I watched the entire piece and came away with a completely different take. Hamdi Ulukaya purchased a closed yogurt factory in upstate NY and employed the workers who had been laid off by Kraft. As his product took off, he employed everybody in the New Berlin area who wanted to work. He added refugees when there were no more workers available, and it appears that he treats everyone the same. To top it off, he gave 10% of Chobani stock to his 2,000 employees because he says “it was the right thing to do.” Ulukaya saw promise where Kraft saw losses, and he made it work for everybody. He looks like a stand up guy to me.
I agree. One antidote would be stronger voter ID measures.
Now that we have Scalia replaced and if we can get some of the vacancies on the lower bench filled, perhaps Congress can put forth a strong Voter ID bill. IF not, then at least Red states trying to shore up voter ID requirements won’t be overturned by Supremes like they were before.
I didn’t watch the episode. Did they ask him if new hires are taught how to use toilet paper?
I eat a lot of yogurt. Always have. I don’t like Chobani. Seems thin and watery to me.
I bought Chernobyl yogurt for awhile, but not once since I found out they were supporting the Muslim conquest.