Margin Of Fraud

I’ll take my civic engagement in Triple Grande Juxtapose, please.

Starbucks, 2016: Schultz wrote a letter to employees on Sunday criticizing the “epic, unseemly” election, and he asked them to share in compassion and empathy.

Starbucks, 2020: Espinel said the company’s effort begins with conversations between managers and their employees to make sure its nearly 200,000 workers have the tools and time to vote. The chain has created a portal for its baristas with tools to register and vote.

Starbucks, 2022: Starbucks asks labor board to suspend mail-in ballot union elections, alleging misconduct in voting process

8 Replies to “Margin Of Fraud”

  1. The homeless have overrun all “urban” Starbucks locations … and they cannot close those stores fast enough. Hint: they did it to themselves.

  2. God Love You…

    That put a spring in my step…

    Some think God doesn’t exists…

    For Shame…

    Shame [N]

    Shame is a consequence of sin. Feelings of guilt and shame are subjective acknowledgments of an objective spiritual reality. Guilt is judicial in character; shame is relational. Though related to guilt, shame emphasizes sin’s effect on self-identity.

    Sinful human beings are traumatized before a holy God, exposed for failure to live up to God’s glorious moral purpose.

    The first response of Adam and Eve to their sinful condition was to hide from God, and consequently from one another ( Gen 3:7-8 ; 2:25 ).

    Christ’s unhindered openness to the Father was both a model for life and the means of removing humanity’s shame.

    Christian self-identity is transformed “in him.”

  3. The wannabe union staff better realize there are two possibilities in the coffee shop business, non-union or shut down. It’s not like people are going to pay $10 for a $2 cup of coffee.

  4. One can remember when the boss of Starbucks proclaimed, beating his chest, that the homeless should not be told to move on, if they wanted to, they could use the toilet. Of course, if there is cold outside, a nap, even the toilet is better then sidewalk.
    A few years ago at Starbucks in a rather wealthy neighborhood, by the university in Salt Lake City, around December or so, there was a black gentleman siting at an outside table, I asked why is he not inside, told me that they won’t let him.
    I got him a coffee, then, later I thought, not good, should have invited him inside to sit with us, neither right nor wrong, just happened.
    Yeah, the rich socialist aristocrats like to show off their warm and fuzzy manners until they don’t.

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