Saturday, June 18, 2022

coffee and guns

 


 

After I polish off my annual steak tomorrow (and baked potato) our desert will be a triple berry pie that is said to bring tears to your eyes. Naturally, the pie will be topped with some vanilla bean ice cream, and will be washed down with a cup of coffee – but a very special cup of coffee.

Brian learned about a coffee recently that is said to be extraordinarily delicious. The company that makes is the Black Rifle Coffee Company, and it’s got an interesting history.

Black Rifle Coffee Company (BRCC) is a coffee company based in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, owned by former members of the armed forces of the United States. It gained national attention in 2017, when it employed about 50 people, after pledging to hire 10,000 veterans in response to Starbucks's pledge to hire 10,000 refugees.

The company was founded in December 2014 by former Green Beret Evan Hafer. He began by selling a small volume of his "Freedom Roast" coffee through a friend's apparel website. The coffee sold well, so Hafer launched his own brand and website through which to sell his coffee and branded accessories. The company specializes in its online, direct-to-consumer coffee subscription service, which had over 100,000 subscribers as of 2020. In addition to online sales, Black Rifle Coffee Company has physical coffee shops in UtahTexas, and Georgia. The coffee is also distributed at some firing ranges5.11 Tactical stores, and Bass Pro Shops.



BRCC has produced a number of sometimes controversial social media videos which combine military humor with hipster jokes and guns.

In 2017, BRCC expanded into Canada with a division based in Alberta and led by CEO Darren Weeks.

In 2018, BRCC opened a new coffee roasting facility in Manchester, Tennessee, as part of a $6 million investment in the state. It also launched Coffee or Die Magazine, an online news and lifestyle publication that reports on military, veteranlaw enforcement, and coffee topics.

In 2018, the company's gross revenue totaled $30 million. In 2019, BRCC employed more than 200 people — 40 percent of them veterans of the U.S. military. At the time of reporting, their products were available at 1,700 retail locations across the country. On September 29, 2019, BRCC opened its first stand-alone licensed coffee shop in Boerne, Texas. According to the Washington Examiner circa 2021 they employed approximately 550 people, half of whom were veterans, military spouses or reservists.

The company expanded in 2020 with the release of ready-to-drink canned iced coffee. In March 2020, BRCC launched a coffee-donation campaign to support medical and emergency workers, quarantined military personnel and their families, and others working to mitigate the national and global impact of COVID-19. In May, a Canadian gun ban enacted following the 2020 Nova Scotia attacks was mistakenly thought to include a ban on the coffee company, but further inspection revealed that the ban was actually applied to a similarly named Arizona-based "Black Rifle Company". In July, BRCC provided a $15,000 grant to the Hunter Seven Foundation, supporting a new round of medical research exploring the effects of toxic exposure in Afghanistan. A July 2021, article in The New York Times, Hafer describes his vision for growth of the physical franchised stores using retired military NCO's. He sees Navy petty officers and Army staff sergeants joining the company and running a franchise of their own rather than joining the local police force in their hometowns.

In November 2021, Black Rifle Coffee Company merged with SilverBox Engaged Merger Corporation via a special purpose acquisition company in an effort to raise funds for expansion and to go public. The company has a valuation of approximately $1.7 billion. The merger completed in February 2022.

Black Rifle Coffee Company's corporate image is built on its conservative politics and supporting veterans. Over half of its staff are former military.

The company maintains a pro-military, pro-gunpro-police image and has publicly supported the politics of former US President Donald Trump through actions such as publishing a (since-deleted) blog post that supported Trump's then-current proposal of an immigration ban from Muslim majority countries. The company's political stance has attracted attention from Fox News,]and it has been endorsed by conservative broadcast personality Sean Hannity and Donald Trump Jr. A 2021 Salon article reported that BRCC is trying to draw a line and distance themselves from the far-right after their logos and gear appeared on Kyle Rittenhouse, a teen who was acquitted after killing two people and injuring another during a Black Lives Matter protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Black Rifle Coffee's symbols were also present on rioters who trespassed the United States Capitol on January 6th, 2021.

The company's brand is tied closely to its pro-gun and socially conservative image as well as close links with American military and law enforcement.

In 2017 BRCC launched an advertising campaign based on their plan to hire 10,000 veterans. While it was conceived previously. BRCC launched the campaign after well-known coffee purveyor Starbucks Corporation launched an advertising campaign centered around their plan to hire 10,000 refugees. BRCC released a meme on social media that juxtaposed an image of ISIS fighters photoshopped with Starbucks cups next to an image of American soldiers in combat, which read: “Starbucks vows to hire 10,000 refugees,” and “Black Rifle Coffee Company vows to hire 10,000 veterans.” Company posts associated with the ad campaign labelled Starbucks “Hipsterbucks.” While Hafer criticized what he saw as a publicity stunt by Starbucks, BRCC also received similar criticism around their ad campaign, especially because of the size disparity between BRCC and Starbucks as well as the suggestion in BRCC's ad campaign that Starbucks doesn't hire veterans. Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz and former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates had in 2013 launched a similar program to hire 10,000 veterans in the next five years and that by 2017 they had hired 8,000 of them. As of February 2017 BRCC employed 52 people in total. Hafer responded that BRCC and Starbucks are very different companies, and that their size disparity meant that BRCC's proposal was a much more ambitious plan. In a 2017 interview with Vice News, founder Hafer commended Starbucks' veteran hiring program and clarified that he supports all hiring pushes as long as the message is a positive one.

For a campaign in July 2019, BRCC donated a bag of coffee to a police officer for every bag purchased, in response to a story that six Tempe, Arizona police officers had been asked to leave a branch of Starbucks.

BRCC rejected a potential logo for one of their coffee bags featuring a Renaissance-style rendering of Saint Michael the Archangel, a patron saint of military personnel, shooting a short-barreled rifle. The design was rejected when Hafer was informed by a friend at The Pentagon that the image of Saint Michael standing on the neck of Satan was being used by white supremacists because of the resemblance to George Floyd's murder.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Rifle_Coffee_Company

 

If you are wondering why there are more guns than people in America, here’s the reason:

https://www.businessinsider.com/gun-dealers-stores-mcdonalds-las-vegas-shooting-2017-1

Not all guns are sold at guns stores, of course, since there are numerous gun shows in just about every state, and there are also sales between private individuals.

When Brian went online today to find out where to buy the coffee, the closest location was a gun store show near his home. His visit today was the 2nd time in his life that he has been in a gun story, which is exactly 2 times more than I have been in a gun story.

He described the gun store as “old school”. It was not well lit, there were guns covering most of the wall surface of the store, and there was a tip jar on the counter for the NRA.

After doing a little research, I discovered that I could buy Black Rifle Coffee at a Speedway story that’s only a couple of miles from our house.

 If I like the coffee, I may have to buy some in the future, but there is NO WAY that I’m going to buy the stuff at a gun store.

 

 

 

 


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