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Just looked it up, I've been on a Scotch kick lately and I'm not eager about more price increases- there's a 25% tariff Trump instated his first term, but was suspended for five years in 2021. Supposedly the industry lost 600 million pounds during the time they were in effect.
I think this one was always going to stick because Trump doesn't like booze. Annoying, but here we are.
Scotch is also the blue-coded whisky; Bourbon and Rye are the red tribe hard liquors of choice.
What's maximally red-coded? Probably Jack Daniels?
I feel like an upscale liquor shelf kind of supersedes the tribes. I would be equally unsurprised to see BTAC bottles at a car dealer's home in the suburbs as an academic's bungalow in the city.
American Whiskey, regardless of price- Red
Scotch- Blue, but maybe a conservative blue
Other expensive imported whiskey- Black
Nice non-craft beer(the stuff labeled ‘imports’ regardless of country of origin)- red
Craft beer- blue
Cheap beer(‘domestics’)- Hispanic
Vodka- pure alcoholic
I would say the maximally red coded alcohol is probably shiner, yuengling, or some other premium but domestic beer with a strong regional distribution pattern, narrowly followed by jack and coke(which in my dialect could be any American whiskey and any dark soda- budget brands, Pepsi, Dr Pepper, etc).
Yuengling is, in some circles, more disliked by craft beer snobs than even Bud/Coors/Miller, due to the pro-Trump/anti-union stance of the owner. Should unions ever shift to be more right-leaning, I'll be watching the discourse with great interest.
Unions are shifting to be more right leaning- they supported Trump in the last election.
Yeah, that's why I'm wondering if the shift will eventually lead to, "Well, Yuengling is anti-union, which we now like, but still pro-Trump, which is bad."
Unions are so popular that I’m wondering if it’ll be more of a ‘republicans are only pretending to be pro-union/democrats are arrogantly imposing instead of listening to unions’.
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