July 4: Virtue signals on twitter about America being on "stolen land" (lol fuck off), draws ire of conservatives, Unilever parent company drops $2 Billion in market cap amid possible boycott https://nypost.com/2023/07/06/ben-jerrys-boycott-calls-unilever-stock-falls/
July 6: Ben Cohen arrested at a Free Assange rally in Washington DC hosted by Code Pink https://nypost.com/2023/07/06/ben-jerrys-co-founder-ben-cohen-arrested-during-dc-protest/
July 8: Indian chief contacts B&J letting them know that his tribe was from the land their headquarters is now on, and is happy to take the land back (no answer so far) https://nypost.com/2023/07/07/ben-jerrys-hq-is-on-native-american-land-vermont-chief/
I honestly don't think I've ever seen a petard-hoisting this fast before.
I think the Budweiser event was so powerful it created a social graph for these kinds of boycotts.
People you don't know really well like a coworker say they're boycotting Budweiser, but you didn't know how they felt about this specific issue or boycotts. That creates a social link where you know you can tell them directly about Ben and Jerry's and other things like that.
Without Budweiser you wouldn't bring up B&J, but now you can tell them B&J is also up to no good and so the momentum behind a boycott grows faster and easier than before.
Leftism only got as far as it did by making people too scared to be honest with each other. Because if you let someone know you aren't comfortable with Pride Parades waving dongs in kids' faces you might get destroyed socially.
Now people are realizing they aren't alone, that they actually can say these things and aren't evil for doing so. Its undoing the isolating effect the Left has been pushing for decades.