The politics of brand names

Do the public stances of a business and its owners affect whether you’ll buy their product?

John I. Carney
4 min readMar 14, 2024

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A collage of two images — on the left, a jar of Penzeys Spices’ Fox Point Seasoning, and on the right, a jar of The Spice House’s Lake Shore Drive seasoning.

Years ago, a family member introduced me to Penzeys Spices, out of Wisconsin, a mail order business (they have some retail locations as well, but none near me) selling all sorts of individual spices, specialty spice blends, gift boxes, and so on. I loved their products and have ordered frequently from them over the years. Their physical catalog (this was before online ordering became omnipresent) was packed with great recipes showing you how to use their herbs and spices. The recipes were so popular that for a while, they even published a print cooking magazine, Penzeys ONE.

At the time, all they were was a spice company. At some point after that, the founder, Bill Penzey Jr., became outspoken about political issues, and began using his company’s e-mail lists and catalogs as a forum. Penzeys sometimes even builds sales or special promotions around some political event, anniversary, election, or what have you.

Penzey is unabashedly liberal. Even in cases when I agreed with the content of his basic argument, I would sometimes get annoyed with the shrill, polarizing way he would express it. I tend to think of myself as a moderate — I lean left on some issues, right on others, but strongly believe…

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John I. Carney

Author of “Dislike: Faith and Dialogue in the Age of Social Media,” available at http://www.lakeneuron.com/dislike