Impressed with Coca-Cola’s ‘awesome’ multicultural Super Bowl ad? Don’t be. deathandtaxesmag.com
  There  have been many reactions towards Coca-Cola’s very lovely and  pleasant-seeming Super Bowl ad. It’s full of lovely, multicultural  people, and even a family with two dads! It’s sung in various languages!  Yay! Warm feelings! Unity!
    The primary issue has been about idiots freaking out over the fact that  it involved singing “America the Beautiful” in various languages,  because “This is America! We speak ‘MERICAN here!” and some such. Never  mind the fact that English isn’t even our official language, and we  don’t even have an official language.
  While making fun of sad,  xenophobic yokels and Allen West is of course a good time, it’s a bit  like shooting fish in a barrel. If you want the truth, the ad offended  me too, but for entirely different reasons. The number-one reason being  that I cannot believe that Coke dared to run an ad purporting to be this  lovely, progressive, multicultural company when it is in fact a company  that willfully oppresses people of color throughout the world–and has  been the subject of a major boycott for years over these issues.
  Human rights abuses and murder in Colombia and Guatamala
  Back in 1996,  Isidro Gil,   a worker at one of Coke’s bottling plants in Colombia was gunned down  by a paramilitary group as he entered work one morning. Why? Because he  was a Union organizer. Two days after his murder, the paramilitaries  went to the bottling plant and informed the workers there that they  could either quit the union by 4pm that day or be killed as well. They  were given resignation forms by Coca-Cola’s plant manager, who had been  known to be in cahoots with the paramilitary groups for quite some time.  The workers quite en masse and fled the country, and were then replaced  by new hires working for $130 a month, as compared to the $380 a month  the experienced workers had been making.
  This situation repeated  itself in 2002 when SINALTRAINAL union leader Adolfo de Jesus Munera was  murdered under very similar circumstances. There have been a total of 8  murders of union members and one murder of a friendly plant manager at  Coca-Cola operations between the years of 1989 and 2002.
  In  Guatemala, where the situation has been dicey since at least the 1970s,  one of the more recent controversies is the 2006 campaign of harassment,  violence and intimidation against Union activist Armando Palacios and  his family. This involved death threats, the gang rape of his daughter,  and the murder of the son of one of his fellow organizers. He and his  family now live in the U.S. and  filed suit against Coca-Cola in 2010. youtube.com
  In  2004, there was a 10-day independent investigation into the allegations  of human rights violations at Coca-Cola’s Colombia plant. Members of  the investigation were horrified by stories of intimidation and abuse  from management. The investigation determined that there had been ”a  total of 179 major human rights violations of Coca-Cola’s workers,  including nine murders. Family members of union activists have been  abducted and tortured. Union members have been fired for attending union  meetings. The company has pressured workers to resign their union  membership and contractual rights, and fired workers who refused to do  so…Most troubling to the delegation were the persistent allegations that  paramilitary violence against workers was done with the knowledge of  and likely under the direction of company managers.”
  Coca-Cola is  not denying these things happened, instead, they merely deny  responsibility for them. They argue, instead, that they cannot be held  liable for things that happen outside of the United States. They also,  very conveniently, technically do not directly own their overseas  bottling plants. Instead, they have a system of bottling plants that act  as agents for Coca-Cola, and operate under contract. This is a  calculated decision that allows them to ignore the human rights  violations occurring at their overseas plants.
  Pollution in India
  One of the 58 Coca-Cola plants in India has been the cause of protest for years due to the fact that it is  using up too much groundwater and polluting the soil–including  one that lasted for three months and ended in a hunger strike. This is  in an area where people don’t have enough water to begin with, so it’s  kind of a big deal. Residents also say that the plant is there  illegally, as it was built on village council land. As a result of this,  officials are planning to have the plant demolished.
  A  2006 study discovered that there was a disturbing amount of pesticides in the Coca-Cola sold in India as well.
  Discrimination against Black and Latino workers in… America the Beautiful
  As  you may know, in one of Martin Luther King’s last speeches, he called  for a boycott of Coca-Cola due to the fact that the Atlanta plants were  discriminating against black workers, who would be kept in menial,  harder, lower paying jobs while white workers enjoyed better pay and  better work. Which makes this 2007 CocaCola Super Bowl ad celebrating  Black History Month feel a tad awkward: youtube.com
  But HEY. 2007 is totally different from 1968, right? The times have changed and Coke had gotten with them! Except not!
  In 2001, Coke was an integral part of the largest employment discrimination lawsuit in the history of the entire country. The company was ordered to pay out $192 million dollars to over 2,000 Black employees. Why?
  Via  Find Justice:
 
 Among  a long list of allegedly inequitable business practices, the plaintiffs  alleged a substantial difference in pay between African-American and  white employees; a “glass ceiling” that kept African-Americans from  advancing past entry-level management positions; “glass walls” that  channeled African-Americans to management in areas like human resources  and away from power centers such as marketing and finance; and that  senior management had knowledge of these inequities since 1995 and  failed to implement policies to remedy them.
 
  The  company was then ordered to subject itself to a five-year diversity task  force. How did it work? Well, in 2012 they were the subject of yet another  discrimination lawsuit from 16 Black and Hispanic workers at two of  their New York plants who called the company “a giant cesspool of racial  discrimination.”
  Via  New York Daily News:
 
 Sondra  Walker said that when she was hired as a merchandiser at the Maspeth  plant, she felt like she “had hit Lotto” because Coca Cola is such a  prestigious company.  “I’ve never been called so many names as I have  been at Coca-Cola,” Walker told the Daily News, citing “Nappy Head” and  “Aunt JaMamma” as examples.  Walker describes in the complaint an  incident when a white worker wore a Confederate flag on his head and  another in which a white employee complaining about cleaning a sewer  allegedly said: “What am I, a n—– or something?”  “I thought this was  a fair and honest company, as American as apple pie,” said plaintiff  Guillermo Nunez, who says he has suffered emotionally because of the  treatment. “I thought I had made it. It was my American Dream.”
 
  Charming!
  In  addition to all this is their opposition to labeling GMOs while  marketing supposedly health-conscious products like Zico Coconut Water  and Simply Orange (which turned out to not be “Simply Orange” after  all), their H2No campaign encouraging restaurants to push bottled water  over tap water, land grabs all over the world, labor violations in  China, and a million other things I don’t have room for in this one  piece. If you’d like to find out more, check out  Killer Coke, a page created by SINALTRAINAL union activists dedicated to detailing each of Coke’s crimes across the world.
  So  yeah. That’s why I am less than impressed with Coke’s “It’s a Small  World After All” posturing in that Super Bowl ad. Feel-good ads do  nothing for me when we’re talking about a company that is just  straight-up fucking people all around the world.
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