protections for LGBT workers came in 1982, shout out Wisconsin). The vibe of gay panic continued well into the 60s and 70s, when the Coors Brewing Company used polygraph tests to screen job candidates for what it described as “potential troublemakers.” The tests apparently questioned applicants about their politics, private lives, and sexualities, though the company denied this at the time. The company also discriminated against Black employees and women, according to complaints filed by the Economic Employment Opportunity Commission.

These issues prompted a nationwide boycott that successfully helped overturn Coors’ discriminatory practices—one that was kickstarted and organized by queer activists. In 1973, the Teamsters union in San Francisco went on strike against Coors distributors and called for a boycott of its products. Because of the company’s reputation for homophobic hiring practices, union president Allan Baird reached out to friend and LGBT community organizer Harvey Milk to help grow the boycott. Milk—who later became the first publicly gay elected official in the United States—put out an impassioned call in his Bay Area Reporter column with the headline “Teamsters Seek Gay Help.” He argued that queer people needed to build alliances with other oppressed groups, such as labor and civil rights organizers.

Protesters hit Coors in its wallet. They avoided buying Coors products, while local advocacy groups like Bay Area Gay Liberation rallied gay nightlife hubs, convincing bar owners to stop selling the beer. According to the Bay Area Reporter in 1976, the pressure campaign led to a 90 percent reduction in Coors sales throughout the region. Throughout the Coors boycotts, protests of the company became so synonymous with gay rights that signs protesting the brewery could often be seen alongside other calls for gay rights at pride events. The protests grew across the country over the next decade, eventually reaching all the way to Massachussetts—where Harvard students chanted, “Racist, sexist, anti-gay! Coors beer, no way!” at a campus protest in 1987.

The boycotts ended in the 80s—by then, Coors was experiencing “a profound slump in business and in its corporate image,” as The New York Times reported in 1984. The company finally agreed to invest a staggering $625 million in Black and brown communities “in an attempt at reversing a slide in its reputation among minority groups,” the Times reported, eventually also ending the practice of polygraph testing job applicants in 1986. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, organizers of the original boycott “take pride in the fact that Coors beer has never touched their lips” to this day.

The Coors boycott legacy is visible among those of us fighting for queer and trans liberation today: After Anheuser-Busch seemingly caved to the campaign against its Dylan Mulvaney partnership—by suspending a leading executive and sharing an extremely mid apology that did not actually mention Mulvaney—gay bars in Chicago have pulled Budweiser products from their menus. While these bars didn’t reference the Coors strike in their statements, the parallels are hard to ignore. As Anheuser-Busch faces pressure from progressives and reactionaries alike, it’s hard to know what its executives will do next. I just hope they know their history.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: almaavalle; beer; boycottbud; budisforfaggots; budlight; dylanmulvaney; faggotsforbud; gowokegobroke; neverbuybud; queerbeer; transgender
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To: nickcarraway
The author of this mess is a transvestite.

Bon Appetit is evil, BTW.

21 posted on 05/11/2023 11:32:45 AM PDT by Vision (Woke is communism and it has no place in America. Election Reform Now! Obama is an evildoer.)
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To: traderrob6

What you said


22 posted on 05/11/2023 11:33:15 AM PDT by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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To: nickcarraway
But 50 years ago queer activists organized the original beer boycott against Coors.

WOW, I guess I get a 2fer, gave up Bud Light and started drinking Coors.

23 posted on 05/11/2023 11:33:43 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: bobbo666

No, he is gay, he’s pretending to be a woman.


24 posted on 05/11/2023 11:34:10 AM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
How many former consumers of Bud Light peruse Bon Appetit?
25 posted on 05/11/2023 11:35:16 AM PDT by Tench_Coxe
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To: nickcarraway

so boycotts work!


26 posted on 05/11/2023 11:35:36 AM PDT by joshua c (to disrupt the system, we must disrupt our lives, cut the cable tv)
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To: nickcarraway

This entire article falls into:

I’ll take desperation and stupidity for $2000 Alex


27 posted on 05/11/2023 11:36:15 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: nickcarraway

The author says the boycott is gay as if it’s a bad thing. Obviously a homophobe.


28 posted on 05/11/2023 11:40:26 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: nickcarraway

Protesting something because it’s destructive is not remotely gay. Unfortunately as long as people think there’s a difference between “trannie” and “gay” the destruction will go on.


29 posted on 05/11/2023 11:41:19 AM PDT by Varda
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To: nickcarraway

I think I’m more in the “now that you’ve tried some beer that doesn’t suck don’t you feel silly?”


30 posted on 05/11/2023 11:42:12 AM PDT by discostu (like a dog being shown a card trick)
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To: nickcarraway

Trans”phobes”, lol. FALSE. Trans haters, aka reality supporters.


31 posted on 05/11/2023 11:43:02 AM PDT by GrumpyOldGuy
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To: nickcarraway

By this logic, because gays drive cars, that means everyone who drives a car is gay. LOL.


32 posted on 05/11/2023 11:43:49 AM PDT by FamiliarFace (I got my own way of livin' But everything gets done With a southern accent Where I come from. TP)
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To: traderrob6

“Alma is a member of the Trans Journalists Association.”


33 posted on 05/11/2023 11:45:11 AM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: nickcarraway

“Amid 2023’s wave of anti-trans hate”...

I quit reading right there.


34 posted on 05/11/2023 11:45:15 AM PDT by Fledermaus (It's time to get rid of the Three McStooges; Mitch, Kevin and Ronna!)
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To: nickcarraway

“People are not boycotting the beer, because Dylan Mulvaney is gay.”

You’re right. They are protesting because they couldn’t drink the beer out a can due to getting the parasol stuck in their nose.

wy69


35 posted on 05/11/2023 11:45:17 AM PDT by whitney69
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To: SaveFerris
Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot . . .

The homos in that era wanted to have gay sex with the angels.
36 posted on 05/11/2023 11:47:33 AM PDT by EliRoom8
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To: nickcarraway

Anyone using the term “transphobes” is a liberal, and, therefore, mentally ill.


37 posted on 05/11/2023 11:49:01 AM PDT by CodeToad (No Arm up! They have!)
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To: Vision
Bon Appetit is evil, BTW

Should be spelled, "Bone Appétit".

38 posted on 05/11/2023 11:51:07 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (THE ISSUE IS NEVER THE ISSUE. THE REVOLUTION IS THE ISSUE.)
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To: nickcarraway

For anyone curious, the rag is owned by Condé Nast, which is in turn owned by Advance Publications.

Nuff said, eh?


39 posted on 05/11/2023 11:52:40 AM PDT by mewzilla (We will never restore the republic if we don't first secure the ballot box.)
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To: x

.
Any Company that despises their Customer Base should go under.


40 posted on 05/11/2023 11:55:44 AM PDT by AnthonySoprano (Statute of Limitations is going to elapse on Hunter Biden )
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