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So you thought you had choices?
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Basically all junk food anyway
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Yes, hugo boss is junk food
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he's mostly right. |
How many of those products do you use on a daily basis? LOL.
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I knew Nestle was huge, but I didn't know they owned L'oreal!
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I couldn't read the small image very well so click below for the full size. You'd be surprised how many of those products are made in China or from ingredient imported from China :2 cents:
http://i.imgur.com/k0pv0.jpg |
I remember reading somewhere that Proctor and Gamble makes almost all of the laundry detergents.
And there is no Pepperidge farm with quaint country people making those great cookies. It's actually just Campbell's, the same people who make the soup. |
I'm pretty sure the choices narrow even further than what's shown. My second job was a warehouse worker at Kraft, which was owned by Phillip Morris, the tobacco company. We even had a separate room with an advanced air filtration system so that the smokers could enjoy smoking inside the building, in their own room.
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There is always a boss of a boss of a boss n so on.........
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If its in a box and has a corporate label on it, there's a good chance you shouldn't be buying - or consuming - it.
My mother raised me on boxed food (hence my GFY posts - make the connection!) I have never once fed my children anything that came out of a box or a bag with a corporate label on it. Christie, Kraft, Monsanto - all the same. Same with personal hygeine products. My kids are adults now so I don't know what they buy, but I DO know this... They're fine. I'm nuts. I'll attribute that to growing up on Swanson TV Dinners, Schnieder's Bologna, Shopsy's Hot Dogs, Kraft Dinner and massive amounts of glorious Coca-Cola. Put me in the ground today and I'll look just as good 100 years from now. I am preserved and pickled because convenience foods defined the late 1960s through the 1970s. I'm a walking chemical minefield. And that does not always work out well. |
Each and every one of those brands would be making at least 207x more money if they just gave it all away for free. Worked well for us. Has to work for them.
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*Edit: Of course a sample isn't giving it "all" away for free. Just enough to get me hooked. |
Coca-Cola's largest individual shareholder is...
Kraft's largest shareholder is... One of P&Gs largest shareholder is... Berkshire Hathaway (Warren Buffett) Talk about almost having a monopoly on foods that are literally killing you. |
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It's interesting that in Australia the major brands are being completely pushed out by the supermarket chains (we have two big players and two small players), what the big chains are doing here is to replace brands with their own branded products.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/suppl...305-1ueg4.html |
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I don't see ManWin
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Heinz recently pulled out of a few supermarket categories because they could no longer sustain the squeeze that the supermarket branded products placed on them. http://www.smh.com.au/business/heinz...121-1nr1l.html |
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The ironic thing is that generic (aka store brand) products are usually made in the same factories as the brand.
When you're buying brand, you're usually not paying for a better quality product, but the huge marketing budgets national brands have. Edit: I missed U-Bob's post. Apologies. |
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This is interesting. The main brand has sub-brands. Coca Cola has Dasani, Frutopia and other drinks. Kraft has Cadbury, Ritz and other snacks. Kellogg’s has Corn Flakes, Vector and other foods. The product choices are there. However, many products are consolidated for a large company. For better reports, these foods can be separated into sections like Prepared Meats, Bakery Foods and Drinks.
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Nestle is the largest food producer in the world. That graphic is only the tip of what they produce.
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Personally I don't buy the vast majority of those products, but I don't see where there is a "lack of choice" here. They are all different products and you have your choice as to which one you wish to purchase. So what if they are all ultimately owned by several large corporations? Those corps run them each as an individual profit center, and allow the profit centers to compete with each other, so as to fill up various market niches. I really don't see the issue here.... No one lacks for choice, and you can choose to not buy any of them if you wish.
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No one should be surprised by this at all.
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So some supermarkets actually take advantage of the fact that a lot of people know that their products (sold under their own label) are produced in the same factories as some of the high end brands. So people buy those products thinking they're buying the same quality for a lwoer price while they are actually buying lower quality products. |
Ben And Gerrys' = Unilever....
I'm not going to say who I thought owned it - lol |
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