Wanted to be part of the buy-cott. Funny, I had never heard of Goya before the left boycotted them. I would encourage all folks who are tired of the left attempting to ruin people because we've annoyed them to participate in buy-cotts. Even if you don't really care for the products, just consider it your own little donation to freedom.
Without a link, this thread needs to be moved to the correct section. But to stay on topic of this thread......good for you, I guess? Boycotts are ****ing lame. I don't care what side of the aisle you sit on, why the hell would someone deny themselves of something they enjoy?
It is funny how liberals fail over and over again. A CEO says something positive about Trump and libs say boycott. And it ends up being a buy-cott! Libs!!
Nikes are too expensive. I used to enjoy Keurig until I discovered Nespresso. OMG, what a huge difference in quality & taste.
Or you could have bought made in America products like Bush's ... but I guess if bowing to the Trump god is your thing instead of buying American... whatever.
They are American made, right here in NJ. Good grief, I love how people know absolutely nothing other than "GOYA BAD!!!" now.
But that won't be poking a stick in the eye of all you liberals. It's not so much about loving Trump as it is about hating liberals. You know, the guys who run around excusing rioters and releasing criminals.
The Goya boycott is a current event. To answer your questions boycotts seem to be mostly started by lefties so you may want to ask them why they run from Chick-fil-A, My Pillow, and a few dozen other products that are advertising on FOX news. Here is a link to their products so you can break open your wallet. https://www.goya.com/en/ Good God, now lefties are triggered by beans.
Goya Foods Opens Four New Facilities Snippet: A new 350,000-sq.-ft. Houston facility sits on a 130-acre farm and will serve as a hub for the manufacturing and distribution of Goya's healthy bean lines. It will produce 1,000 cans of beans per minute, serving consumers west of the Mississippi River. It also "acts as a launching pad for global export from Houston's port and the Panama Canal." Company officials say it's an environmentally sustainable center equipped with an advanced water treatment plant that will recycle and purify water used for the soaking and transporting of beans and other products, crop irrigation and replenishment of local streams. The 250,000-sq.-ft. facility in Los Angeles will serve the West coast. It will have some packaging but will focus on distribution. A 151,000-sq.-ft. facility in Atlanta is strictly a distribution center and will serve Georgia and the surrounding area. The fully renovated 240,000-sq.-ft. facility in Secaucus, the current company headquarters, will be armed with a new rice packaging line to produce 600 bags of Goya rice mixes per minute, six times faster than its current production.
I think you just made that up: KDW was hired to upgrade the existing distribution facility with a larger distribution center accompanied by a cannery of equal size. The new 160,000 sq. ft. distribution center is now adjoined to a 160,000 sq. ft. production floor, both with their own corporate office, suites and staff. In addition to the building, KDW is the designer/builder for the supporting infrastructure including a storm drainage system, road improvements, wastewater treatment plant, rail spur and rail dock. The facility includes several "satellite" buildings to house sophisticated water pumps, boiler tanks, outdoor processing, refrigeration equipment and hydrostatic cooking tower. Goya Food's new production facility is strategically located in the south central U.S. to drive Goya's growth in the U.S. and Mexico markets. The location in Brookshire provides access to rail spur, the Port of Houston and abundant ground water. https://www.kdwltd.com/projects/goya-foods-processing-center Goya Foods (www.goya.com), Secaucus, N.J., in March opened four manufacturing, production and distribution facilities in Texas, Georgia, California and New Jersey as part of a $250 million investment for a global expansion of the company's healthy product lines. https://www.foodprocessing.com/industrynews/2014/goya-foods-opens-four-facilities/
https://www.goya.com/en/our-company/history No, they aren't. Just stop and do at least some half assed research. GOYA is and has always been an American company. Current head quarters are in NJ.
Haha. The only time I've ever bought Nikes was when my son was 6 years old and had to have a pair. They cost three times what I normally spent on his shoes and wore out in a month. Never again.