is insulted when their country shoves globalist policies in their faces?

Why in the world would we protest having 20 million mexicans treating our country like their own personal garbage dump and having to translate our signage to spanish for all the 4th grade educated donkey wranglers (this is a factual statement btw, not name calling )?

The Chinese don't want to Americanize their culture just as we don't want to mexicanize ours? But we're racists if we object????

By Christian Science Monitor
Starbucks must have known trouble was brewing when it first hung its forest-green logo outside a crimson pavilion in Beijing's Forbidden City.

Sure enough, when the symbol of globalization set up shop in the heart of China's most famed historic monument six years ago, Chinese "internauts" did indeed spread their injured dignity all over the Web in a flood of protest.

The world's largest purveyor of coffee drinks weathered that PR storm by the tactical expedient of taking down its sign and adopting a more discreet way of doing business. But that was then.

Coffeehouse's presence 'an insult'
Now another Web-launched tide of criticism is washing over the small cafe tucked in beside the Hall of Preserving Harmony. And with the Chinese blogosphere more than 30 times bigger today than it was last time the latte hit the fan, Starbucks (SBUX, news, msgs) has a much tougher problem on its hands.

"Some things can be changed by public opinion in Chinese cyberspace," says Hu Yong, a TV editor who writes a blog. "There are precedents."

Video: Baidu cleared for news
The current flap began last week, when Rui Chenggang, a well-known anchorman on Chinese state TV, posted an entry on his personal blog calling for Starbucks to be evicted from its corner of the Forbidden City. The coffee shop's presence "tramples on Chinese culture," he fulminated, and constitutes "an insult to Chinese civilization."

Since that post went up, Rui's site has registered more than half a million hits and collected thousands of messages of support for his position, the TV personality says.

One message, signed Shi Ershao, gives a flavor of the bitter dregs the site serves to America's favorite coffee roaster: "What a humiliation for China," the message reads. "Once it was military invasion; now it is economic invasion. Why can't they just drink tea?"