Hello All,
From:
https://tinyurl.com/2p9bja39
Coca-Cola accused of paying NAACP to call soda taxes `racist'
"I say Coke's policies are evil because I saw inside the room. The first
step in playbook was paying the NAACP + other civil rights groups to call
opponents racist," said Calley Means.
TrueMedicine Care co-founder Calley Means published a thread to Twitter on
Monday, where he broke down the grip that soda companies have over food
regulation. Means claimed that his Twitter Blue access and his account is
now under review, suggesting that this was due to Coca-Cola being a major
advertiser for Twitter.
"Early in my career, I consulted for Coke to ensure sugar taxes failed and
soda was included in food stamp funding," Means claimed.
"I say Coke's policies are evil because I saw inside the room. The first
step in playbook was paying the NAACP + other civil rights groups to call
opponents racist. Coke gave millions to the NAACP and the Hispanic
Federation - both directly and through front groups like the American
Beverage Association This picked up in 2011-2013 - when the Farm Bill and
soda taxes were under consideration."
Means included a screenshot from a Center for Science in the Public
Interest (CSPI) report as written about in Nutrition Insight in March of
2013.
Both the NAACP and the Hispanic Federation "received grants from
Coca-Cola, with the national NAACP receiving at least $2.1 million from
the soda giant since 1986, including $100,000 as recently as December. The
Hispanic Federation also lists Coke as a donor, and in February 2012 its
president, Lillian Rodriguez Lopez, left the nonprofit group to become
director of Latin affairs at the company," Nutrition Insight wrote.
CSPI's report noted that Coca-Cola gave the American Academy of Family
Physicians a $600,000 grant in 2009 for a new website, and gave a $1
million grant in 2003 to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry,
which was "seemingly enough to get the president of the American Academy
of Pediatric Dentistry to suddenly hedge the group's position on the
extent to which soda causes cavities," Nutrition Insight reported.
"Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Dr Pepper Snapple Group, the American Beverage
Association, and Kraft Foods, maker of such sugar drinks as Kool Aid and
Capri Sun, are also big donors to two major anti-hunger groups, the Food
Research and Action Center and Feeding America," the report added.
"The conversations inside these rooms was depressingly transactional: 'We
(Coke) will give you money. You need to paint opponents of us as racist.'
The effort was successful, and the message was carried in thousands of
articles between 2011-2013," Means continued.
"Coke's position was clear: soda is one of the cheapest ways to get
calories - a flagrantly inaccurate statement when factoring in the health
consequences.
"Despite high rates of obesity in the populations they work for, groups
with a long history of funding by the beverage industry are now fighting
measures like New York City's stalled soda ban," Means added, noting a
2013 article in the New York Times.
"I watched as the FDA funneled money to professors at leading universities
- as well as think tanks on the left and right - to create studies showing
soda taxes hurt the poor. They also paid for studies that say drinking
soda DIDN'T cause obesity," Means claimed.
"Of course, not mentioned in these studies is the incontrovertible fact
that sugary drinks are one of the top causes of obesity and diabetes -
leading to harrowing statistics like this.
Means cited a recent report from CNN, in which a new study published in
the American Diabetes Association journal Diabetes Care last month found
that the number of people under the age of 20 with type 2 diabetes may
skyrocket 675 percent by 2060 if current rents continue in the US.
"Soda companies are deeply embedded in the USDA - so much so that the
agency carries discredited talking points like 'there are no bad food,
only bad diets.'"
"This ignores fact that sugar is highly addictive and has negative
nutritional value," Means continued.
"In the end: racial tensions flared, soda spending was kept in SNAP
funding, and many of the soda taxes were defeated... Of course, this has
been a disaster for low-income communities. Addictive, deadly sugary
drinks should never be included in a government nutrition program. People
saying that restricting soda from SNAP funding is 'paternalistic' or an
'assault on personal choice' are unwittingly doing the work of the soda
companies."
"You can't have a free market if that market is rigged," Means concluded.
Means would then post that his Twitter account is under review and had his
check suspended. "This is not the free speech ethos [Elon Musk], childhood
obesity and diabetes is urgent issue. It is a simple question. Has
Coca-Cola ever had a direct line to Twitter to suspend critics. Do they
still?
The Post Millennial has reached out to Coca-Cola for comment.
-- Sean
... "Where the press is free and every man able to read, all is safe." - Jefferson
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