popular transgender social media influencer, to commemorate her 365-day transition to "girlhood". Despite the fact that the so-called "partnership" between the beer brand and Mulvaney only amounted to a short social media video, the reaction swiftly escalated, with conservatives threatening to boycott the brand and destroying cans of the product on video, while others allegedly called in bomb threats to Anheuser-Busch facilities."One of the suspects commented on the male victim's choice of alcohol and uttered anti-homosexual derogatory slurs as he approached the victim," the York Regional Police's statement explained.Police also noted later that the victims had not even purchased Bud Light that night, but rather a different, unspecified product that the attackers mistook for Bud Light."But it wasn't.
He actually didn't have Bud Light," a spokesperson for the department told Global News. "I guess there were some rainbow colors on the cans and so it was initiated that way...Then upon further determination as to what they purchased, they still weren't happy with that.
Let's just put it that way. And the insults continued."Help us identify this suspect and two others sought for a possible hate-motivated assault that occurred outside a liquor store in the area of Jane St.
and Major Mackenzie Dr. W. in Vaughan on Sat., May 6th, 2023, around 8:30 p.m. More information here: https://t.co/OMRZF9vmi9 pic.twitter.com/p9LtIrfuB7A photo of one of the attackers was released on Twitter in a bid to solicit public help in identifying them.