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Don’t buy Black Rifle Coffee

November 11, 2022

This piece represents the opinion of the author .
Eva Ahn

The Bowdoin C-Store is one of the central hubs for buying goods on our campus. From drinks to snacks to some basic groceries, hundreds of students pass through every week. Aware of this, the College works thousands of Polar Points into student dining plans and encourages each student to spend their $150 each and every semester. For these reasons, what we put in the C-Store is important and says something beyond just what tastes good. Across the few semesters that I have been here, I have seen products come and go, but none have really caught my attention until I saw Black Rifle Coffee Company (BRCC) iced coffee.

When I saw that dining had begun to stock the back left fridge with the brand, I was upset and disappointed. BRCC has been a fundamentally regressive organization since its founding. Masquerading as a pro-veteran company, BRCC began by infamously critiquing a Starbucks campaign that announced they intended to hire 10,000 refugees. In “protest,” BRCC said they would hire 10,000 veterans, as if hiring refugees was in some way anti-American. To this day, the company, which was founded in 2014, has still not fulfilled its hiring promise. Ironically, Starbucks actually ran a similar campaign in 2013, also designed to hire prior military personnel. They successfully hired over 8,000 people within the first year and currently employ over 26,000 veterans.

In future years, BRCC would continue to promote toxic and dangerous ideas about minorities, American policing and immigration. It would go online in a now-deleted blog post to support the Muslim Ban passed by President Trump and actively support police in the face of the Black Lives Matter movement. In doing so, BRCC has caught the attention of many right-wing extremists and talking heads.

To the far-right in America, BRCC is a corporate ally in a crusade against diversity and equity. BRCC brand logos were worn by multiple rioters who invaded the capital on January 6 and have been frequently adorned by Kyle Rittenhouse, who murdered two Black Lives Matter protesters in Kenosha in 2020. In a Twitter post that BRCC had to explicitly clarify they did not sponsor, Rittenhouse can be seen wearing one of the brand’s shirts with a caption that reads, “Kyle Rittenhouse drinks the best coffee in America @blckriflecoffee.”

While BRCC has publicly distanced themselves from certain parts of the far-right, this appears as nothing more than an attempt to stay on the shelves; whenever BRCC draws the public’s ire, the stores it occupies threaten to remove the brand’s product unless it backtracks its more radical positions. At the end of the day, BRCC seems perfectly comfortable supporting racist, xenophobic and otherwise horrible policies until its distributors threaten to cut into their bottom line.

Last week, I met with President Rose to discuss BRCC’s new presence in the C-store. During our conversation, he made it clear that the C-store is stocked based on what is in demand and bought by students. While the College would not be comfortable removing the brand explicitly based on politics, President Rose explained that it would be replaced if it was not selling well. Essentially, if we choose to not buy the coffee and let it sit on the shelves for a bit longer, an alternative brand will likely take its place.

As the son of a veteran who is still serving in the US Navy, I personally feel close to the issues that plague BRCC. I am also someone who is politically active and worried about where the country is headed. While stocking the company’s products may seem like a small issue, Bowdoin should be a place where everyone feels included and safe. Black Rifle Coffee Company has repeatedly proven to stand in direct opposition to those values. I expect the College to make smart and thoughtful decisions about the brands we choose to support and that includes what we choose to stock in the C-Store. BRCC may pretend to be just supporting our troops, but it is simultaneously supporting something far more sinister, and I don’t think that belongs on our campus.

Noah Saperstein is a member of the Class of 2025.

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6 comments:

  1. Class of '15 says:

    What’s next, Ben Shapiro books in the bookstore? Kid Rock performing at Ivies? Maybe someone should invite Alex Jones to speak on campus. We would be terrible scholars if we didn’t consider all perspectives on contemporary issues. /S

  2. Shaun says:

    Kyle Rittenhouse didn’t murder two Black Lives Matter protesters in Kenosha in 2020. He was tried and acquitted by a jury who believed he was exercising his lawful right to defend himself. You lose people when you fail to remain intellectually honest in your argument.

    • Thomas says:

      Intellectual honesty would be acknowledging that what the “jury” decides and what actually happens can easily be two different things. Being acquitted doesn’t correlate to being innocent outside of anything but the law. The U.S. court system is heavily flawed and mistakes happen. It’s not like we don’t have countless imprisoned Americans who were incarcerated after being found guilty by a similar “jury”, but are found many years, if not decades, later having been innocent the entire time.

      With a system as flawed as the U.S. court system, whether a person was found innocent or not is almost entirely irrelevant if there isn’t dead-to-rights proof for their innocence or guilt.

  3. Duce Jones says:

    Yikes, the part that got me was somehow BRC was wrong for defending police during the BLM riots? How disconnected from reality is this author, I lived in Los Angeles at the time and we desperately needed the police to keep us safe from the chaos. This dangerous group think and propaganda has gone too far. Sheesh.

  4. Al Lorentz says:

    As a disabled combat veteran I would like to ask the students at Bowdoin (and others) to not give your money to Black Rifle Coffee Company or their affiliates. They are toxic and support the violent right wing that are destroying our country.

  5. Mike says:

    I concoder myself conservative on many issues. I am for the most part, socially liberal, or at least libertarian. I am a navy veteran and find b.r.c.c. content at times amusing, but in general pandering their veteran status to secure a loyal base
    I prefer not to drink the coffee. But i stromgly disagree with removal of the sale of the companies product just because youare not a fan and dislike some of the political veiws. Youbuse patiently false or misleading reasoning to support your veiw. I.e. kyle Rittenhouse did not murder 2 blm protesers. In self defence he shot a pedophile and domestic abuser attacking him as per the verdict. Also who makes you the arbiter of safe and inclusive. Feeling unsafe or offended over a coffee companies product is a personal problem and shows no belief in peoples personal freedom of choice. There are companies who support causes i do not, but at no point do i ask for there removal. I am comfortable in my beliefs and also self aware enough that i 1. Could be wrong in my opinions and 2. I do not take offence or feel threatend from others with different veiws.

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