Posted on 08/11/2017 9:35:01 PM PDT by American Quilter
Ben & Jerrys ice cream had to figure it would be one of the last firms in America to come under attack from the liberal misinformation complex.
It has created flavors to honor Democrat politicians, contributed to Democrat campaigns and positioned itself well to the left on social and employment issues. It has cultivated an image of the good capitalist, which can create jobs, lead in its field and do it all in a sustainable and environmentally friendly way.
But when there became a bigger fish to fry, all the loyalty the company thought it had earned suddenly dried up. And now the knives or at least the ice cream spoons are out for it.
(Excerpt) Read more at townhall.com ...
Isnt it heart warming when they eat thier own
were found to contain a controversial herbicide glyphosate, the main ingredient in the RoundUp brand of weed killers.
Good. Another reason not to eat Ben and Jerry’s.
Me too, never been a fan of the nasty stuff, but their support of all left wing crap, put them on my ban list. Along with any place except Military or Gov’t buildings, that won’t let me carry my gun or supports Abortion.
I’ll be happy when this hand surgery PT is done and I can get back to the range. Looking like another 6 months. YUCK.
15-20 years ago I LOVED Cherry Garcia...would foolishly eat an entire container sometimes in a day
Then I found out who B&J were . . . that was the end of that.
Doesn’t matter. Whoever owns it now still carries the name and that’s reason enough for me and the wife to boycott forever
Just spent an afternoon in Burlington, VT - B&J World HQ - it IS owned by Unilever, still pushing leftist crap (but they know their market in VT). It’s their support for the cop-killer “Mumia” that killed the brand for me.
This slop has been on sale right and left here in the East TN/West NC area lately...wonder if sales are slumping?
Wasn’t their ‘Fudge & Peanuts’ flavor an ode to themselves?
It has created flavors to honor Democrat politicians, contributed to Democrat campaigns and positioned itself well to the left on social and employment issues. It has cultivated an image of the good capitalist, which can create jobs, lead in its field and do it all in a sustainable and environmentally friendly way.
But when there became a bigger fish to fry, all the loyalty the company thought it had earned suddenly dried up. And now the knives or at least the ice cream spoons are out for it.
Last month, the New York Times fired an opening salvo in this new battle with an article that said several of Ben & Jerrys more popular flavors Half Baked, Phish Food Peanut Butter Cookie and Chocolate Fudge Brownie were found to contain a controversial herbicide glyphosate, the main ingredient in the RoundUp brand of weed killers.
Why would the left turn on Ben & Jerrys in this way? Because a bigger lobby in this case the Organic Consumers Association wants it this way. For years, the organization has tried to pressure Ben & Jerrys to stop greenwashing itself and go organic. Ben & Jerrys already doesnt use genetically modified plant ingredients in its products, but that is not enough.
It also is not enough that the amounts of glyphosate found in those ice cream pints fell far below the safe legal limits set by the EPA. To reach what the EPA considers the danger zone, a 75-pound child would have to eat 145,000 servings of Chocolate Fudge Brownie, which contained the most glyphosate of any of the brands tested. An adult would have to at 290,000. Even the binge-iest of ice cream eaters could not come close.
The Organic Consumers Associations Ronnie Cummins summed up his groups response: Not everyone agrees with the acceptable levels governments have set. And, anyway, would you want to be eating this stuff at all?
So, perhaps its twice as bad as government describes, and kids would need to eat only 72,000 pints and adults 145,000. No one has proposed eating glyphosate itself, and everyone has safely eaten food grown with the help of glyphosate.
Few things bring out the regulatory crazy like anti-glyphosate campaigns. The organics people point out the International Agency for Research on Cancer classified it as probably carcinogenic in a 2015 report. But they do not point out that just last month, the European Chemicals Agency refuted the link with cancer or that nearly every regulatory agency, food safety outfit and chemicals evaluator in the world has tested glyphosate repeatedly for decades now and found no link with cancer.
They also fail to point out that, according to a Reuters story in June, the working group that developed the IARCs findings that glyphosate is probably carcinogenic refused to consider an important study that contradicted its thesis. The Agricultural Health Study followed 89,000 farm workers and their families for two decades and found no discernible link to cancer.
Findings from this study were first published in 2005. But because the group is still processing some data for its updated study, the IARC working group refused to consider its findings, even though one of the scientists is involved with both projects and knows full-well what the updated findings are expected to reveal.
The foot-dragging on releasing the new data, which appears to be designed to keep information unfavorable to the IARCs findings from seeing the light of day, has caught the eye of Congress. Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., chairman of the Senates Environment and Public Works Committee, who wrote to the heads of the Department of Health and Human Services and the National Institutes of Health last week, pushing them to review the data and publish those parts having to do with glyphosate. Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., the new chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, has asked the same of the National Cancer Institute.
So we have advocates lobbying for organic food claiming on one side that any exposure to glyphosate is too much, regardless of the fact were nearly all consumers of it and seem to be surviving. On the other side are the public health, food safety and chemical analysts of the United States and most of the countries of Europe saying the amounts we may inquire in normal food intake pose no threat.
So lets get those results out and see what they say and where we stand. And if it turns out yet again that the dangers have been oversold and the benefits undersold, then lets, for once, let science dictate over lobbying interests and let farmers use the products they find most effective.
It’s the Starbucks of Ice Cream, the most over-rated crap tasting crap on the market.
Glyphosate is designed to effect a specific plant hormone - if a person has that hormone, then they will become ill. Of course a person with a plant hormone is not human ... but then there are all sorts of ‘people’ running around today ...
Glyphosate, like any other substance when consumed in quantity, and not intended as food, will make you ill or kill you ... anyone for a nice helping of Draino?
I’ve never given Ben & Jerry’s a dime nor will I ever. About 20 years ago, I did get a small carton of their product with a free coupon.
Why is it that Libs are ALWAYS shocked when Libs turn on them? Lib idiots (but I repeat myself) are always looking for new “causes” to make themselves fell relevant.
Unilever is a bunch of liberals...if you want to boycott them, you’ll boycott besides B&J, Breyers, Good Humor, Hellman’s, Sauve, Axe, Lipton and others....
It’s rich in ironic humor, though again if Ben & Jerry’s hadn’t been bought by a corporate behemoth, the lefty world might be kinder. They joined the dark side which was the unforgivable sin.
They are lefties because the outsized voice of modern lefties has convinced them that the whole world is lefties.
Ah! That is why greenies hate it so! Sympathy for the weeds! Even though they would die of eating too much ice cream long before they could get a sickening dose of glyphosate from it.
Today, almost anything a name brand produces can be had in a good generic or store brand. There are few modern innovations. The patents have all passed into public domain. Only the branding and trademark, etc. rights remain.
Unilever also does business with Iran, and its CEO supports the Paris climate deal.
Weed: definition - any unwanted or out of place plant. Arose can be a weed if in the wrong place or unwanted. Milkweed is another example of a weed or a beneficial plant.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.