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Mubarak Dahir is editor of the Express Gay News in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., a paper
affiliated with this publication. He can be reached at mdahir@expressgaynews.com.
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HOME > VIEWPOINT > EDITORIAL
By: MUBARAK DAHI COMMENTS
TO PARAPHRASE AN adage, you can’t have your mug of beer and drink it, too.
But that’s exactly what members of the Coors family, namesakes of the
Coors Brewing Company in Golden, Colo., are trying to get away with among gay
customers of their company.
Pete Coors, a former chair of the Coors Brewing Co., is now a Republican candidate
for the United States Senate from the state of Colorado.
Pete Coors has also become an outspoken supporter of a federal constitutional
amendment to ban same-sex marriage.
Political analysts who have been watching the U.S. Senate race in Colorado
say Pete Coors took the strong stand that he did — not just against same-sex
marriage, but fully in favor of an amendment to enshrine the ban in the Constitution — to
appeal to conservatives who make up a substantial base of his candidacy.
Pete Coors’ anti-gay stance on the Federal Marriage Amendment has re-ignited
calls from many gay leaders for us to stop buying Coors beer at gay bars.
Furthermore, a large number of Coors family members — who profit directly
from the Coors Brewing Co. — are board members of a private institution,
the Castle Rock Foundation, which gives away millions of dollars to conservative,
anti-gay organizations.
This fact, and its consequences, is even more important for us to consider
than Pete Coors’ anti-gay position on the Federal Marriage Amendment.
The Castle Rock Foundation was founded in 1993 with a $36.5 million endowment
from the Adolph Coors Foundation.
Since then, it has given away millions of dollars of grants to often conservative,
right-wing, anti-gay groups.
According to the group’s Web site, four out of five of the board members
of the Castle Rock Foundation are members of the Coors family. Pete Coors is
the vice president.
Where did Pete Coors and the other Coors family members on the board of the
Castle Rock Foundation get their money and power? Through the Coors Brewing
Co.
AND YET, THE Coors Brewing Co. and the Coors family have gone on a public
relations blitz to distance themselves from each other.
In a nutshell, they each claim to be independent of one another, and thus
not responsible for the others’ actions or stands on gay rights.
In fact, in early June, the Coors Brewing Co. issued a letter stating that
Pete Coors’ position on the Federal Marriage Amendment does not reflect
the corporate values of the Coors Brewing Co.
The letter stated that the company does not endorse discrimination against
gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender people.
In addition, the Coors Brewing Co. has started running full-page ads in gay
newspapers and magazines around the country. In the ads, humorously headlined “Straight
talk from Coors,” the company goes to some length to describe the positive
changes within the company in the past couple of decades with respect to how
it treats gay employees.
Most notably, the change is reflected in the company’s nondiscrimination
policy, as well as the fact that the company offers health benefits to partners
of gay employees.
The Coors Brewing Co. has had a long and tortured history on gay issues, dating
back to the early 1970s, when it used to require prospective employees to submit
to a lie detector test.
One of the questions on the test was whether or not the hopeful employee was
a homosexual.
Outrage over that practice prompted former San Francisco supervisor Harvey
Milk to kick-off a boycott of the Coors Brewing Co. in 1974.
In 1995, much of the steam of the boycott evaporated when the beer maker instituted
its much-friendlier policies toward gay employees.
The company even hired Mary Cheney, Dick Cheney’s famously lesbian daughter,
to handle gay outreach.
IRONICALLY, AS FORMER chair of the Coors Brewing Co., Pete Coors has taken
much of the credit for advancing the company’s positions on gay employees.
He even claims to have gone out personally to gay bars to promote his beer
and his company’s more enlightened
outlook.
Pete Coors’ opponent in the senate race is making much of that history,
in an attempt to tarnish Pete Coors with the state’s much-coveted right-wing
voters.
So Pete Coors is trying to live down his past, thus embracing the Federal
Marriage Amendment with such gusto.
So on the one hand we have the Coors Brewing Co. chatting up gays and extolling
the virtues of its corporate policies toward us.
Hey, that Pete Coors guy, he can do whatever he wants as a private citizen,
the company seems to be saying; you have to evaluate us independently, on our
own policies.
On the other hand, you have Pete ...
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