They call it equity
Damn, that diffuse thinning hair for all 3 looks horrific. Based on neck and shoulder placement, dude in the middle got lower in the 2nd pic.They call it equity
I suspect they figured men would want to line up and pay extra to virtue signal.
I suspect they were wrong
I'm off to open a bagel shop in NYC that won't sell to Jews.They even tried promoting their soy latte to entice their target male demographic, but to no avail.
There's also the fact they chose to advertise both as a Vegan Café, and w/ this discriminatory pricing policy...You're working double time to insinuate people would never visit a vegan place with their vegan friends. I've been to plenty of places outside of my norm because friends wanted company. Gay and hip hop clubs, wine tastings, hookah bars and such.
Now if those places advertised that bald bastards were going to be charged extra and will be treated like 2nd class citizens I would have declined. To put it politely.
This actually works surprisingly well in many situationsSimple solution if you're a man, just say you're a woman. They can either take the man tax off or you can label them as transphobic if they don't remove the tax. Turn the leftist propaganda back on them.
They call it equity
It's weird he's trying really hard to say the sexist policy didn't affect them. Granted I live in Massachusetts, but we have two vegan places around here that have been wildly popular for about 10 years now on top of all the other niché vegan places that have been in business a while now. The vegan taco place around the corner wins a bunch of awards and tends to be the go-to place my friends go for tacos. If the food is good, people go to vegan places.
About as dumb as refusing to sell Nike products in a sporting goods store.
However, vegan cafes tend do well for a niche market. So I would be inclined to believe this policy played a bigger part than simple business failure
Vegan or vegetarian? I can only think of one vegan joint locally, and it's a cafe/bookstore/makeup/activist place called, aptly enough, "Everything Vegan". Never been in.
I would have thought a dedicated vegan cafe that only offers coffee black or with soy/almond milk would struggle. Unless some people really like that nutty taste I guess.
Edit: Although I see this place specialised in macadamia milk (as well as offering, soy, almond, cooconut and oat milk) which might be nice. Never tried it. The rest of the menu looks a bit limited.