California Coffee Shop Sees 312% Sales Surge After Supporting Charlie Kirk Despite Cancel Campaign
California Coffee Shop Sees 312% Sales Surge After Supporting Charlie Kirk Despite Cancel Campaign
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In the age-old battle between David and Goliath, sometimes the slingshot comes in the form of a coffee cup.

The latest battlefield emerged in the affluent hills of Rancho Santa Fe, California, where the aroma of Italian espresso mingles with ocean breezes. Here, in one of the state’s last conservative enclaves, a family-owned café discovered what happens when you refuse to bend the knee to the outrage machine.

The crime? Honoring a conservative figure with simple stickers on coffee cups.

Sara De Luca, owner of Invita Café, didn’t get the memo about cowering before the aforementioned mobs. When she decided to honor Charlie Kirk with commemorative stickers reading “Thank you, Charlie Kirk” and “We Love You,” she approached it with the same straightforward courage that built her business nine years ago.

“I didn’t think twice,” she said, noting her previous support for Israel during wartime. This wasn’t political grandstanding; it was simply standing by someone her business had hosted and supported for years.

The digital mob descended swiftly. Phone lines jammed with “horrible and horrific things.” Google and Yelp pages flooded with one-star reviews from people who’d never set foot in the café. It was the kind of coordinated harassment that has broken countless small businesses, forcing them to issue groveling apologies just to make it stop.

Then something extraordinary happened. The real community—not the Twitter avatars or anonymous reviewers—showed up. Sales didn’t just recover; they exploded by 312 percent. Lines stretched 30 to 45 minutes long, filled with what De Luca called “righteous people” who came to support both the business and the principles it defended.

From ‘Fox News Digital’:

“I was actually tearing [up] because I was like, ‘Where did these people come from?’ We went 312% up in sales. We were flooded with righteous people just showing up, supporting us, defending us.

They were defending Charlie. Obviously, we all were. We didn’t have any haters show up. It was only the righteous showing up—just God-fearing people.”

The support transcended geography. A caller from Georgia sent $500 to buy the next hundred drinks. Another customer walked in, left $300 on the counter, and walked out without a word. These weren’t orchestrated responses from political organizations—they were spontaneous acts of solidarity from Americans tired of watching the mob win.

When Faith Communities Fight Back

The transformation at Invita Café revealed something the cancel culture crowd never understands: real communities have deeper roots than social media campaigns. De Luca’s church, Awaken, mobilized not with hashtags but with actual bodies in the building. Members drove from across San Diego County, some waiting nearly an hour for their coffee, turning what was meant to be a punishment into a celebration.

Look, this wasn’t just about coffee; this was about something more fundamental: the right of a small business owner to express her values without facing economic execution.

The Italian-inspired café, built on De Luca’s vision of creating a space where “espresso is the magnet that unites people,” became exactly that: a rallying point for Americans exhausted by the constant demands for ideological conformity.

Here’s what the left doesn’t get: Their greatest weapon—economic intimidation—only works when targets stand alone. When communities refuse to abandon their neighbors, when people vote with their wallets as powerfully as they vote at the ballot box, the mob’s impotence is exposed.

The message reverberating from this small California coffee shop should absolutely terrify the cancel culture brigade.

De Luca believes “God is so behind all of this,” and looking at the results, it’s hard to argue. A coordinated attack meant to destroy instead created a nationwide network of support. Stickers meant to be controversial became symbols of resistance. A small business that should have been crushed instead thrived beyond imagination.

Yes, we’re witnessing something beautiful here—the blueprint for defeating cancel culture.

I’ll say it plainly: This is how we win. Courage from business owners, solidarity from communities, and the simple recognition that those who scream loudest online often represent the smallest fraction of actual consumers.

Every conservative who’s ever hesitated to support their values publicly should take note. The mob thinks it’s invincible until someone stands up to it. Then, like most bullies, it crumbles when confronted by genuine strength. Haven’t we seen enough to know this is true?

Key Takeaways

  • Small businesses thrive when they stand firm against cancel culture mobs
  • Conservative consumers wield massive economic power when mobilized together
  • Faith-based communities provide the backbone for defending American values

Sources: Fox News

October 2, 2025
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Jackson Wright
Jackson Wright is a journalist, writer and editor with over two decades of experience. He has worked with three newspapers and eight online publications, and he has also won a Connecticut short story contest entitled Art as Muse, Imaginary Realms. He has a penchant for writing, rowing, reading, video games, and Objectivism.
Jackson Wright is a journalist, writer and editor with over two decades of experience. He has worked with three newspapers and eight online publications, and he has also won a Connecticut short story contest entitled Art as Muse, Imaginary Realms. He has a penchant for writing, rowing, reading, video games, and Objectivism.