Opinion: My Tractor Supply hat was a symbol. Now it’s in the garbage - Cope Sneed Dilate

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Editor’s Note: David M. Perry is a journalist, historian and co-author of “The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe.” He is the associate director of undergraduate studies in the history department of the University of Minnesota. Subscribe to his newsletter, “Modern Medieval.” The views expressed here are those of the author. View more opinion on CNN.

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The hat was solid gray when I got it, but now it’s faded and splotchy, especially on the brim where a sweat line differentiates the light from the dark. It smells of bug spray, fish and gasoline. Still, the Tractor Supply Company (TSC) logo gleams red and white, with the red lettering, “For life out here,” emblazoning corporate logo.

don’t wear it much in the winter, as it’s not suitable for indoor use, but the moment the thaw comes and I start putting my old aluminum boats back in the water, when I start clearing brush, when my physical labor marks the turning of the season, this is the hat I wear. Partially it’s because I really want a comfortable hat when doing outdoor work, but also it’s a symbol of something to me. Spring is here. Time to clear. Burn. Plant. Repair. Launch. Fish.

The hat has history. Before it, I used to wear an old, green Red Sox hat when I went outside to work or to play. But one day, I pulled in a massive carp from the bottom of the St. Croix River and got so covered with fish slime that I made the terrible mistake of trying to wash my hat, and it disintegrated. The TSC hat took its place. I was wearing it when I caught the biggest walleye of my life in May.

After I read something on the internet on Thursday, I took off my hat and threw it into the trash.

That’s because the company — in what it says is an effort to distance itself from “nonbusiness activities” — caved to a right-wing boycott campaign and announced it would abandon its programs intended to foster diversity, equity and inclusion (in favor of, presumably, homogeneity, inequality and exclusion?). In a news release Thursday, TSC said it will stop sponsoring events like “pride festivals and voting campaigns” (not voting for anyone, just voting) and “withdraw our carbon emission goals and focus on our land and water conservation efforts.” The company said further that it would be eliminating DEI roles and “retire (its) current DEI goals while still ensuring a respectful environment.”

Predictably, conservatives are celebrating and liberals are now the ones calling for a boycott.

It’s possible that TSC has calculated that it can’t please everyone, that most of its customers are White conservatives or sympathize with that viewpoint — and so to hell with the rest of us. But I’ve been a loyal customer. When my pressurized well tank sprang a pinhole leak, I went straight to the store in Spooner, Wisconsin. I tow my boat using a 1 7/8 inch ball I bought there as well, and purchased an extra-tall jack and a trailer tire when I blew out a wheel coming back from a lake. I bought marine varnish there for the transom. All around me on this holiday weekend (I’m spending the week in the woods), I see products I purchased from a store that has told me — loudly — that it doesn’t see me as a valuable customer. Message received.

Except that the company is wrong in two ways. First of all, by assuming that bigots who threatened boycotts represent rural America. White conservatives may own the farms, but it’s people of color — many of them Latino/a of course, although in Minnesota you’ll find increasing numbers of Somali and Hmong farmers — who do the work (and are organizing more and more to acquire their own land). John Boyd Jr., founder of the National Black Farmers Association, told the Washington Post that Tractor Supply is “sending the wrong message to America.”

Failed Tennessee politician Robby Starbuck isn’t a farmer; he ran (unsuccessfully) to represent a primarily urban congressional district. I should know. I grew up right in that district.

Second, fighting climate change shouldn’t be a partisan issue. While much of the country is battling epic levels of heat, that’s not been the case in our neck of the woods. While years of drought have made the waters hotter and shallower, which isn’t good for our northern fish, this year so far we’ve replaced drought with cool weather, endless rain and terrible flooding. Today the fish in the St. Croix might be happy, but the river is too dangerous for me to find out. And while fishing is essential to my happiness, it is at least just a hobby. An era of drought or constant rain presents a disaster for farmers. In the real world instead of right-wing social media, it’s going to be a disaster for the corporations that serve them.

My hat is already in the garbage. Once a company has made this kind of decision, it’s hard to imagine ever going back. I threw a bag of cat litter and some frozen fish guts on top then put it out on the curb. It’s gone. But let this be a lesson to the next company faced by one of these campaigns (and right-wing influencers are already gearing up for the next one): You don’t have to comply. Tractor Supply Company could have just affirmed that it supports everyone who tries to live “life out here,” while making sure that “out here” is still around as we try to pull back from this era of fire and flood.
 
I threw a bag of cat litter and some frozen fish guts on top then put it out on the curb.
Suburban hands wrote this, farms don’t have curbs, let alone trash pickup.

What a poseur. Implying he’s a “man of the land” despite being an academic.
when I start clearing brush, when my physical labor marks the turning of the season, this is the hat I wear.
Dude, you’re trimming g a few rose bushes, give me an break.
 
The sooner these pantywaisted buffoons realize that corporations are NOT your friend, let alone genuine in their moral posturing, the sooner life will improve for everyone involved.

It's mindboggling how liberals and far-left wingnuts fellate corpos on one side of their mouth while decrying capitalism and all the usual lefty talking points out of the other. They want to have their cake and eat it too, jfc. Same goes for the far-right and conservative morons who do similar. The apocalypse can't come soon enough.
 
In a news release Thursday, TSC said it will stop sponsoring events like “pride festivals and voting campaigns” (not voting for anyone, just voting) and “withdraw our carbon emission goals and focus on our land and water conservation efforts.” The company said further that it would be eliminating DEI roles and “retire (its) current DEI goals while still ensuring a respectful environment.”
A company is abandoning the woke shit that doesn't matter in business, and also abandoning climate zealot nonsense in favor of things that ACTUALLY help the environment....and they scream as if this is a bad thing?


White conservatives may own the farms, but it’s people of color — many of them Latino/a of course, although in Minnesota you’ll find increasing numbers of Somali and Hmong farmers — who do the work
The owners are the ones spending the money. Cope and seethe, faggot.
 
"I'm a typical client at your store! I uhhh bought a ball hitch for my boat trailer that one time! And yacht varnish!"

What a fucking queer

Also

While years of drought have made the waters hotter and shallower, which isn’t good for our northern fish, this year so far we’ve replaced drought with cool weather, endless rain and terrible flooding. Today the fish in the St. Croix might be happy, but the river is too dangerous for me to find out.

When it's too hot out and no rain = bad
When it's too cool and rainy out = also bad
 
About the only things with logos in my wardrobe come down to three categories:

1) stuff built on to the product like the logo on a pair of sneakers or the tag on a pair of jeans
2) band tshirts
3) school or professional team tshirts

I don't have any baseball caps with logos beyond an actual baseball team I rarely use these days. I certainly don't own any logo'd items to show solidarity with some perceived political ideal that doesn't really exist beyond some marketing types figuring out how to exploit someone's position for brand allegiance.
 
I certainly don't own any logo'd items to show solidarity with some perceived political ideal that doesn't really exist beyond some marketing types figuring out how to exploit someone's position for brand allegiance.
Wait, are you saying you don't proudly wear your McDonald's rainbow-M hat to show solidarity with a company that values LGBTQIA+ representation in fast-food?
 
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Suburban hands wrote this, farms don’t have curbs, let alone trash pickup.
...
In fairness, it's possible to have suburban "sewer and sidewalk in the front, boonies in the back" situations, the primary difference being that the property line you need to clear the 5 foot tall allergy grasses doesn't extend near as far as in the country proper.
 
Gayness is the entire identity and personality of that sort.
I find it hilarious when they claim to be "queermunists" not unlike ADF and yet they meat ride corpos whenever they see a rainbow flag in a store window or something.
The sooner these pantywaisted buffoons realize that corporations are NOT your friend, let alone genuine in their moral posturing, the sooner life will improve for everyone involved.

It's mindboggling how liberals and far-left wingnuts fellate corpos on one side of their mouth while decrying capitalism and all the usual lefty talking points out of the other. They want to have their cake and eat it too, jfc. Same goes for the far-right and conservative morons who do similar. The apocalypse can't come soon enough.
Not even our country's flags are made here anymore

made-in-china-usa-flag-shirt-shirt.jpg
 
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