Gianno Caldwell, a conservative pundit who works for Fox News, was asked to leave a restaurant in North Miami, Florida, on Sunday because of his job. On Sunday, he was furious about what the restaurant’s management had done.
The owners of Paradis Books and Bread asked Caldwell and his group to leave early on a Saturday morning because their “behavior” and “comments” had made the staff and other customers feel “extremely uncomfortable.”
Rachel Campos-Duffy asked Caldwell about the situation. He told her that the group had discussed working at the legacy media source, values, violent crime, and progressive district attorneys.
The restaurant owners told Caldwell and his friends, “You’re not welcome here because our ideas are different.”
Yesterday, I and a few neighbors I’m just getting to know were maltreated. It makes me think of what Martin Luther King Jr. said in 1963: “Unfairness everywhere is a threat to fairness everywhere.”
He said, “It was a terrible wrong.”
Caldwell also drew comparisons to the time of Jim Crow laws in the South, which made racial discrimination a part of everyday life.
He said, “There’s a bull’s eye on the backs of conservative Black people, and that needs to stop.” “I can’t tell much of a difference between this and the Jim Crow South if this isn’t it.”
About 2 million people saw Caldwell’s post after the conversation, in which he called Paradis’ response to the issue “outrageous.”
They asked, “Are you a conservative?” Yes, I said “yes” to your question. Caldwell said it. “Taken for Granted: How Conservatism Can Win Back the Americans That Liberalism Failed to Get” is the title of my book. It would help if you got the book.
Caldwell told the owner that his brother had been killed by gunfire the summer before in Chicago, Illinois.
Caldwell says that he recently told the restaurant owners what he had told members of Congress on Capitol Hill: that he was trying to get justice for his brother and that there was a lot of violence in the United States.
In response to Caldwell’s group on Instagram, Paradis said, “They talked badly about women and used eugenics to defend their views on Roe v. Wade.”
As soon as it was clear that they were done eating, we told them that our beliefs were different and that their language was not appropriate for our business, the statement says. “It’s your business plan, and I like that,” said one group member.
The statement said, “As a venue owned by both black people and women, we strongly stand by our zero-tolerance policy.”