T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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297.1 | I'll keep an eye out for an article | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Nov 14 1988 21:49 | 9 |
|
I've heard this boycott was being revived but have no details.
However, I subscribe to "Mother Jones" (which probably places me
on some conservative hit list) and they will certainly mention it
sometime. They broke the original story. I love the way some
businesses believe that killing babies is OK if they are third
world. Why don't the right-to-lifers fight for these babies? Of
course they have been born already so maybe they don't count.
liesl
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297.2 | algae | HACKIN::MACKIN | Funeral on Jan 20 | Mon Nov 14 1988 23:31 | 16 |
| But Nestle isn't killing babies -- they're just supplying free formula
to new mothers. Its the parent's fault they don't realize that the
milk supply dries up if nursing isn't continued and that they can't
afford the full formula price and are forced to water it down, thus
causing infant malnutrition. Not to mention the diseases that come
from dirty water supplies.
*sigh* Some things never change; I remember boycotting Nestle many
years ago; had to have been as far back as the mid '70s. Never did go
back to buying their products.
Its a shame that boycotts are so ineffective. Look at how many years
Nestle didn't change their act; and when they did it really amounted to
a change in tactics.
Jim (a former Gulf-Western boycotter -- anyone remember that one?)
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297.3 | Industrial disease | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Tue Nov 15 1988 02:40 | 68 |
|
What I find interesting is that this is just the sort
of thing many people advocate in the name of humanitarianism.
They would have us send food to starving people (until the
money runs out), making them dependant on the food, and
ultimately condemning them to slavery to the system.
If Nestle is doing this in the third world, think of it
as nothing but an extension of the hand-out programs that
are so popular among 'concerned individuals'. Nestle is
just a part of the grander system of Industrialization,
and is merely using the same tactics employed by society
(at a slightly different level).
Would you condemn them for giving free samples to you?
No, but then you can probably afford the full price for
their formula (when you're not boycotting them for offering
the same free samples in the third world). I know, I know,
it's a bit more nefarious than that, but essentially it is
just capitalism in action... create a market, then exploit
it.
I love capitalism, but then I was born into it. To others
it must seem like a terrible beast devouring the planet.
Come to think of it, it looks that way to me too, sometimes.
But that beast has treated me well, so I can accept free
samples (and often throw them away unused). Third-worlders
are outworlders as far s capitalism is concerned. They are
'virgin markets'. And the naivete associated with virginity
is what lures them into the trap. Soon they are made into
slaves of capitalist products, such as formula. They must
then take jobs to buy the formula (and other necessary
products, such as chocolate, disposable diapers, and
frozen pizzas). Once they are so trapped, they must move
to the big cities, where they take the sweat shop jobs
nobody else wants. They slave away for pennies an hour,
all the while dreaming of the good life capitalism has to
offer.
But the good life is usually two or three generations
down the line for these new recruits (unless they are
particularly clever). But eventually they are swallowed
up by the system, and absorbed into the living melting pot
that is modern society.
We, the industrialized people of the planet, contain the
virus of modernization. We strive to take over the entire
planet, casting nature aside and mounting our earth-movers
to clear away new subdivisions for a new generation of
yuppies and techno-heads. Our virus spreads like a plague
across the planet, devouring everything it touches.
And as we spread the disease, the beast of Industrialization
grows larger and more powerful. It has long been too strong
for us to ever succeed in defeating it, so our best bet now
is to keep in its good graces. And so we, as loyal subjects
of the grand dragon, do wantonly seek to spread our virus to
the four corners and beyond. We consider it our grand mission
in life.
"Feed the poor," comes the rallying cry, and there are
hundreds mounted up to hand out free samples to the poor.
Now perhaps you know what they're really doing. They're
spreading the virus.
- Greg
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297.4 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:01 | 14 |
|
Greg, you seem to have faith that Nestle is "doing the right thing" by
passing out this formula. I think that if infant formula were healthy
for babies, Nestle's actions could be seen in a more generous light.
I've heard that many formulas have much less nutrition than a mother's
milk, that they don't help a baby form an immune system and that
they're filled with sugar. A friend who grew up in Thailand once told
me that there's a whole Thai generation raised on infant formula and
missing teeth. A chief complaint against Nestle is that they've
convinced mothers that formula is _better_ for babies than their own
milk.
Liz
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297.5 | Formula for profits | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:14 | 11 |
| re: .4 (Liz)
No, actually I am well aware that anything Nestle does,
they do for a profit. It's the great American way. My whole
point was that because the third-worlders don't know how
capitalism works, they are often ensnared by it unawares.
Of course the same could also be said of communism (or
any 'ism that is practiced in the industrialized world.)
- Greg
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297.6 | What is happening | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Tue Nov 15 1988 14:12 | 22 |
|
[moved by moderator]
CIMBAD::WALTON 16 lines 15-NOV-1988 11:07
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If I may interject...Nestle did indeed use marketing tactics which
led many to believe that the formula was better that the mother's
milk. Now, the problem is fairly large here, because when the mothers
stopped breastfeeding, they stopped passing on the immunities to
disease (ameobic dysentary, cholera, an a few others). combine
the lack of immunities with the desease ridden water used to make
the formula and the practice of watering the formula led to a marked
increase in infant deaths.
It is widely felt that Nestle took advantage of women who wouldn't
know any better in marketing the formula. And personally, I think
that is exactly what they did, and I won't knowingly buy Nestle
products for that reason.
Sue
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297.7 | | CVG::THOMPSON | I'm the NRA | Tue Nov 15 1988 19:02 | 6 |
| I would like to remind people, since Nestle's crime appears to
be being characterized as an American one, that Nestle is a
Swiss company. It is owned and operated by Swiss and not US
interests.
Alfred
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297.11 | did you re-read any of the previous replies? | LDP::SCHNEIDER | possessive of THEY = THEIR | Thu Mar 30 1989 02:02 | 4 |
| Some people will snipe at any note, including ones they apparently
haven't made any effort to understand.
Chuck, who should really know better than this
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297.12 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Thu Mar 30 1989 04:20 | 8 |
297.13 | Facts are available | TUT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Thu Mar 30 1989 13:43 | 9 |
| re: 10
Mike,
There's a whole history of supporting evidence. If you do not know
that history, ask, and I'm sure someone will provide info or a pointer.
When you have the information, it isn't silly, it's tragic!
Nancy
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297.17 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Sun Apr 02 1989 02:33 | 77 |
| RE: .16
No, the silence (at least from this noter) is because your attitude
makes it hardly worth responding.
However, let me see if I can explain the situation to you...
Companies like Nestle' donate infant formula to hospitals in
the Third World for only one reason: to worm their way into
a previously untapped source of revenue. (In other words, they
do it to make money. Pure and simple.)
The women of these poor countries are led to believe that their
own milk can't possibly be as good as the formula that modern
technology can produce, so they let their milk supplies dry
up in favor of feeding their infants the free samples of formula
that they get from the hospital.
Once the women's natural milk supply has gone away, the infants
are dependent on the formula (which their parents can not afford
to buy in sufficient quantities for adequate nourishment.)
So the formula starts becoming "watered down" (in efforts to
stretch less formula over more of the infant's meals.)
Meanwhile, the much needed immune system that babies get from
Mother's milk is not replaced in the formula, so the infants
are more susceptible to disease.
Also, the families who are attempting to feed this formula to
their infants may not have adequate sterilization procedures
explained and/or available to them to offset the effects of
mixing the formula with contaminated water. Even if the water
that they use with the formula is ok, they still may not be
using adequate sterilization techniques to fight the dangers
present to infants when their own bottles have not been treated
well enough to destroy the kinds of dangerous organisms that
are present when milk products have been left standing long
enough to spoil.
The overall result of this scenerio is that millions of babies
have died from the so-called "charity" of companies like Nestle'
(who were merely seeking a new market for their products, but
who succeeded in robbing a healthy source of nutrition from
babies in place of something that turned out to be POISON within
the particular circumstances/environment that it was being used.)
Now, Mike Z., you may think it is a big joke ("silly") to protest
the actions of a company who puts its own opportunities for
profit above the actual (and future) deaths of millions of infants,
but there are others here who think that such companies don't
deserve to benefit from the continuation of profit from *OUR*
patronage, so a boycott has been set into motion.
Whether or not the companies actually walk up to Mothers and
say, "Our formula is better than your milk" is irrelevant!!!
If they are still offering their formula for free to Mothers
for four days (in hopes that the Mothers will need to continue
to purchase their products *REGARDLESS* of the effects on the
infants,) then they are not companies from which I will purchase
any sort of product.
Is this any clearer to you now, Mike Z.? The actions of these
companies have indirectly led to millions of INFANT DEATHS in
the pursuit of new/additional profits. This result may not have
occurred to them when they started out supplying infant formula
to Third World countries, but they sure as HELL know about it now
(yet they are doing it again.)
Clearly, they have made their choices (for PROFITS over the lives
of Third World infants.) That leaves *us* free to make OUR choices
about whether or not we wish to allow them to continue receiving
profits from *OUR* continued patronage. Many of us do not wish
to give them another penny of our money until they stop what
they are doing.
So, what is your problem with that? Please explain.
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297.18 | The decline of breastfeeding | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Sun Apr 02 1989 02:46 | 30 |
| from an article, "The Decline of Breastfeeding," by Kathleen G.
Auerbach in the latest issue of _Mothering_ (No 51, spring 1989):
Most hospital staffs, rather than providing skilled care and
assistance to new mothers, serve as unpaid representatives and
advertising agents for the multimillion-dollar formula industry.
They hand out "gift packs" to mothers as they leave the
hospital--packs of artificial baby milk that the formula
companies are only too happy to provide. When these gift packs
are distributed, sales of the product go up; when they are not
distributed, sales go down. One colleague reported that in her
area, formula sales dropped 80 percent after her hospital
stopped giving out formula gift packs.
Simply by dispensing such "gifts," hospitals contribute to early
lactation failure, for they give new mothers the impression that
formula is necessary for optimal infant health. Early in the
20th century, when formula companies attempted to market their
new product directly to mothers, they failed miserably. Only
when doctors began promoting the product were women convinced of
the superiority of infant formula over "mother's own brand." We
continue to live with the legacy of this successful sales pitch:
nearly half of all women in this country are choosing
second-best feeding methods for their babies.
The article is about breast feeding in the US, but I believe that
the argument is, if anything, even more compelling for third world
countries.
-Neil
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297.20 | People have to choose what causes they can support | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sun Apr 02 1989 18:25 | 20 |
| Mike,
If you mean the sales of cigaretts - are these give away free
in third world countries to entice people to smoke?
In general I believe people have only x amount of energy that
they can devote to causes and trying to improve the world
situation. I don't think it is unreasonable for a person to
feel more strongly about boycotting a product that is contributing
to infant mortality. Cigaretts do indeed raise the mortality
rate of smokers, however, you are talking about adults who presumably
have some control over and a measure of choice around smoking rather
than helpless infants.
I'm not saying it is right for American countries to push cigaretts
or banned pesticides or untested drugs in third world countries.
What I do think, is it is not unreasonable for people to feel more
strongly in the case where so many infant deaths are concerned.
Bonnie
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297.22 | List of boycotted products available | SSDEVO::RICHARD | Call Me Mr. Foobar | Mon Apr 03 1989 03:56 | 6 |
| If anyone would like a list of boycotted products, I will be glad to
send you one. I personally feel outraged by the actions of the Nestle
company, and feel that this is one of the most effective methods of making
our opinions known to it.
/Mike
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297.23 | Can u post the list here? | TUT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Mon Apr 03 1989 12:26 | 1 |
|
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297.24 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Mon Apr 03 1989 14:45 | 10 |
| before the list gets posted here, could we have some guidance from
the moderators about how to word such annoucements appropriately?
thanks.
liz
(who vaguely remembers that announcing a boycott might be ok, but
encouraging others to participate might not be)
(and who also encourages the mods to delete this note if it offers
more confusion than clarity.)
|
297.25 | | SSDEVO::RICHARD | Call Me Mr. Foobar | Mon Apr 03 1989 16:33 | 6 |
| Re .24
My thoughts also, which is why I am keeping the dissemination of the list at
a private level.
/Mike
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297.26 | Is it the formula or the method of preparation? | HPSTEK::APPIAH | Coming out from the cold | Mon Apr 03 1989 19:52 | 18 |
| Before I let off steam on this subject, I would like to know from
the anti-Nestle folks out there if these infants deaths are from
the product or bad preparation.
I would like to point out that I was born and raised in a Third
World country and beg to differ with some of the opinions expressed
here. Not all places in these underdeveloped countries have tap
water. As a result, giving free formula to a mother and not educating
her on the importance of using clean water in preparing the formula
will naturally cause problems for the baby.
I happen to believe that Nestle makes good products and do have
subsidiaries in the Third World making their product. Since no mention
was made of the particular formula that the infants are dying from,
I'd like to know the product.
_COOL BREEZE_
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297.27 | summary behind the boycott | ELMST::MACKIN | Question Reality | Mon Apr 03 1989 21:01 | 16 |
| The reason for renewing the boycott is *not* because the Nestle
products are bad in and of themselves.
In a nutshell, the major problem is that once a mother is "hooked" on
the formula, which will happen if her milk supply dries up, the family
will have to *buy* the formula. Lack of financial resources to buy
enough of the formula causes "many" families to water it down, thus
significantly decreasing its nutritional value. This is why there has
been such a stink over the now subtle and previously not-so-subtle
pushing of infant forumulas in the poorer countries and counties within
this country. If doctors in hospital's give out the formula to
mothers, doesn't that imply to them that this is a good thing for
their baby?
A secondary problem is the lack of clean water supplies. I haven't
heard this mentioned as a reason for the boycott, however.
|
297.28 | | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Apr 03 1989 21:57 | 13 |
| re .27
>In a nutshell, the major problem is that once a mother is "hooked" on
>the formula, which will happen if her milk supply dries up, the family
>will have to *buy* the formula.
As I understand it, Nestle either donates in toto or sells considerably
below cost to the governments of these Third World Nations. Any buying
of the formula occurs between the peasants and the government, not Nestle.
Also, the problem really is the preperation; i.e. using contaminated
water and bottles, rather than dilution because of expense.
Sm
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297.29 | Another simple explanation | BOLT::MINOW | Who will can the anchovies? | Tue Apr 04 1989 16:43 | 29 |
| re: .26 or thereabouts:
If a mother begins using formula:
-- her own lactation ceases; thus the baby must continue to receive
formula, which is expensive for the parents. Since formula is
generally imported, it contributes to the country's overall
foreign exchange debt.
-- the baby does not receive a number of "nutrients" specific to mother's
milk, such as disease antibodies, making it more susceptable to illnesses.
-- the formula is mixed with available water; if not done carefully
(i.e. with boiled or treated water), the baby may be subject to
disease or parasites.
-- the mother's lactation produces anti-fertility hormones. If she
stops breast-feeding, she is more likely to get pregnant, leading
to further population increases, economic burdens, abortion, miscarriage,
and infanticide.
-- the cost of formula (which must be purchased with, ultimately, dollars
or Swiss francs) may be such that parents dilute it; leading to
malnutrition. Also, they may wean the baby before it is developmentally
ready.
Clearer?
Martin.
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297.30 | | HAMPS::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Fri Apr 07 1989 09:33 | 22 |
297.31 | Beech Nut -- Nestle | CSC32::DUBOIS | Carol duBois, formerly Johns | Tue Apr 11 1989 23:01 | 9 |
| I was just reading the latest issue of Consumer Reports. They report at
length about the Beech Nut "apple juice" fraud. I found it interesting to
also read that Beech Nut's parent company is Nestle.
For those who aren't aware (it has been mentioned here before), Beech Nut
(a baby food company) sold flavored water for several years, labeling it pure
apple juice.
Carol
|