I donât know exactly what happened with the two black men arrested for apparently loitering inside a Philadelphia Starbucks. There is always context and details to these incidents that never get reported in the rush to declare it a racist hate crime straight out of the 1960s. If the men were arrested simply because of an overreacting Starbucks manager, then itâs wrong, Iâm sure it was terrifying for the two men, and this kind of thing should never happen.
But overreaction to incidents like this has become a very bad national habit.
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Now, all 8,000-plus Starbucks locations will be closed on Tuesday, May 29, depriving America of an entire day of over-priced, European-sounding coffees and lattes. Whatever will we do? That may be the real apocalypse.
The stores will be closed so Starbucks can address a rampant, company-wide culture of racism in their customer relations. So ingrained is this racial bias in Starbucks employees that theyâve called the cops to remove black customers at least once in the companyâs almost 50-year history.
This is the problem with every unfortunate incident in the social media era — there is an immediate, wild overreaction. Because if you donât express the proper level of grief, remorse, apology, reparation, t-shirt-wearing, and hashtagging, youâre screwed. Commence the boycotts! Itâs insane.
The New York Times asks in an urgent-sounding headline, âCan Training Eliminate Biases? Starbucks Will Test the Thesis.â Can it be done? Can eight hours of mandatory seminars and how-to videos override a lifetime of oppressive white/male cultural programming? Of course it can. Why else would Starbucks forfeit an entire day of revenue and hire a special public policy group to run these seminars if it couldnât?
While theyâre at it, however, altering racist hearts and minds isnât the only thing that Starbucks needs to take a hard look at. Itâs time to examine their menu, which is rife with racial profiling and trigger words. A drink called a âBlonde Flat White?â Two Caucasian words in a single drink name? Not. Cool.
This article was originally published on GlennBeck.com.