How America’s Politics Are Making People Drink Less
In America’s never-ending culture and political wars, even a bottle of beer isn’t safe anymore.
Modelo’s recent struggles reveal something bigger and far more unsettling than declining alcohol sales.
They tell a story about fear, belonging, and how the country’s obsession with ideological purity is quietly reshaping the everyday habits of millions.
Once upon a time beer was the great equalizer. Blue-collar or white-collar, left or right, everyone could raise a glass.
But today, a sip of the wrong brand feels like a political statement. Bud Light learned that the hard way when a single social media post featuring a trans woman turned into a nationwide boycott.
Now, Modelo, ironically, the “winner” of that backlash, is facing its own problems, not from boycotts but from fear.
According to Constellation Brands, Hispanic consumers who make up half of Modelo’s customer base are drinking less.
Not for health reasons or changing tastes, but because they’re afraid.
Afraid of being seen. Afraid of being in the wrong place when federal agents are sweeping through neighbourhoods. Afraid that a casual night out could end in deportation.
This isn’t just about beer. It’s about the erosion of normal life. When people start changing their Friday-night routines out of fear, something has broken at the core of society. It’s no longer about left or right it’s about what kind of country America wants to be when citizens feel they must hide to stay safe.
The tragedy is that these fears ripple far beyond the communities most directly targeted. Every crackdown, every televised deportation, every speech about “taking our country back” chips away at the nation’s psychological stability.
As Businesses lose customers. Cities also lose energy. People lose trust. And somewhere between moral outrage and political theatre, the idea of America as a shared space begins to disappear.
We like to think politics only affects elections. But it now decides what people eat, watch, and even drink.
The personal has never been this political. And as fear creeps into daily habits, from grocery aisles to restaurants and bars, it starts doing something that no law ever could.
So yes, America’s migrant crackdown might be a “policy issue” in Washington. But on the ground, in quiet corners of the country, it’s become something far deeper
Because when people are too scared to toast to life, freedom starts to lose its flavour.