Mises explains Bud Light sales fiasco

I stopped drinking Bud Light decades ago, so when the Dylan Mulvaney controversy exploded last month, I didn’t need to consider if I’d stop drinking Anheuser-Busch’s most popular product.
What’s clear is that many others have decided to quit the beer over the brand’s decision to wade into transgender politics. According to figures reported in The St. Louis Dispatch, based on data from a Connecticut-based consulting group that focuses on the alcoholic beverage industry, Bud Light’s in-store sales fell 11 percent in the week that ended April 8 from the same period the previous year. Year-over-year sales fell even faster over the next two weeks, dropping 26 percent in mid April. The decline continued into May despite ad blitzes and marketing gimmicks that included $20 rebates—on a $19.98 case of beer. Oof.
Endless ink has been spilled over the controversy, which was fueled by celebrities like Travis Tritt and Kid Rock, who shot up several cases of Bud Light after the Mulvaney ads began to go viral.
Many public figures seemed genuinely stunned by what they saw as a massive overreaction to a single March Madness ad featuring Mulvaney, who drank from a Bud Light while talking cluelessly about the NCAA tournament.
“I thought there must be a piece of the story that I’m missing,” shock jock Howard Stern said on his show.
Writing at Vox, Emily Stewart poo-pooed the Bud Light controversy and predicted it would blow over, pointing out that similar campaigns directed at other major brands quickly fizzled out.
“In terms of hurting sales, boycotts tend not to be super effective as most people don’t respond, let alone stick to them,” wrote Stewart. “Remember the Great Keurig Boycott of 2017? Or Frito-Lay in 2021? Or, more recently, when people were mad because M&Ms were girls?”
Stewart might be correct that Bud Light’s problems will blow over, though I have doubts. Still, critics scratching their heads over the controversy have a point that there’s something fickle and disproportionate about it. After all, Jack Daniels, a brand with a consumer base similar to Bud Light, recently ran its own LGBTQ+ ad campaign featuring American drag queen Ru Paul, and it generated a fraction of the scrutiny. Miller Lite, meanwhile, ran its own “woke” ad that was ignored for months.
In a way, I feel sorry for Bud Light. The company is being singled out for doing the same thing other publicly traded companies are doing: catering to the ESG (environmental, social, and governance) puppeteers who are scoring them on “social responsibility.”
ESG scoring is notoriously opaque, but the costs of not playing the game are quite real. ESG funds managed some $40 trillion in assets as of 2022, according to Bloomberg, and a poor score can get a publicly traded company booted from a fund just that fast, as Tesla found out that same year when it was kicked off the S&P 500 ESG index despite its sparkling sustainability score.
“While Tesla may be playing its part in eliminating fuel-powered cars, it has fallen behind its peers when examined through a broader ESG lens,” said Margaret Dorn, the executive in charge of ESG scoring for North America. Dorn didn’t feel it necessary to elaborate further.
Unsurprisingly, companies are not thrilled about having to do this ESG dance. While they pay lip service to ESG publicly, a 2022 CNBC survey showed most CFOs supported efforts to prohibit pension funds from using ESG scoring to determine how they invest.
One can see why corporate executives chafe under the ESG framework. Instead of focusing on creating value and serving consumers, companies are forced to dance to the ESG piper’s tune and perform whatever social initiatives a tiny cabal of people regard as important.
This was always the danger in “stakeholder capitalism,” the decades-old attempt to nudge corporations into serving interests other than their own shareholders and consumers. It subordinates consumers, the very people who should be in charge.
“The real bosses, in the capitalist system of market economy, are the consumers,” the economist Ludwig von Mises famously wrote in his book Bureaucracy. “They, by their buying and by their abstention from buying, decide who should own the capital and run the plants. They determine what should be produced and in what quantity and quality.”
This is the true lesson of “Bud-lash.” Bud Light forgot who its bosses really were. It wasn’t just that Bud Light was serving the ESG puppeteers—who award companies points for diversity and inclusion initiatives as well as environmental ones—and ignoring its own consumer base. The company was openly insulting its consumer base, describing Bud Light as a “fratty” beer and “out of touch” brand “in decline.” It’s one thing to disregard your boss. It’s another thing to openly insult her.
Many see Bud-lash as “anti-trans,” but the response is more about reminding corporations who their boss really is: consumers. These are the true masters in a free market economy; they decide who wins and loses, who becomes rich and who becomes poor. And yes, consumers are fickle.
“They are no easy bosses,” Mises reminds us. “They are full of whims and fancies, changeable and unpredictable. They do not care a whit for past merit. As soon as something is offered to them that they like better or that is cheaper, they desert their old purveyors. With them nothing counts more than their own satisfaction.”
Bud Light was serving a boss other than its consumers, and it really shouldn’t have to. “ESG is a scam. It has been weaponized by phony social justice warriors,” Elon Musk wrote on Twitter after Tesla was given the boot from the S&P 500 ESG index.
Musk is not wrong. ESG is a scam, and a dangerous one. It is embraced by anti-capitalists precisely because it undermines the consumer sovereignty Mises described, and empowers the financial class, bureaucrats, and money printers central bankers by enabling them to manage society as they desire while further enriching themselves.
A famous ancient text says, “No one can serve two masters.” Corporations like Bud Light need to remember who their true bosses are, and it’s past time consumers reminded them.
The coffee shop “The Anarchist”, headquartered in Toronto, Canada, and which boasted of being a “communist” company, closed its doors after only 1 year of operation. Inaugurated in March last year, the venture, which had the slogan “pay what you can”, ended up succumbing to the forces of the evil capitalist market. The establishment billed itself as a “radical anti-capitalist, anti-colonial cafe, shop and community space on stolen land”. But, in fact, the coffee shop wasn't even that communist - but we'll get to that soon. Although it gained considerable fame when it opened, due to its proposal, the business turned out to be unfeasible. Who could imagine that, right?
Despite the cafeteria's closure, its owner, Gabriel Sims-Fewer, said the experience was a tremendous success. Well, that's what I call an alternative point of view! Anyway, Sims-Fewer justified the coffee shop's bankruptcy, in a statement made a few days ago. Hang on to your chair to listen to the brilliant explanation given by the owner for the failure of his venture. Here it goes: “Unfortunately, the lack of generational wealth/seed capital from ethically bankrupt sources prevented me from calmly facing the winter season or from growing in the necessary measures to be sustainable in the long term”.
But how did The Anarchist coffee shop work anyway? What led it to be considered a “communist” enterprise, since it even had an owner? If your guess is that this coffee shop was a bistro for rich people, dressed in red, with a Che Guevara beret and a painting of Marx hanging on the wall - well, you're right. By all accounts, the Canadian coffee shop was far from being considered an “affordable” establishment.
To live up to its proposal of being communist, The Anarchist offered the simple coffee at a price classified as “pay what you can”. From there, we assumed that anyone who couldn't pay for coffee could drink it for free - but there's nothing confirmed about that. Other more sophisticated drinks, such as teas and espressos, as well as other typical bakery products, such as sweets and cakes, were also offered at the café. In this case, though, people had to pay. According to the owner, this charge served to offset the revenue that the establishment lost with strained coffee, which was served at subsidized prices. So it is.
Visitors were also allowed to look in the window and use the bathroom without paying. Wow, how much communism, don't you think? The communist cafe even had a space dedicated to literary works by socialist authors, shirts and other items. All sold, of course. Looking at it like this, it is difficult to defend the idea that the coffee shop really follows the doctrine in which its owner believes. Even so, it cannot be denied that, in the end, this communist mentality, even if not put into practice, ended up taking its toll on the establishment.
This case, by the way, is very similar to another enterprise headquartered in a rich capitalist country, but which calls itself a “communist company”. The bakery “La Conquête du Pain”, headquartered in Paris, France, sought its name from this nefarious ideology: it comes from a famous work of the movement, known as "anarcho-communism", the title "The conquest of bread". This bakery goes a little further than the Canadian coffee shop: it has no owners, functioning as a cooperative. But still they charge for the products - of course. Anyway, the members claim to defend “equality with freedom”, something that is obviously contradictory. After all, any forced equality suppresses our freedom, as we are naturally unequal and unique. We can only be equal in treatment before the law, in rights and duties.
Returning to The Anarchist: the coffee shop's biggest problem really was the prices offered to customers. Locals complained about the high price of products sold in the cafeteria, in addition to - of course - pointing to the obvious hypocrisy of the owner of the establishment. According to some customers, the company claimed to be against the “wrong values of capitalism”, but was too concerned about money. It's that old story: it's very easy to be a communist in theory; in practice, however, what everyone really likes is good money and a high standard of living.
For starters, if this Canadian coffee shop really was communist, it might not even be owned. After all, the idea behind this ideology - and which even gives it the name by which it has become known in history - is the common ownership of the means of production. Nobody owns anything, at least effectively; a private establishment, which sells products in a competitive market system and which seeks profit is therefore totally incompatible with communism. This without touching on the point of social classes - after all, as mentioned, the cafeteria was not for the common people, but for the rich people of Toronto.
If there is private ownership of the means of production, then there is no communism. Likewise, if there is a price system freely practiced, in competition with other establishments, it cannot be said that this coffee shop is really communist. After all, as we well know, and as history tells us, communism fails precisely because it does not have an efficient price system, precisely because of the abolition of private property. Hypocrisy is the key word in this story; even because there is no better place in the world to be a communist than in a western capitalist country. It's really bad to be a communist where this ideology has been implemented in practice, as in Venezuela, where no leftist sympathizer chooses to live.
This experiment, therefore, is a faithful representation of Western communists - who pretend to adhere to Marxist ideas, but who do not give up the benefits of capitalism. Put The Anarchist coffee shop on the side of the iPhone socialist on the shelf of leftist hypocrisy - it will be well deserved! Canadian coffee is basically a capitalist business, only painted red to attract the left-wing rich. This time it didn't work out; but this brand usually works in other environments, especially in politics.
The Canadian enterprise lacked more important things in a market economy than flawed ideologies. Things like attractive prices, a competitive edge and superior quality products than competitors. However, things would be much worse if the coffee shop really tried to be a communist experiment, without a price system, with collective ownership and without capitalist interests. Instead of a coffee shop closing its doors, we could see a mini North Korea or a mini Venezuela being born in Toronto. Believe it or not, being a bankrupt capitalist company is much better than this alternative, because the bankrupt company does not forcibly force you to pay your debts.
Anyway, it cannot be denied that communism does have some degree of responsibility in the bankruptcy of The Anarchist coffee shop. As much as the establishment has been subject to the market rules that its owner says he criticizes, the fact is that the very essence of the communist ideal may have made the enterprise bankrupt. If the owner really views the world through a socialist lens, he is incapable of understanding what causes wealth to be created and distributed in society - namely, the perfect equilibrium of the market. This is the big mistake of socialism, and that happens so much in the micro scenario: companies going bankrupt due to the sheer ineptitude of their controllers. As for the macro: countries being thrown into misery because of their rulers.
The Canadian coffee shop will become just a footnote in the book of communist failures. Already as a capitalist enterprise that went bankrupt, The Anarchist is forgettable. His attempt to disguise himself as socialism to earn money from unsuspecting leftists ended up not working out very well. Perhaps, Gabriel Sims-Fewer would have better luck in business if he abandoned his leftist ideas for good, to really undertake. However, it looks like he won't change his mindset anytime soon. The statement made by the bankrupt businessman exudes all the finesse of a typical communist born in a rich capitalist country: “F*** the rich. F the police. F the State. F the colonial death camp we call Canada.” All he had to do was give an F to communism, and learn to truly obey the rules of the market.
This is so sad 😞 #FentanylAwareness
https://nostr.build/av/deff139c1e5cec1e6e29f7c0386c829651c1bd1dc1c9bdb95d75bb55932a64e5.mp4
And it was on that June 4, 1989:
It's his day, his symbology, his resistance to one of the most heinous dictatorships of the modern era, the memory of the day 34 years ago when the hope of freedom was crushed in China.

I remembered that classic photo of Arnold's children, where one was raised by him and the other by his mother:
"same genetics, different habits"

#Bitcoin is going to hit $1M within the next 4~5 years and there’s nothing anyone can say to convince me otherwise
🇧🇷 According to a report from the Valor Economico newspaper, Mercado Bitcoin, the biggest bitcoin exchange in Brazil, was granted a license from the country’s central bank to function as a payment institution.
https://bitcoinnews.com/mercado-bitcoin-granted-license-by-brazil-central-bank/
Exactly 34 years ago, in Tiananmen Square, in Beijing, China:


Good Morning from #Germany, where retail bank deposits rose sharply in April by €15.5bn to ~€2.7tn. This is due to the fact that Germans went on a spending strike, i.e. consumer spending collapsed. In addition, few savers in Germany are shifting their money into money mkt funds. Here, traditional bank products such as call money, which are also part of retail deposits, are more in demand.

Treasury cash pile slumped to match 2015 low during debt-cap saga. US has used up more than 90% of authorized special measures. Congress has passed ceiling legislation for Biden to sign. The Treasury’s cash balance fell to just $22.892bn.

US Bank run in slow motion over or just a pause? US bank deposits rose for a 2nd week by $86.5bn, almost entirely led by large banks. While that was the largest gain in almost 2yrs, deposits fell $31.5bn on an unadjusted basis. (via BBG)

Good Morning from Germany where 10y #inflation expectations have softened to 2.28% after the latest CPI numbers. 10y real rates (10y yields - 10y inflation expectations) have crept up slightly and are now back in positive territory at ~3 basis points.


NEW: 🇺🇸 US Senators Worried About Bitcoin Adoption In El Salvador 👀😱
https://bitcoinnews.com/us-senators-worried-about-bitcoin-adoption-el-salvador/
Saudi Arabia said it will make an extra 1mln bbl/d production cut in July, taking its production to lowest level for several years after a plunge in crude prices. Other OPEC+ nations will stick to existing targets this year, so Saudis will shoulder burden.

Decoupling from China continues. #China will soon account <50% of US imports from low-cost countries in Asia as Western firms shift supply chains out of mainland. Trade segregation between superpowers has accelerated under Biden.

Biden signed the debt ceiling suspension.
That gives the go-ahead for the Treasury to urgently issue new debt, as the US Treasury's cash reached less than $23 billion last Thursday.
Now we will see how the flood of Treasuries in the coming days will impact the market.
