It isn't just Mulvaney (someone I had posted about before the Bud Light dust up because he was a defacto face of the weirdo brigade), it is all of it in totality.See, this is a perfect example of what I've been trying to point out to you. You're mad at the company. You think they "got out of line" and deserved to be punished. But what did they do to you and other conservatives? Nothing. They didn't broadcast any ads into your home celebrating trans rights. They didn't deliver any pamphlets to your front door. They didn't send you an emails about Dylan Mulvaney.
They thought they saw an opportunity for a partnership on a social media site (they probably do dozens or hundreds just like it every year) that would give them visibility among a group of people who don't normally think of their product. That's it. The only reason it ended up on your TV, in your online newsfeed, in your brain, fomenting this anger, is because the right wing outrage machine put it there.
Again, how you feel about trans people is how you feel. I'm not going to tell you to feel any other way. But understand that you don't know the first thing about Dylan Mulvaney because of what Bud Light did. You know about Dylan Mulvaney because the people who are hoping to stoke your anger told you about Dylan Mulvaney.
And yes, if it is acceptable for the left to throw a tantrum whenever corporation XYZ does something they don't like, then the right has to do it too. Otherwise you get your viewpoint chased out of the public eye.
Politics is downstream of culture and big business pushes culture. I'd prefer not to have to have it this way but if Disney, Target, InBev, et. al. want to jump in on the cultural left side, then they should feel economic pain from the 50% they are writing off.
In short, the outrage machine is catching up to me, not the other way around. I have been calling to play the game like the left for years.