Posted on 09/17/2004 11:13:07 AM PDT by LouAvul
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Conservative Christian groups are urging a boycott of two of consumer product maker Procter & Gamble's key products, charging the company is aligning itself with gay rights groups, according to a published report.
The New York Times said Friday that James Dobson of Focus on the Family and the Rev. Donald Wildmon of the American Family Association are angry at P&G for a statement on the company's internal Web site opposing an anti-gay rights statute in its hometown of Cincinnati. The law exempts gays and lesbians from special civil rights protection.
The two influential conservatives charge that by opposing the Cincinnati statute, the company is joining a push to allow same-sex marriage. They are urging supporters to boycott Crest toothpaste and Tide laundry detergent.
"For Procter & Gamble to align itself with radical groups committed to redefining marriage in our country is an affront to its customers," Dobson told the paper.
(Excerpt) Read more at money.cnn.com ...
No Crest, No Tide, No problem.
Done.
Whew! I was afrid I was going to half to lose a client, but the pharma divison was not implicated. LOL :)
Glad I don'T use crest (puke) or Tide though!
One more time...
Trucks deliver the lion's share of products to the marketplace. The drivers are union (by and large). Unions are (by and large) not for Bush.
To be consistent, and not spend our money on those at odds with our political beliefs, you would be able to buy just about NOTHING!
This has nothing to do with Bush this has to due with the homosexual agenda.
Stay on target.
And for the record, having worked for a number of years in the trucking industry and knowing that there are a large number of Owner Operators (in other words small businessmen) out there on the roads I can tell you that your generalization of them is wrong.
To be consistent, and not spend our money on those at odds with our political beliefs, you would be able to buy just about NOTHING!
And YOUR solution to the problem would be...
Corporate America loves gays. Far fewer of them have kids or even monogamous, long term relationships, than straights. This means fewer work-home conflicts. Also, at the most sinister level, the general tendency of gays to shun Judeo-Christian morality makes them generally more amoral. Especially from the standpoint of the late 20th century utopian globalist mentality which has taken over the corporate world over the past 25 or so years, having well educated, hard working, non family oriented, amoral people increasingly staffing middle and now even upper ranks of management, is considered advantageous. And if anyone thinks I don't know what I am talking about here, all I can say is, I quite literally have seen this with my own eyes, in Fortune 500 firms where I have superb access.
Actually this is about vetting our products for political suitability, be it the Dixie Chicks and Bush, or the homosexual agenda. You want to vet, I don't, so I used a rather absurd (intentionally) example to illuminate the difficulty of being consistent in that regard.
So, tell me, given your years of experience in the trucking industry, what percentage of products are moved by union/non-union drivers?
It depends on what you're talking about truck load, LTL or UPS style stuff.
If you're talking small parcel like UPS and USPS obviously that's nearly all union. The majority of LTL stuff is probably union as well but the unions don't have nearly the throat hold on that portion that they do on small parcel (UPS). When you get to the truckload movers and include the owner operators and private carriers the majority is non-union.
Percentage wise the vast majority of trucking companies have fewer than 10 trucks. Smaller trucking companies and owner operators who may lease out their extra equipment to other drivers.
P.S. Latest statistics are that 78% of all freight moved in the U.S. is moved on a truck.
Major Ministries Boycott Crest, Tide 9/21/2004
By Robert Knight
Focus on the Family, American Family Association protest Procter & Gambles aid to homosexual activists in Cincinnati ballot measure.
Tide detergent and Crest toothpaste, two top-selling consumer products, are the targets of a nationwide boycott led by two major Christian organizations to protest parent company Procter & Gambles (P&G) donation to a homosexual political campaign in Cincinnati.
Homosexual activists are attempting to overturn Cincinnatis Issue 3 law, which bars the city from creating special rights based on sexual orientation. Federal courts have upheld the law, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to it. Cincinnati citizens passed the law in 1993 with more than 60 percent of the vote in response to the city councils adoption of sexual orientation language in civil rights ordinances.
With the aid of a $10,000 donation from Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble, and help from national organizations such as the Human Rights Campaign and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, homosexual activists are attempting to overturn the law with a petition drive and ballot vote. The boycott got underway last week, when Focus on the Family Chairman James Dobson and American Family Association (AFA) President Don Wildmon announced it on radio and on their organizations Web sites.
Both groups accused P&G of aiding the movement to legalize same-sex marriage by undermining a law that protects against challenges to current marriage law.
"For Procter & Gamble to align itself with radical groups committed to redefining marriage in our country is an affront to its customers," Dobson said in a CitizenLink article. "An overwhelming majority of Americans the men and women who buy this company's products oppose same-sex marriage. To give no thought to their views while selling out to a very small special-interest group is not only bad business, it's bad for the country.
"Procter & Gamble has had its problems in the past," Dobson added, "in terms of the sexualized television programming it has sponsored, but what it's doing now threatens the cornerstone of our society: the family."
Jan LaRue, Concerned Women for Americas chief counsel, commented on the boycott: The Tides out, and furthermore, Crest causes moral decay. Concerned Women for America does not endorse boycotts, with the exception of the pro-family boycott of the Walt Disney Company.
The P&G boycott is the second major confrontation between pro-family groups and P&G in recent years. In 2000, several groups met with senior P&G officials to urge the company to stop sponsoring TV programs laden with sex and violence. The officials were polite but noncommittal. However, no boycott was launched.
Weve had our fill of it, said Cincinnati-based Citizens for Community Values President Phil Burress, who is also active in the boycott. Once this gets rolling, there will be no stopping it, he said.
AFA President Don Wildmon told AgapePress: "Procter & Gamble, to my knowledge, is the first corporation in this country that has given money for a political campaign pushing the homosexual political agenda."
Wildmon also noted that the company recently wrote to P&G employees and urged them to support the revocation of the city law that prohibits granting special rights to homosexuals. AFA has a petition form on its Web site for people who want to send a message to P&G.
Robert Knight is director of the Culture & Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned Women for America.
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But, but I thought P&G sold off Crisco a few years back - so why are they playing footsie with the rump wranglers?
Well, there's always the lesbian side, a great potential market for mouthwash...
No trouble at all. We already buy all P&G-type products from Amway/Quixstar.
Refusing to buy Crest and Tide is great, but if you really want to make an impact, switch from Folgers to another brand of coffee. Folgers is another PG product.
Moon and stars redux.
There's certainly nothing about the faggots on their external website.
Make no mistake, dobson lives for the attention he gets from silly "boycotts" like this.....
In my opinion
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