Members of an Indigenous tribe have reportedly expressed interest in taking back the land now occupied by popular ice cream makers Ben & Jerry's after the company posted a Fourth of July tweet calling for America to return "stolen" land.https://t.co/NODC7UTfxx
— 13WHAM (@13WHAM) July 7, 2023
MORE Per the New York Post: "Ben & Jerry’s HQ is on ‘stolen’ Native American land, Vermont chief says".
Ben & Jerry’s has called on the US to give back “stolen Indigenous land” including Mount Rushmore — and now a Native American chief in Vermont said he’d like to talk about the land that’s under the ice cream maker’s headquarters.
Haw! Time to put 'em money where forked tongue is, palefaces.
H/T: Sondrak's Gulch

About the only place on this tired old planet that doesn't have "stolen" land is Antarctica.
ReplyDeleteB&J could move there. I can imagine them surviving on penguin meat and seaweed.
I imagine Chief Don Stevens knows he won't get anything out of B&J, but I give him kudos just for bringing it up. But who knows? Maybe he can get a shakedown boycott going that will get his tribe some money.
ReplyDeleteHoist on your own retard makes me laugh every single time.
ReplyDeleteShoving hypocrisy down theiir throats is hilarious.
Lefties are always surprised/shocked when their plans have repercussions. They never think it (whatever it is) includes them, because they were just standing up for the down-trodden.
ReplyDeleteB&J's parent company Unilever lost 2 billion over this debacle. To paraphrase, 'sit down, shut up, and just make ice cream'.
ReplyDeleteit is good that the natives call them on it. most colleges have started events like it's a struggle session by noting that the college is on stolen land. more natives need to show up and accept their offering... maybe even peacfully protest.
ReplyDeleteThere's really only one solution to this... Unilever signs over the corporation, the brand, and all real property to Elizabeth Warren.
ReplyDelete