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Put Down That Coors: Why We Should Be Boycoting Big Beer

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 06:22 AM
Original message
Put Down That Coors: Why We Should Be Boycoting Big Beer

By Benjamin Dangl, CounterPunch
Posted on August 15, 2009, Printed on August 16, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/141953/

When Obama sat down for a beer in the White House Rose Garden with Professor Gates and Sergeant Crowley, they all turned their backs on the smaller, craft brewers of the country. Obama chose Bud Light, Gates asked for Red Stripe, and Crowley drank Blue Moon.

One of the major craft brewers based where I live in Vermont is Magic Hat, a brewery with a delicious array of brews. That brewery issued a press release following the "Beer Summit" explaining, "Craft Brewers the country over are chagrined by the President’s choice to consume a beer owned by a company based outside of America’s borders. Bud Light, owned by Belgium-based AB InBev, and Blue Moon, owned by London-based SAB MillerCoors, together control 94% of the beer market in the United States. However, the United States boasts over 1,500 craft brewers, the majority being made up of small Main Street Businesses that employ less than 50 people."

This encounter at the Rose Garden provides a perfect time to reflect on why we should all boycott the beer monopolies of the world.

One reason to boycott large breweries is the union busting, right wing culture that dominates some of the biggest breweries in America. Yuengling, America’s oldest brewery, and Coors, America’s biggest brewery, both offer insights into the ugly political and labor practices of this multi-billion dollar industry.

In 2007 Yuengling owner Dick Yuengling told his workers, "the writing was on the wall" and that if they didn’t get rid of the union he would close the brewery and open up shop in a location in the southern US where labor was cheaper. Faced with the choice of looking for work in an area with few jobs, the workers decided to kick the union out.

At the time, Patrick Eiding, then-president of the AFL-CIO union in Philadelphia said of Mr. Yuengling, "If he doesn't want union people, then I would say union people shouldn't drink his beer."

Municipal worker Don Long said he would follow along with the boycott, explaining that Yuengling "doesn't care for his workers -- he just cares about how much money he can make."

I’ve joined in a boycott against this beer, and have convinced some of my friends to do so as well. But it’s really Coors Brewing Company that takes the cake for supporting conservative causes and busting unions.

Over the years the Coors family has contributed handsomely to plenty of conservative projects and organizations. Reading about their family’s philanthropy is like reading a history of the right wing in America.

Joseph Coors was an advisor to Ronald Reagan, provided the founding grant to the infamous Heritage Foundation as well as the right wing Free Congress Foundation, which asks the following question on its website: "Will America return to the culture that made it great, our traditional, Judeo-Christian, Western culture?" If not, the US will, revert to "no less than a third world country."

Joseph Coors really put his money where his right wing heart was when he donated a $65,000 plane to the Contras in the covert US war against the Nicaraguan Sandinistas in the 1980s. It’s high time to raise a glass of non-Coors beer in solidarity with the Sandinistas. But here’s another reason to boycott America’s most successful brewing company; their union busting.

In 1977, in Colorado, home to the company’s brewery, Coors hired scabs to replace workers on strike at the plant. Jeff Coors, the president of the family company at the time, told the Los Angeles Times that he wouldn’t back down because agreeing to union demands was like "inviting the Russians in to take over America."

continued>>>
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/141953/put_down_that_coors%3A_why_we_should_be_boycoting_big_beer/
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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 06:42 AM
Response to Original message
1. I've been boycotting 'big beer' for a couple decades now
Miller, Coors and Budweiser aren't even beer, IMO, and I wouldn't drink one of their beers if you paid me.

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Bluzmann57 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 07:07 AM
Response to Original message
2. That is one major reason I don't drink Coors
The Union busting and the fact that if I want water, I will simply turn on my tap and get a glass of water. It's cheaper and tastes about the same.
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Jester Messiah Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 07:32 AM
Response to Original message
3. Or, there's the -best- reason to boycott "big beer":
Because it sucks.
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mysuzuki2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 10:02 AM
Response to Original message
4. I never drink beer from the big companies
The smaller breweries make much better beer. Coors is absolutely awful, Miller and Bud not much better.
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tech3149 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-16-09 11:58 AM
Response to Original message
5. I don't drink much beer these days
But I'm more than happy enough to put down a few shekels now and then for a six pack of home-grown Straub beer. Even if I don't drink it, it's good to have around for cooking.
One of the guys that used to work with my ex was part of the Rolling Rock family. After they sold the brewery he went to work for Anheuser Bush and saw first hand the psychopathy of big business, no matter the industry, and was ready to bail out after a year. Haven't talked to him in years but I think he followed his ethics and heart rather than looking for the big payoff.

Hey Joe! This Bud's for you or whatever else you'd like.
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