• @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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      -3014 days ago

      “Yeah so we tried to make this powdered garbage sweeter so children could stomach it. Sure it has nutritional value but it tastes like orphan slop. Can we improve that?”

      “No.”

      Fuck Nestlé but come on guys.

  • @beatle@aussie.zone
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    5614 days ago

    It is not always easy for consumers in any country to tell whether a product contains added sugar, and how much is present, based on nutritional information printed on packaging alone.

    That seems like the problem that actually needs solving.

    • Agreed but our governments have nearly completely checked out of monitoring food less the more immediate consequence type situations. Good luck getting real olive oil for example.

      • JackFrostNCola
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        14 days ago

        Not sure which countries you are talking about but Australia’s nutritional information seems pretty robust, every food product must list its ingredients, and in order of highest amount to lowest (sometimes with % for things like fruit in syrup, juices, etc).

        Also they have a nutrition table where it shows each main factor (vitamins/minerals, sugars, salts, fats, carbohydrates, calories, etc.) And the amount per ‘serving’ (serving size noted) and per 100g of the product. So you can compare the exact same figures product to product and know which is better for you.

        There are often other bits of information on the packs, (some of which are optional i believe) such as %of ingredients grown in australia, if its packed in australia, country of origin, ‘health start rating’ (0-5 star scale which shows a quick comparison of how healthy a TYPE of food is. Keep in mind a 4.5 star bottle of soft drink isnt healthy, it is simply more healthy than other soft drinks in its category, ie: a better choice)

      • @beatle@aussie.zone
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        210 days ago

        Relying on for profit corporations to do what is best for the human body is a fool’s errand.

        Strong consumer labelling laws and regulation is the primary way to combat it. Encouraging consumers to actually read the packaging is also required.

  • velox_vulnus
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    14 days ago

    Can I sue Nestle and Johnson for milk and baby powder respectively? I am an Indian citizen, so I don’t know if I am entitled to the compensation for damages caused - my mother used their shitty products, and apparently, it killed babies in developing countries.

    • @nekandro@lemmy.ml
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      3814 days ago

      Unfortunately, Nestle and J&J have spent billions on lawyers and consultants, so even if you could sue it would go nowhere.

  • @kureta@lemmy.ml
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    4114 days ago

    But why? It is bad for babies OK, but what is the upside for Nestlé? Is it addiction?

    • livus
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      14 days ago

      One of Nestle’s main evil plans in the Low Income Countries is to aggressively tell mothers that formula is better than breastfeeding, have doctors suggest it, or even give free formula until the mothers’ breastmilk dries up.

      Humans evolved to crave sugar which is scarce in nature.

      Babies will naturally prefer milk with higher sweetness i.e Nestle Cerelac. This will help convince the mothers to breastfeed less, buy more formula, and/or let their milk dry up.

      Edit: here’s UNICEF on these evil marketing practices in Bangladesh.

      • @HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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        1614 days ago

        Add to that.

        Nestle has a huge bonus long term from sugar. It is hugely addictive. Haveing children grow up with an early addiction can only benifit them long term. Given how much sugar is a part of other non bany products they sell.

      • @ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml
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        613 days ago

        Why do they do this in specifically lower-income countries, where there is less money to be made for them? That’s the part that confuses me.

        • @inetknght@lemmy.ml
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          1013 days ago

          There’s less regulation in a developing country. So… if you get them hooked on it then, at least, you’ve got easy (albeit low) income. During the developing country maturity they will then be hooked on sugar and less likely to ban it or curb it.

          It’s just as any addiction.

            • Instigate
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              313 days ago

              It’s also not an exclusive situation: that is, selling to the Global South doesn’t in any way impede or prevent their sales in developed nations. It’s just an extra source of income. Sure, they’re making less money per unit sold, but less extra money is better than no extra money. Aggressively marketing to these countries also helps prevent local companies from creating their own competitive products, which protects Nestle’s global dominance interests.

              Suffice to say that the list of reasons they would want to do this is long while the list against is very short.

      • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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        -3914 days ago

        Jesus Christ what misleading bullshit. Should we classify sugar as a schedule 3 drug then? Treat it like cocaine? No thats fucking stupid because it’s not. It can be addictive, like literally anything else. A baby is not going to get chemically dependant on sugar.

        Another example of having the right information but the wrong conclusion.

        • AlphaOmega
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          14 days ago

          https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23719144/#:~:text=Overall%2C this research has revealed,be more rewarding and attractive.

          “Eating too much sugar can lead to weight gain, which then increases the risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke and some cancers. But sugar also alters our mood and provides feelings of being rewarded and euphoria; hence the comparison to illegal drugs.” https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.ramsayhealth.co.uk/blog/lifestyle/is-sugar-more-addictive-than-cocaine&ved=2ahUKEwj-8KOjt8uFAxUT4skDHUPYBWAQFnoECEkQAQ&usg=AOvVaw2ys5-XMhDhbu8-D39e9u4j

          Yeah it should be regulated as a highly addictive substance. It shouldn’t be in baby formula.

          I don’t know what you mean by “addictive as anything else”. We are talking about the relationship to how your brain reacts to these substances, using science. Based on that there’s only a handful of highly addictive substances out of millions of potentials.

          This isn’t psychological addiction, we are talking about physical addiction. And sugar is comparable to the 2nd most addictive substance in the world, cocaine.

          And you think that’s a good idea to give to infants?

          You think that it shouldn’t face regulation?

          Your argument is subjective and lacks substance. The facts are very clear here.

          • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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            -1314 days ago

            This is why anyone outside the left laughs at us. You have people sincerely equating sugar to cocaine because a corporation decided to try and make tasteless gruel edible.

            Watch out, if you put sugar in your oatmeal you’re a drug addict. You’re taking truly the dumbest position possible because to admit there’s a middle ground doesn’t let you dig into the big bad Corp.

            Should it be regulated due to its overabundance? Yes. Should it be regulated like cocaine? Fuck no. What’s wrong with your brain? Too much sugar or cocaine?

            • AlphaOmega
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              14 days ago

              I think you are missing the entire point. Nestle puts sugar in the baby formula because it’s a physically addictive substance. A mother who buys the formula but later tries to switch to different formula will end up with a baby going through sugar withdrawals. I think it’s safe to assume the baby may not even feed until it’s given the Nestle formula.

              This isn’t the first time Nestle has done something like this, they have a dark history. Some might even call them evil.

              Plus all the long term health issues associated with giving children sugar. “Added sugar intake at an early age may have adverse life-long health consequences, including overweight, obesity, cardiovascular diseases, asthma, and dental caries, as well as worse dietary habits” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8624134/

              And yes I think it should be regulated for children, based on the science it is a serious health issue.

              Also you keep mentioning the “left” like this is some political discussion. This has nothing to do with politics. **I think most people would agree that using a legal addictive substance to hook babies to your product is a real dick move and something should be done to prevent it from happening. **

              • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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                -814 days ago

                Lol the only reason you’re against this move is because sugar is vaguely tied to addiction and you want to demonize a corporation. Honey has sugar, are the bees trying to get us addicted too? These are the ramblings of the insane.

                Yes, Nestlé fucking sucks. Evil, even. But them farting in the wind is not them engaging in chemical warfare. Treating it like it is, is part of what I can’t fucking stand. This is an isolated event. Just because someone has a shit reputation doesn’t mean every single minor move is a nefarious conspiracy.

                You people are bored and hypocritical. The same people that would consider weed harmless but unironically compare sugar to cocaine. Sugar spurs on habitual addiction, not chemical dependancy. Not knowing the difference, pretending you understand addiction because you read the headline of a study and the parroted news articles, that’s how bullshit gets spread around.

              • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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                -714 days ago

                Fucking anything that derives pleasure can be habitually addictive, this shit means nothing. Literally nothing. Chemical dependancies are not the same fucking thing. Stop pretending they are so you can look smart. This circlejerk of dipshits is truly beyond my patience.

        • @kandoh@reddthat.com
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          1114 days ago

          Drugs aren’t illegal because they are addictive. They are illegal because they make humans behave unpredictably and that scares other humans into banning the substances.

          The ‘its addictive’ thing is just to frighten people away from trying it.

          • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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            -2014 days ago

            Weed is addictive and many people fall into a feedback loop of depending on it yet every dipshit on the left wants that unbanned and unregulated. The hypocracy is what annoys the shit out of me.

            • Liz
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              614 days ago

              If I had to hazard I guess, the person you’re replying to would probably legalize a lot more than weed if they had the power to do so.

                • Liz
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                  213 days ago

                  I also don’t think they’d look to ban sugar, just slap a sin tax on it like other harmful addictive substances that people enjoy.

            • @ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml
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              113 days ago

              Weed is not addictive. I only smoke when I hang out with my friends, which isn’t often, and I never have cravings for it.

              • @RealFknNito@lemmy.world
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                113 days ago

                Yes, it is. Habitual addiction is addiction. While you might not suffer from it, just like some people can become alcoholics but not all, some people can become severely dependant on the way weed makes them feel.

                If it can make you feel good, it can become addictive. Knowing the difference between habitual and chemical addiction is extremely important.

    • @MrFunnyMoustache@lemmy.ml
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      1714 days ago

      I am a staunch opposer to the death penalty, and believe no crime, no matter how severe warrants an execution, but I wouldn’t lift a finger to stop the execution of Nestlé executives because they aren’t worth a single calorie spent on their defence.

    • velox_vulnus
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      13 days ago

      Nestle’s most popular sub-brand, Maggi, is a Nazi company. They were banned in India for selling noodles with high concentration of lead.

      • @TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml
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        614 days ago

        … and then bribed FSSAI with ₹15K and are back to selling Maggi ever since.

        Proud boycotter of Nestle since nearly a decade. I either get myself noodles from Nissin or Korean/Vietnam/Indonesia ramen brands. There are plenty, Nongshim, Samyang, Indomie, Vifon, Omni and others. All are outright superior to the garbage Maggi people eat just because of cultural popularity. Some of them cost a lot though, but I do not eat everyday so I find it extremely reasonable to purchase.

        I vary my carb snacks, sometimes ramen, poha, oats, omelettes etc.

        • velox_vulnus
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          314 days ago

          The problem with boycotting Nestle is that you end up using Unilever products, which is so frustrating. I wish there were alternatives with better supply-chain.

          Maggi is dog-shit, soggy trash, their soup tastes like puddle. I love Nissin, they’re the OG noodle-maker. I’ve yet to try Indomie and Wai-wai. Rest of the brands you’ve mentioned are too expensive for me, which is unfortunate.

          • @TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml
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            13 days ago

            Try getting some of those brands from Blinkit, they sometimes have good discounts. I know they are expensive, but I find them worth only because I consume noodles at most twice a week.

            Also, avoid WaiWai and a lot of unknown brands from Nepal, their noodles taste bad or meh. Korea, Vietnam and Indonesia have massive noodle consumption and know their game. Chinese noodle cuisine does not exist as packaged brands and only have restaurant options that need time and investment.

            I think Unilever is a lot better than having to choose Nestle, one of the worst brands in existence. Unilever is massive, there is only so much we can do. The only big Western food brands I consume from are Cadbury/Mondelez and (Kwality) Walls (Walls is under Unilever) I think, others are Korean, Japanese or Indian.

    • SUPAVILLAIN
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      714 days ago

      Fuck a guillotine, gimme a Colt 1911 and a couple hundred rounds of .22 long; I’ll have it done by dinner time.

      • @tetris11@lemmy.ml
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        13 days ago

        Fuck 'em, I found a new love my .357
        And my best little back up, a black Smith and Wesson
        I got a Glock 19 with a laser inside
        And I’m the one you need to watch for when we go on a ride

    • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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      313 days ago

      no. pedophiles are bad. tasting human shit is bad. the feeling when the love of your life walks out of the room for what you know is the last time is bad.

      we need a new word for nestle. this company is like Belgian Congo or maybe even “Israeli” levels of fucked up.

  • @digdilem@lemmy.ml
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    1414 days ago

    Obesity is increasingly a problem in low- and middle-income countries.

    Isn’t that always going to be the case, regardless of ingredient adjustment? It feels like people who have had very little food will tend towards over-compensating during times of glut - perhaps not so much the generation directly affected, but the care they give to next generations.

    As an example vaguely related but less extreme; I was born in 1970 in England to a lower middle-class family. My parents were wartime and post-war babies who had experienced rationing and as a result, I have very strong recollections of being made to “clear your plate” before I could leave the table. (Ironically given this topic, the “there are starving children in Africa who would like that” line was given quite often)

    Wasting food was the absolute highest sin I could commit and that’s stayed with me to this day.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    1014 days ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Nestlé, the world’s largest consumer goods company, adds sugar and honey to infant milk and cereal products sold in many poorer countries, contrary to international guidelines aimed at preventing obesity and chronic diseases, a report has found.

    Laurent Gaberell, Public Eye’s agriculture and nutrition expert, said: “Nestlé must put an end to these dangerous double standards and stop adding sugar in all products for children under three years old, in every part of the world.”

    It is not always easy for consumers in any country to tell whether a product contains added sugar, and how much is present, based on nutritional information printed on packaging alone.

    The UK recommends that children under four avoid food with added sugars because of risks including weight gain and tooth decay.

    Biscuit-flavoured cereals for babies aged six months and older contained 6g of added sugar for every serving in Senegal and South Africa, researchers found.

    A Nestlé spokesperson said: “We believe in the nutritional quality of our products for early childhood and prioritise using high-quality ingredients adapted to the growth and development of children.”


    The original article contains 774 words, the summary contains 180 words. Saved 77%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    Corporation ignores guidelines in pursuit of profit. News at 11.

    Corporations will not ever self-regulate. If the “global south” can’t even govern their food suppliers at the inadequate and shitty level the US does, then what else can be said? This is a problem that is directly within those governments ability to solve, but they still won’t even do that.

    Unsolvable problems with the Nestle Corporation - They Exist and their executives weren’t guillotined in the 50’s.

    Solvable problem with the Nestle Corporation - They are legally allowed to sell products within the sovereign countries of the global south while complying with all local laws and regulations.

    If only something could be done…

    • livus
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      No, don’t try to pass the buck. Wealthy nations are the ones responsible for what their own citizens get up to. Corporations are made up of people and should be regulated by their host nations.

      • Low Income Countries usually lack the resources to test imported products properly. This for eg is why all the poison cough syrup deaths globally.

      • They also lack the resources to finance enforcement of their laws.

      • They are also bullied by the World Trade Organization or threatened with lack of trade in necessities if they try to go against large international corporations with lobbying power.

      • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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        -114 days ago

        Don’t noble savage this shit. Most of those countries have functional governments that manage to regulate a lot of stuff, the article isn’t about lack of enforcement. It’s about lack of regulation period. While the WTO does help enforce the neo-liberal order, they aren’t the ones that are doing this. Nestle-LLC incorporated in South Africa is using “too much” sugar in their formula. This is a problem that is wholly within South Africa’s ability to solve.

        • livus
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          The article isn’t the be all and end all of the problem though. I’m talking about the wider picture.

          I find it bizarre that you think pointing out resource disparity is the racist “noble savage” stereotype.

          The behaviour of Western corporations are also wholly within the power of Western countries to solve.

          Edit: I don’t get why you want to focus so hard on what the end-users and LICs are doing and not on what the sources and wealthy nations are doing. Its like owning very vicious killer dogs, letting them loose and blaming your neighbour for not having a fence.

          • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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            213 days ago

            Do you want America to enforce regulations upon sovereign nations because they can’t do it themselves? What are you asking for here?

            • livus
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              13 days ago

              Yikes, of course not.

              I want Switzerland to regulate Nestle’s behaviour and I want the US, the EU, and everywhere in the West where it operates to regulate it similarly.

              Foe example, if you see my link elsewhere in here, according to UNICEF Nestle is in clear violation of the Breast Milk Substitute Code, and that should be better enforced for a start.

              • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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                13 days ago

                Sure. I do too, but whatever Nestle subsidiary that operates in South Africa, can only be regulated by the South African government. There is no other option today. Not as long as Capitalism is the assumed world economic system.

                • livus
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                  113 days ago

                  Parent companies should be legally held accountable for their subsidiaries though.

                  The thing is we do this with citizens all the time. For example if a citizen of my nation goes and commits pedophilia overseas they are still prosecuted for it. Similarly of they commission a third party to commit a crime for them.

                  This is something we are beginning to see in an international context with companies that commission crimes such as the landmark Lundin Petroleum (a Swiss company) trial last year, over corporate complicity (incitement really) of human rights abuses in Sudan.

    • @InternetPerson@lemmings.world
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      13 days ago

      If a corporation willingly abuses every loophole in laws or lack of laws even though it is able to know what would be more beneficial for their customers or humanity or at least to know what the law originally intended, then it’s just plain evil shit. It’s still people who work at companies and make immoral decisions. They have the power to decide.

      • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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        113 days ago

        Yes, and since modern capitalist companies are transnational, what should be done? If you are blaming nestle you are correct, but Nestle’s actions within South Africa are outside the scope of America’s laws.

  • YⓄ乙
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    413 days ago

    People always try to exploit the disadvantaged. That’s just how humans are programmed. For me, its not shocking at all.

    • livus
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      513 days ago

      I don’t have to be shocked to be angry.

        • livus
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          013 days ago

          Feelings don’t do good but the actions they inspire us to take sometimes do.

          Like I said elsewhere in here, formula companies like Nestle used to behave like this in the West as well and it was the actions of activists that changed that.

          Knowing about what’s going on is the first step.