Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

What the Bud Light Fiasco Reveals about the Ruling Class
Brownstone Institute ^ | April 13, 2023 | Jeffrey A. Tucker

Posted on 04/13/2023 6:27:17 AM PDT by Heartlander

What the Bud Light Fiasco Reveals about the Ruling Class

What were they thinking? How did someone believe that making “trans woman” Dylan Mulvaney the icon of a Bud Light ad campaign, complete with a beer can with her image on it, would be good for sales? With an ad featuring this person vamping around in the most preposterously possible way? 

Dylan, who had previously been interviewed on trans issues by President Biden himself, was celebrating “365 Days of Girlhood” with her grotesquely misogynistic caricature that would disgust just about the whole market for this beer. Indeed, this person’s cosplay might as well be designed to discredit the entire political agenda of gender dysphoriacs. 

Sure enough, because we don’t have mandates on what beers you must buy, sales of the beer plummeted. 

The parent company Anheuser-Busch’s stock lost $5 billion or 4 percent in value since the ad campaign rollout. Sales have fallen 50-70 percent. Now there is worry within the company of a widening boycott to all their brands. A local Missouri distributor of the product canceled an appearance by Budweiser Clydesdale horses due to public anger.

Ads are supposed to sell products, not prompt a massive public backlash that results in billions in losses. This mistake could be for the ages, making a distinct departure from corporate deference to wackadoodle ideas from the academy and a push for more connection to on-the-ground realities. 

The person who made the miscalculation is Alissa Gordon Heinerscheid, Vice President in charge of marketing for Bud Light. She explained that her intention was to make the beer King of ‘Woke’ Beers. She wanted to shift away from the “out of touch” frat party image to one of “inclusivity.” By all accounts, she actually believed this. More likely, she was rationalizing actions that would earn her bragging rights within her social circle. 

Digging through her personal biography, we find all the predictable signs of tremendous detachment from regular life: elite boarding school (Groton, $65K a year), Harvard, Wharton School, coveted internship at General Foods, and straight to top VP at the biggest beverage company in the world.

Somehow through all that, nothing entered her brain apart from elite opinion on how the world should work with theories never actually tested by real-world marketing demands. Would that she had worked at Chick-Fil-A at some point in her teen years, perhaps even preserving some friend relationships ever since. It might have protected her from this disastrous error. 

She is a perfect symbol of a problem that afflicts high-end corporate and government culture: a shocking blindness toward the mainstream of American life, including working classes and other people less privileged. They are invisible to this crowd. And her type is pervasive in corporate America with its huge layers of management developed over 20 years of loose credit and push for token representation at the highest levels. 

We’ve seen this manifest over three years and ruling-class types imposed lockdowns, masks, and vaccine mandates on the whole population without regard to the consequences and with full expectation that the food will continue to be delivered to their doorsteps no matter how many days, months, or years they stay at home and stay safe. 

The working classes, meanwhile, were shoved out in front of the pathogen to make their assigned contribution to herd immunity so that the rich and privileged could preserve their clean state of being, making TikTok videos and issuing edicts from their safe spaces for two or even three years. 

In the late 19th century, the blindness of class detachment was a problem that so consumed Karl Marx that he became possessed with the desire to overthrow class distinctions between labor and capital. He kicked off a new age of the classless society under the leadership of the vanguard of the proletarian classes. In every country where his dreams became a reality, however, a protected elite took over and secured themselves from the consequences of their deluded dreams. 

The people who in recent decades have drunk so deeply from the well of the Marxian tradition seem to be repeating that experience with complete disinterest in the lower classes, while pushing a deepening chasm that only became worse in the lockdown years in which they have controlled the levers of power. 

It was startling to watch, and I could hardly believe what was happening. Then one day the incredibly obvious dawned on me. All official opinion in this country and even the whole world – government, media, corporations, technology – emanated from the same upper echelons of the class structure. It was people with elite educations and who had the time to shape public opinion. They are the ones on Twitter, in the newsrooms, fussing with the codes, and enjoying the laptop life of a permanent bureaucrat. 

Their social circles were the same. They knew no one who cut trees, butchered cows, drove trucks, fixed cars, and met payroll in a small restaurant. The “workers and peasants” are people the elites so otherized that they became nothing more than non-playing characters who make stuff work but are not worthy of their attention or time. 

The result was a massive transfer of wealth upwards in the social ladder as digital brands, technology, and Peloton thrived, while everyone else faced a barrage of ill health, debt, and inflation. As classes have grown more stratified – and, yes, there is a reason to worry about the gap between the rich and the poor when malleability is restricted – the intellectual producers of policy and opinion have constructed their own bubble to protect themselves from by being soiled by contrary points of view. 

They want the whole world to be their own safe space regardless of the victims. 

Would lockdowns have happened in any other kind of world? Not likely. And it would not have happened if the overlords did not have the technology to carry on their lives as normal while pretending that no one was really suffering from their scheme. 

The Bud Light case is especially startling because the advent of commercial society in the high Middle Ages and through the Industrial Revolution was supposed to mitigate against this sort of myopic stratification. And this has always been the most compelling critique of Marx: he was raging against a system that was gradually winnowing away the very demarcations in classes that he decried. 

Joseph Schumpeter in 1919 wrote an essay on this topic in his book Imperialism and Social Classes. He highlighted how the commercial ethos dramatically changed the class system. 

“The warlord was automatically the leader of his people in virtually every respect,” he wrote. “The modern industrialist is anything but such a leader. And this explains a great deal about the stability of the former’s position and the instability of the latter’s.”

But what happens when the corporate elites, working together with government, themselves become the warlords? The foundations of market capitalism begin to erode. The workers become ever more alienated from final consumption of the product they have made possible. 

It’s been typical of people like me – pro-market libertarians – to ignore the issue of class and its impact on social and political structures. We inherited the view of Frederic Bastiat that the good society is about cooperation between everyone and not class conflict, much less class war. We’ve been suspicious of people who rage against wealth inequality and social stratification. 

And yet we do not live in such market conditions. The social and economic systems of the West are increasingly bureaucratized, hobbled by credentialism, and regulated, and this has severely impacted class mobility. Indeed, for many of these structures, exclusion of the unwashed is the whole point. 

And the ruling class themselves have ever more the mindset as described by Thorstein Veblen: only the ignorable do actual work while the truly successful indulge in leisure and conspicuous consumption as much as their means allow. One supposes that this doesn’t hurt anyone…until it does.

And this certainly happened in very recent history as the conspicuous consumers harnessed the power of states all over the world to serve their interests exclusively. The result was calamity for rights and liberties won over a thousand years of struggle. 

The emergent fissures between the classes – and the diffusions of our ruling class into many sectors public and private – suggest an urgency for a new consciousness of the real meaning of the common good, which is inseparable from liberty. The marketing director of Bud Light talked a good line about “inclusivity” but she plotted to impose everything but that. Her plan was designed for the one percent and to the exclusion of all the people who actually consume the product, to say nothing for the workers who actually make and deliver the product she was charged with promoting.

That the markets have so brutally punished the brand and company for this profound error points the way to the future. People should have the right to their own choices about the kind of life they want to live and the products and services they want to consume. The dystopia of lockdowns and woke hegemony of public opinion – complete with censorship – have become the policy to overturn if the workers are ever to throw off the chains that bind them. 

The boycotts of Bud Light are but a beginning.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: beer; budlight; queerbeer; trans
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-70 next last
The Inside Story of Brownstone Institute
1 posted on 04/13/2023 6:27:17 AM PDT by Heartlander
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

The author furthers the insanity by continually refering to this follower of Satan as “she.”


2 posted on 04/13/2023 6:35:30 AM PDT by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

It was startling to watch, and I could hardly believe what was happening. Then one day the incredibly obvious dawned on me. All official opinion in this country and even the whole world – government, media, corporations, technology – emanated from the same upper echelons of the class structure. It was people with elite educations and who had the time to shape public opinion. They are the ones on Twitter, in the newsrooms, fussing with the codes, and enjoying the laptop life of a permanent bureaucrat.

~~~

Pretty good article, and that’s a good quote, but it seems to me to attribute this more to the old “bubble” theory. That the coastal elites are just insulated in their own echo chamber.

Not that it’s not true, but What is coming out more and more lately is how the academic world is a full blitz training ground for the elites. They go through a whole system of brainwashing before rising into their positions of power and influence.

So the insular bubble is just there to protect and support the brainwashing. It doesn’t cause it. It just doesn’t hurt it.

This is a woke version of the old-boy network. The woke network assures that the woke pass through and the non-woke do not rise to the heights of power.


3 posted on 04/13/2023 6:37:15 AM PDT by z3n (Kakistocracy)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: All

I wonder if you just took a regular day of News and went back in time to the 1980s how would most people react ?


4 posted on 04/13/2023 6:39:16 AM PDT by escapefromboston (Peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: z3n

A lot of this woke BS is just people who have too much damn time on their hands, who think up this crap out of sheer boredom, to amuse themselves.


5 posted on 04/13/2023 6:39:24 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Good piece. The Brownstone Institute turns out some good material.


6 posted on 04/13/2023 6:40:35 AM PDT by ConservativeInPA ("How did you go bankrupt?" Bill asked. "Two ways," Mike said. "Gradually and then suddenly." )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Great essay.


7 posted on 04/13/2023 6:41:35 AM PDT by TTFlyer (Lenin: that by the infliction of terror, a well-organized minority can conquer a nation.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander
One thing I have not seen in any of the articles about this story; are there thousands or millions of cans in stores and warehouses across America with this special label, or was this a "change the image, run about 5 cases, and change the image back" promotion?

I am not an expert on light beers, because I always thought the only people who actually drank any kind of "light" beer were girls, males who know all the words of all the show tunes, and the kind of people who buy E-Vehicles.

8 posted on 04/13/2023 6:42:46 AM PDT by Bernard (“the rights of man come not from the generosity of the state but from the hand of God." JFK 1-20-61)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: dfwgator

Correct. Think of how many employees Musk could fire from Twitter. The proportion of useless high-level employees permeate the system. Corporations many be forced to remove them. The problem is government, universities, schools, and any corporation largely supported by government (think healthcare) seem to be immune.


9 posted on 04/13/2023 6:46:36 AM PDT by alternatives?
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: escapefromboston

I’ve been watching NYPD Blue from the 80’s. Some of the stuff that’s now championed by the left was openly ridiculed then.

Interestingly, they’ve made several references to Donald Trump , mostly about being a famous rich guy.


10 posted on 04/13/2023 6:48:43 AM PDT by cyclotic
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: dfwgator
A lot of this woke BS is just people who have too much damn time on their hands...

I agree. Idle hands are the devil's playground.

11 posted on 04/13/2023 6:50:04 AM PDT by Kharis13
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: dfwgator

I think some people — especially “educated”, successful people — truly believe the nonsense that a person with a serious mental illness who suffers the delusion they have God-like powers can change their innate sex by announcing it. Instead of helping these sick people get the help they clearly so desperately need, these “educated” people pander to the victim’s mental illness. It is truly disgusting.


12 posted on 04/13/2023 6:50:58 AM PDT by glennaro (Never give up ... never give in ... never surrender ... and enjoy every minute of doing so.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Insightful article. Good read.


13 posted on 04/13/2023 6:51:15 AM PDT by dead (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_vFiUUcBkc)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kharis13

I suppose when you haven’t had a major war for awhile, this is the result.

“Nevermind that s___, here comes Hitler!”


14 posted on 04/13/2023 6:52:17 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

As I understand it this was not a Bud campaign. Bud sent kits to many “influencers”. He was just one
But he took the can they had made up for him abd did his own vids.
Lol it blew up from there


15 posted on 04/13/2023 6:56:26 AM PDT by RWGinger (LGB)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: 7thson

I noticed that to.


16 posted on 04/13/2023 6:57:05 AM PDT by left that other site (Peacemakers who sow in peace reap a harvest of righteousness.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: z3n
This is a woke version of the old-boy network

Exactly. There’s always been an old-boy network. It seems the price of entry has increased over the years and there is no focus on competence. The cost of entry for an average American is an elite education, mountains of debt, and a compromise of principles, primarily being woke.

17 posted on 04/13/2023 6:57:46 AM PDT by ConservativeInPA ("How did you go bankrupt?" Bill asked. "Two ways," Mike said. "Gradually and then suddenly." )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: 7thson

“TOO”. not “to”. Sorry.


18 posted on 04/13/2023 6:58:22 AM PDT by left that other site (Peacemakers who sow in peace reap a harvest of righteousness.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander
...lost $5 billion or 4 percent in value since the ad campaign rollout.

I woke up to some feel good news of the day.

19 posted on 04/13/2023 7:00:20 AM PDT by Tommy Revolts
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Very good!


20 posted on 04/13/2023 7:00:34 AM PDT by dennisw (This)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-70 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson