Starbucks has launched a new ad in the United Kingdom, showing a girl named Jemma struggling with being called by her birth name because she wants to identify as James and become transgender.
If you call yourself a Christian and buy your coffee at Starbucks, you're a hypocrite. You're a hypocrite because when you purchase coffee from Starbucks, you are helping to support an organization that is
anti-christian,
anti-Israel,
anti-police,
pro-Islam, and as you will see in a minute,
rabidly pro-LGBTQ.
So go ahead all you hypocrite Baptist pastors who preach from the pulpit that women can't wear pants and that men have to wear a suit and tie to church, go ahead and keep drinking your Starbucks coffee from that same pulpit while you support a company that's the enemy of every Christian everywhere. Stinkin', lousy hypocrites. Can I get an amen?
Even if everything I just you about Starbucks wasn't true, it is true, but even if it wasn't they still make a terrible cup of coffee. Do you really need to spend $4.50 for a cup of coffee that tastes like terrorism?
#BoycottStarbucks
Starbucks launches commercial on teenager “transitioning” from female to male, donates profits to transgender children’s group
FROM THE BRIDGEHEAD: As the LGBT movement achieves cultural dominance, Big Business has sensed the opportunity to monetize wokeness. Over the past several years,
dozens of major corporations from Coca Cola to Nike, from Apple to Uber have come out swinging at conservative Christians, attempting to use their economic clout to bludgeon legislators seeking to pass protections for religious liberty and the pre-born into submission. From boycotts to carpeting their establishments with the rainbow at the slightest provocation, if you’re a Christian, Big Business wants you to
shut up and buy their stuff, bigot.
With the emergence of the transgender phenomenon, Big Business is upping the buy-in. Despite the fact that
chest-binders are known to be very harmful (chest binders are a tight wrap that gender-confused girls use to flatten their breasts and appear male), Sprite
released a major advertisement that, included in various shots of cross-dressing teens, showed a girl getting a chest-binder tightened by a smiling friend to disguise her femininity before heading off to Pride. Gillette
released an ad tenderly portraying a father teaching his “transgender son”—biological daughter—how to shave after “transitioning” to male. That, and the Super Bowl featured eight commercials with LGBT issues highlighted this past year to an audience of millions. Corporations have money, and they’re using it to normalize gender confusion, hormone regimens, and sex change surgeries.
5 Darkest Starbucks Secrets
If you can still support Starbucks after watching this, you probably need to stop calling yourself a Christian.
And now Starbucks has launched a new ad in the United Kingdom, showing a girl named Jemma struggling with being called by her birth name because she wants to identify as James. The ad shows various people “deadnaming” Jemma, until a Starbucks barista calls out “James” and, as these transgender commercials are all intended to imply, lived happily ever after. This, of course, is the point of mainstreaming, normalizing, and even romanticizing “gender transition”—to present it as a moment of true fulfillment, of finally
becoming yourself. The truth is sadly different. Starbucks, of course, is going all in on the transgenderism phenomenon, partnering with a radical transgender children’s organization called
Mermaids by selling mermaid cookies in their outlets across the UK and donating a portion of the profits. (Mermaids, you’ll recall, are mythical creatures that have no gender from the waist down.)
Someday soon, it might be a good idea to compile an enormous boycott list and, despite the inconvenience and the difficulty, start making purchases only at outlets that don’t take some of your money and send it to LGBT organizations working to make the culture more hostile to Christian values—at least where possible. It wouldn’t be easy, but it might be worth it.
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Starbucks LGBT+ Channel 4 Diversity Award
At Starbucks, writing your name on a cup and calling it out is a symbol of our warm welcome. It’s a small gesture, but it's symbolic of what we believe in: Recognition and acceptance, whoever you are, or want to be. We welcome everyone.
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