![]() The coffee company apologized on Twitter and in full-page newspaper ads, and the hashtag #BoycottStarbucks picked up steam on social media. In 2019, six police officers said they were asked to leave a Starbucks in Tempe, Ariz., after an “anxious, nervous or uncomfortable” customer asked a barista why the officers were there. What happened at Hilda and Jesse is not the first time restaurants have drawn attention for asking officers to leave or refusing them service. The restaurant on Sunday averaged a one-star rating, although Yelp “temporarily disabled” new reviews on the page. “I refuse to eat here again because you refused to serve on-duty police officers,” one reviewer wrote in a one-star review.Īnother reviewer from San Francisco left a five-star review, writing, “Thanks but I don’t want a gun with my waffles,” and adding that “San Francisco is San Francisco for a reason!” ![]() Instead, some of the reviewers criticized the restaurant’s decision to ask the officers to leave and called for a boycott, while others supported the request. ![]()
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