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You've touched on a fascinating, recurrent cultural theme: when the inability to acquire a commodity creates a feeling of inferiority, one of the most frequent defense mechanisms is to negate the value of that commodity. This can be seen historically in the folklore of the Ancient Hebrews where the god of a bunch of backward poor shepherds - surrounded by rich, powerful agricultural societies - shows a divine preference for meat sacrifices over grain in the story of Cain and Abel. Today it can be seen in the aversion that the poor of the United States frequently have toward expensive fruits and vegetables. It is no surprise at all that those unaccustomed to (or materially incapable of partaking of) fancy-schmancy coffee culture would develop a distaste for it.
But if you think that the marketing strategy of a company like Monster represents a resistance movement of the oppressed, you have missed the mark entirely. Monster doesn't care about the poor. They want the business of the poor (or "working class") just as much as you do. The difference is that they have a marketing scheme that appeals to the poor more effectively than yours. If you change your marketing strategy to be more competitive in that respect, you're not "joining the resistance". You're just making more money. There's nothing wrong with making more money as a small business owner, but that's a far cry from a resistance.
If you want to eliminate class oppression, you need to eliminate class because class IS oppression. If you're feeling radical enough about the resistance, you would have to start by freely giving and sharing equal control and ownership of your shop with your working-class employees. That's right - despite their exceptional understanding of espresso culture, baristas are the poor working class, too. It goes to show that coffee education will not elevate quality of life for the poor, but it will elevate YOUR quality of life. I gladly encourage you to do so, but just don't call it a working class resistance.
Some industries like to keep exclusivity i.e. diamonds, Krug, etc., but there must be products or services that have once been seen as fancy but marketed to everyone. Maybe looking to some producers in the wine industry?
I don't know, tough question.
So screw the rhetorical propoganda, just make it look nice?? Ignorance is bliss, eh? I actually like this idea. Quality is overrated; aesthetics, convenience, and routines get people who are not rich to spend money much more often. Is this what you are suggesting??
Well said Jake. Leaves me wondering if there is any hope for me with the working folk. Perhaps it is just a matter of finding the pocket of wannabe intellectual urbanites, like me, in this rural setting.
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