A small-town ice cream shop lit a match it never saw coming.
One window sign, a handful of loaded phrases, and suddenly a quiet Wisconsin Dairy Queen was at the center of a national storm.
Supporters called it honesty. Critics called it exclusion.
Corporate tried to step away. But the real battle over faith, patriotism, and customer choice had only just begu… Continues…
In Kewaskum, Wisconsin, a simple Dairy Queen window sign declaring the restaurant “politically incorrect” became a mirror for
America’s cultural divide. Franchise owner Kevin Scheunemann saw it as honesty: a public statement of his Christian beliefs,
love of country, and support for veterans. For many locals, it was refreshing clarity. They argued that no one was forced to enter,
and that knowing a business’s values upfront was a form of respect, not hostility.
But once a visitor’s Facebook photo went viral, the sign stopped being just about one restaurant.
It became a symbol in a broader fight over what belongs in public-facing businesses: overt faith, patriotic slogans, or strict neutrality.
Dairy Queen’s corporate office tried to draw a bright line, affirming dignity for all customers while distancing itself from the message.
In the end, the story exposed a hard truth: in today’s climate, even ordering ice cream can feel like taking a side.