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The Coke Machine - Michael Blanding [199]

By Root 527 0
meetings

on Colombia settlement

in Hormel strike

negotiations with Coca-Cola

See also Campaign to Stop Killer Coke

Romero, Camilo

Roselli, Fred

Roy, Dunu


Scherer, Bill

Schlosser, Eric

school soda contracts

access to children

activism against

anti-soda legislation

cost to break contracts

industry partnership with teachers and parents

in Mexico

negotiation guidance for schools

restrictions on contracts and sales

school revenue from

ubiquity of

See also Campaign to Stop Killer Coke

Sharma, Sunil

Simon, Michele

SINALTRAINAL

anti-Coke campaigns

contract demands

decimation of

destruction of union hall

false charges against members

government protection

International Labour Organization complaint

militancy

murders of leaders

negotiations with Coca-Cola

percentage of unionized workers

threats against

See also Coca-Cola Colombia

Sisters of Providence

South Africa

Srivastava, Amit

sugar prices and availability

Sundblom, Haddon


Tap Water Challenges

Tedlow, Richard

television and movie product placement

temperance movement

TERI (The Energy and Resources Institute)

Thomas, Benjamin

Tjoflat, Bernard

toxic sludge, India

Trotter, John

Turkey


United Kingdom

United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS)

University of Michigan


Vaughn, Pat

Veblen, Thorstein

Vishwakarma, Urmika

VitaminWater


Walker, Rob

Wardlaw, B.

water

groundwater depletion

pollution

rainwater harvesting

wastewater discharge

wastewater treatment

See also Dasani bottled water

Watters, Pat

Weinstein, Daniel

Whitehead, Joseph

Whitley, Matthew

Wiley, Harvey Washington

Woodruff, Ernest

Woodruff, Robert

Worker Rights Consortium (WRC)

World of Coca-Cola (Atlanta)

World Social Forum

World Trade Organization (WTO)

World War II


Yadav, Kushal


Zepeda Torres, Teresa

Zyman, Sergio

1

Despite initial promises to arrange interviews with Coca-Cola Company executives, corporate spokeswoman Kerry Kerr ultimately declined cooperation with this book. The only interview the company provided was a forty-minute conversation with director of global labor relations Ed Potter, which appears in the final chapter. After that interview, the company asked that further questions be provided in writing. Several dozen questions were submitted to Kerr, and she responded in an e-mail: “Much of the information you are requesting is proprietary in nature and we are unable to comment. The remaining questions are about topics to which we have responded over the years multiple times. Given the fact that this information is widely available, coupled with the decidedly subjective slant in which your questions were framed, we are declining further comment. . . . The Coca-Cola Company’s practice continues to be one of engagement in conversations with all stakeholders—including supporters and critics—as long those discussions can be fair and objective.”

2

BMI, a measure used to estimate a healthy body weight according to height, is calculated by dividing one’s weight by the square of one’s height.

3

Even those disputing the existence of the obesity epidemic, such as Paul Campos and Eric Oliver (authors of The Obesity Myth and Fat Politics, respectively), single out soda as harmful for “wreak[ing] havoc on our bloodstream,” as Oliver writes, “affect[ing] cholesterol, blood pressure, and metabolism.”

4

Still hustling, DeRose would agree to speak for this book only in exchange for $20,000 and 5 percent of the profits. This offer, it should go without saying, was declined.

5

Despite several attempts, López Gómez was unavailable for an interview himself. When I arrived for an appointment at the distribution center, I was told he had just left. I traded several messages with him over the next three days, but he always seemed to be in Chamula when I wasn’t.

6

A New York judge hearing a case against Union Carbide for its gas explosion in Bhopal, India, that killed more than three thousand people dismissed it as “another example of imperialism . . . in which an established sovereign inflicted its rules, its standards and values

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