Heineken and Boston Beers withdrew their participation in the St. Patrick's parades in New York City and Boston. So did the key sponsor Guinness, Boston's mayor Marty Walsh and New York City's mayor Bill de Blasio. They reacted to the organisers of the parades who prohibited LGBT participants to carry signs or banners that identified them as who they are (via).
The Guinness commercial Men and women shouldn't live together from 1995 showing a gay couple was banned before it became a YouTube sensation 17 years later (via).
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photograph (Ashland University, 1973) via
Legendary sujets. Thanks for the clip pack! :-)
ReplyDeleteThe Guinness hands are simply lovely :-)
DeleteHa! F**k the ignorance!
ReplyDeleteHa! ;-)
DeleteSkål!
ReplyDeleteProost! Op je gezondheid! And inclusion!
ReplyDeleteExcellent, outstanding news, didn't know that!
ReplyDeleteLovely to hear that I could provide you with news. Thank you, Kenneth!
DeleteI seems that diversity and inclusion is now integrated into mainstream business strategies. This is great news indeed.
ReplyDeleteI hope it stays that way!
Delete... I somehow have the impression that businesses got more courageous and are no more/less driven by the fear of losing certain customers by openly supporting "certain" customers and employees. Yes, let's hope that this is a real trend and not just a shortly lasting phenomenon.
DeleteThank you Tim! Thanks, Erin!
Cin cin, alla salute!
ReplyDelete