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Starbucks is More Than Coffee

Joining the political circuit is none other than Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz.  As part of his highly publicized blitz to end partisan gridlock in Washington D.C., Schultz will participate in a “Conversation with America” Town Hall meeting on Tuesday, September 6th.

The nationwide telephonic Town Hall is being organized by “No Labels,” a non-profit organization that describes itself as a citizen-led movement aimed at pressuring elected leaders to set aside partisan differences and focus on solving the nation’s problems.

In addition to Schultz, the Town Hall will include No Labels Co-Founders Mark McKinnon and John Avlon.  Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, will also participate.

Schultz has written an open letter that will run as a full-page advertisement in the Sunday and Tuesday New York Times, and in the Tuesday USA Today.  In the letter, Schultz repeats his call for a boycott of political donations until the country’s leaders approve a “transparent, comprehensive, bipartisan debt-and-deficit package is reached that honestly, and fairly, sets America on a path to long-term financial health and security.”

Several large businesses including AOL, J.C. Penney, Pepsi, Whole Foods Market, the Walt Disney Company, J Crew, Zipcar, and NASDAQ have already taken the pledge. 

Moreover, over 1,800 individuals and nearly 300 pledges from business owners promising to do “everything possible” to accelerate job creation have been made.

In a letter released to all Starbucks gift card holders today, Schultz stated:

Dear Starbucks Friend and Fellow Citizen:

I love our country. And I am a beneficiary of the promise of America. But today, I am very concerned that at times I do not recognize the America that I love.

Like so many of you, I am deeply disappointed by the pervasive failure of leadership in Washington. And also like you, I am frustrated by our political leaders’ steadfast refusal to recognize that, for every day they perpetuate partisan conflict and put ideology over country, America and Americans suffer from the combined effects of paralysis and uncertainty. Americans can’t find jobs. Small businesses can’t get credit. And the fracturing of consumer confidence continues.

We are better than this.

Three weeks ago, I asked fellow business leaders to join me in urging the President and the Congress to put an end to partisan gridlock and, in its place, to set in motion an upward spiral of confidence. More than 100 business leaders representing American companies – large and small – joined me in signing a two-part pledge:

First, to withhold political campaign contributions until a transparent, comprehensive, bipartisan debt-and-deficit package is reached that honestly, and fairly, sets America on a path to long-term financial health and security. Second, to do all we can to break the cycle of economic uncertainty that grips our country by committing to accelerate investment in jobs and hiring.

In the weeks since then, I have been overwhelmed by the heartfelt stories of Americans from across the country, sharing their anguish over losing hope in the strongest and most galvanizing force of all – the American Dream. Some feel they have no voice. Others feel they no longer matter. And many feel they have been left behind.

We cannot let this stand.

Please join other concerned Americans and me on a national call-in conversation on Tuesday September 6th hosted by “No Labels,” a nonpartisan organization dedicated to fostering cooperative and more effective government. To learn more about the forum and the pledges, visit www.upwardspiral2011.org

America is at a fragile and critical moment in its history. We must restore hope in the American Dream. We must celebrate all that America stands for around the world. And while our Founding Fathers recognized the constructive value of political debate, we must send the message to today’s elected officials in a civil, respectful voice they hear and understand, that the time to put citizenship ahead of partisanship is now.

Yours is the voice that can help ignite the contagious upward spiral of confidence that our country desperately needs.

With great respect,

Howard Schultz

Chief Executive Officer, Starbucks Coffee Company

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, contributions from business political action committees totaled $334 million in the 2009-2010 cycle, while individual donations from the business community were about $1 billion, split almost equally between the Republican and Democratic parties.

Since 1994, Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz has made campaign donations totaling $144,200, with $113,700 to Democratic candidates, $29,500 to special interest groups, and $1,000 to Republican candidates.

Interesting how this longtime supporter of the Democratic party is now attempting to become part of the process.

With 17,009 stores in 50 countries, including over 11,000 in the United States, over 1,000 in Canada, over 700 in the United Kingdom, and over 150 in Turkey, the Seattle, Washington, based Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse company in the world. 

Scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, September 6th, participants can RSVP at http://www.nolabels.org. The Town Hall meeting will be also streamed live.

COMMENTS

  • http://www.williamlewis.us William E. Lewis, Jr.

    If you guys are going to hijack my article, the least you can do is recommend it to others.

    • westcoastpatriette

      It’s done.

    • acat

      “being mugged” experience.

      Perhaps he was too young (or too insulated) to see the Carter era for what it was…

      That said, I gotta agree with one of the posters above .. “No Labels” means “Stop calling me a liberal”. I’ll be happy to do so .. once Mr. Schultz stops acting like one.

      Mew

      • westcoastpatriette

        Perfectly said as only the cat can say it.

      • runner12

        NT

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  • Jack_Savage

    Schultz can go pack sand. Or coffee beans. Whichever

  • westcoastpatriette

    This guy needs to stick with making the best coffee in the world and stay out of politics. If I could find another coffee bean that even comes close to their French Roast, I would stop buying his coffee. But I’ve tried tons of other coffees and nothing comes close.

    This leaves me with a dilemma. Am I willing to suffer that much for the sake of my country? It would be a huge sacrifice to give up my Starbucks French Roast coffee. Anybody have any suggestions?

  • http://www.usdebateboard.com usdebateboard

    I’m a man on a mission to find the best K-cups around. Starbucks is late to that party.

  • Christine (Trelaina)

    Assuming you’ve tried….which ones? I’m quite fond of it…no aftertaste in the dark roasts, and the price is decent for what you get.

  • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

    Not even close.

  • acat

    Are any of these near you?

    I’d point you at Caribou, but .. they seem to be a midwestern thing.

    Starbucks is good, but .. there are better.

    Mew

  • Menlo

    Colombian coffee is best. I’ve found the grocery store brand tastes the same as Folger’s. That helps since the Colombian variety is always excluded when all the other kinds go on sale. It’s still cheaper than Starbuck’s, and it tastes better too.

  • Christine (Trelaina)

    They donate coffee to the troops.

  • rbdwiggins

    The best coffee in the world is grown on the islands…

    Kona, Maui and Kauai.

    Especially, my favorite, the 100% Kona Peaberry.

  • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

    The best coffee in the world is here.

  • acat

    fresh filtered water and whole beans.

    Mew

  • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

    as it is about how it’s made.

  • conservativecurmudgeon

    Starbucks uses a screw roaster, and they actually shut the firing chamber down when it reaches it’s (very high) French Roast temperature. The beans sit and tumble around inside the smoke and chaff and other effluent. This is what gives ALL their coffees that charred, smokey character. I find such coffees are overpoweringly side-of-the-tongue bitter, and the subtleties of the regional varietals burned and gone. Their Sumatra tastes just like their Tanzania that tastes just like their “Cafe Verona”, and on and on and on… unless they slather flavoring oils all over it, and then it tastes like charred Caramel, or what have you.

    A Sivetz Roaster, on the other hand, is more like a hot-air popcorn popper, and it roasts beans very evenly atop a coloumn of hot air, not in a metal drum (which is more like a clothes dryer) where the beans are in constant contact with searing hot metal surfaces. A Fluid Bed roaster depends on the hot air itself to roast the coffee. Thus, the beans tumble around on themselves, away from the hot metal, and roast very evenly, brought up to a temperature for a darkened French roast, (usually around 465 degrees), and then water-quenched to stop the roast development precisely. All of the chaff and smoke and crap is vented off the roast, and burned in the afterburner, or collected in the chaff cyclones.

    Also, Starbucks has only two roasting facilities, and thus most of their coffees are warehoused for long periods of time. It is all outgassed and stale by the time you drink it.

    So, yes, keeping your coffee whole bean (and in the freezer in an airtight container until you grind it) ) will result in the best cup. And use a French Press so the essential oils aren’t soaked up in a paper filter.

  • APA Guy

    Caramel Kiss Island and the Lucky Lagoon (when it’s in season) brands. The smell alone is enough to make me jump out of bed, but the taste is outstanding as well.

  • westcoastpatriette

    You’ve given me enough suggestions to keep myself busy for a while tasting all of these different coffees.

    Not sure if I will have success. I do buy the whole beans and grind-as-you-go, so to speak, but I’m not into espresso. Somehow, I got into the habit of using Irish Creme creamer and the combination with the French Roast is indescribable.

    I’ll keep you posted on my search and am open to any other suggestions anyone may have.

    Have a great labor day weekend.

  • acat

    Consider these guys:

    Really good coffee, highly duplicatable business model, and .. I don’t think anyone can call them liberals.

    Mew

  • NRPax

    The fact that he can refer to them as non-partisan and keep a straight face suggests appalling ignorance or willful blindness. Either way, I am as impressed with his letter as I am with the pleas for a “new civil tone” that came out after the Giffords shooting.

  • George Neitz

    I have recently purchased the Dunkin Donuts dark roast K cups if you like strong it will knock your socks off

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    I like the ‘Rainforest espresso’ when I’m having it my usual way, with ice and milk. I like the ‘Mocha Java’ when I’m having it hot with flavors.

  • izoneguy

    If my wife wants a triple flip-off latte cool lot whatever – I wait in the car.
    She calls me a caveman.
    I told her that cavemen discovered fire
    and hunted while the women tended to
    children and cooked the food.
    If that is the case – I will gladly be a caveman.

  • snowshooze

    If not for gridlock, Obama would be King.
    Somehow, this drivel from Starbucks Yuppie Coffee… does not surprise me in the least.
    I will make a point of not patronizing them.