If you respect your customers, you focus on what your customers want—you don't try to impose your political ideology or your extreme views on them. “The customer is always right” used to mean something. #Verdict podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ver…
Wait, did Cruz actually say that? How about we evaluate his statement. A business has more rights to choose than members of government. Cruz, for example, represents half of the people of Texas. Those people are a wide variety of individuals. Different political parties, different genders, different beliefs, different skin colors, etc. Yet if you are not a MAGA RINO, then he attacks and discriminates against you. And as a sitting member of Congress, he has no right to discriminate against the American people. None.
@tedcruz I only moderately agree with this. There’s a certain amount of core values influence what goes into delivery of service or product. If a customer asks me to deliver something contrary to my core values, I’m probably not going to comply (see Colorado baker)
@tedcruz Some customers wanted less calories in their beer. Some customers wanted more colors on their clothes. What is your problem? Less calories and more colors really bothers you that much? Next it will be diet sodas and nail polish!
@tedcruz Okay but customers who want Pride stuff now can’t get it and customers who don’t want Pride stuff always had the option of, oh I dunno, not buying it
@tedcruz So, Target can’t do both? Sell what I want and what others might want?
@tedcruz Sometimes you have to educate the customer as they are not always right.
@tedcruz It's not about political ideology. It's about obtaining credits.
@tedcruz Isn’t that what you are doing?? I will shop where I want to shop, not because of what some politician says. You are making a issue out of a non issue for most Americans. And I say that because the Target where I live was very busy with a full parking lot. I live in a Red State.
@tedcruz The customer isn't always right. Ever work retail?