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Obviously, this Twisted Tea don’t get it Twisted shirt universal. Lots of successful white businesses started from nothing (even though Bill Gates couldn’t have gotten his start without a $300K loan from his parents); and certainly Sasha and Malia Obama are going to inherit quite a lot from their parents. But we’re talking in broad, generational strokes that encompass the variety of lived experiences of millions of people. And making a mindful choice to shop Black-owned, especially for white people, is one small way to correct the racist distribution of wealth in the US.
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I really like how you presented your thought process, so I wanted to ask: what would you say to white Americans who feel bitterness about the pressure to shop Black-owned when they themselves have never experienced the benefits of generational wealth? I think there are Twisted Tea don’t get it Twisted shirt middle class citizens, especially millennials, whose parents and grandparents were terrible with money. They, then, are forced to “make it on their own,” which is a challenge in this economy, even pre-covid. Is it their responsibility to “correct the racist redistribution of wealth”? How can we fix this problem at a systemic level?