Don't Blame Coca-Cola and Pepsi for America's Israel Policy
American firms are not responsible for how the taxes they pay are spent.

Local soda brands in Muslim-majority countries are eating into Coca-Cola and Pepsi's market share, Reuters reports, "due to consumer boycotts that target the globe-straddling brands as symbols of America, and by extension Israel."
The link between the U.S. government and the Israeli government is clear: The Washington Post calculates America has given $6.5 billion in security aid to Israel since its war with Hamas began on October 7 last year. But why punish civilian producers of sugary beverages that have employees, consumers, and capital all around the globe?
Beyond expressing disapproval of "symbols of America," the boycotts have a more concrete aim. The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo are headquartered in the United States. Coke paid $1.299 billion in taxes during the six months ended June 30, 2023, and Pepsi paid $2.262 billion for the year ended December 30, 2023. When American firms lose revenue, the American government loses tax receipts, which may, in theory, reduce military aid to Israel. The boycott movement has achieved the first two steps: Per Reuters, "Western beverage brands suffered a 7% sales decline in the first half of the year across the region, market researcher NielsenIQ says." Given the increasing disconnect between government revenue and government spending, it's unclear whether the third step was ever really on the table.
Coca-Cola has attempted to distance itself from Israel's military campaign. Al Jazeera describes a Bangladeshi ad in which a shopkeeper tells shoppers Coke is not from Israel, but rather enjoyed globally: "Even Palestine has a Coke factory," the shopkeeper says. The short-lived ad was less than persuasive to people in the Muslim-majority Bangladesh who are concerned about the financial link between American firms, the U.S. government, and Israel. Likewise, PepsiCo pleading that none of its brands "are affiliated with any government or military in the conflict," as it said in a statement to Reuters, has fallen on deaf ears.
Questions of boycotts' efficacy aside, firms are responsible for their actions, not for what the government does with funds stolen from them. Those who morally object to the war in Gaza, which has claimed the lives of thousands of civilians, often say that it's wrong to hold Palestinian civilians responsible for the heinous terrorism of Hamas. Objectors rightly argue that merely living under, and paying taxes to, a government does not make a person morally responsible for that government's actions.
By these lights, neither American citizens nor American companies are responsible for the actions of the American government or governments supported thereby. While consumers are well within their rights to spend or withhold their money on any basis, they should consider whether they have principled reasons for not drinking a can of Coke—or, if they have worse taste, a bottle of Pepsi.
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Questions of boycotts' efficacy aside, firms are responsible for their actions, not for what the government does with funds stolen from them.
Does this statement apply to pharmaceuticals?
Why wouldn't it?
Taxes aren't theft.
But why punish civilian producers of sugary beverages that have employees, consumers, and capital all around the globe?
Because the antisemitic nazis have no idea what they're doing, why they're doing it, who they're doing it for, or for what purpose or endgame.
They are useful idiots. Jackbooted morons who outsource their thinking to globalists who are happy to hijack their incoherent rage to sow chaos.
Remember just a few years ago when "punch a nazi" was all the rage among leftists? You know why they're not saying that anymore? Because they now fully appreciate - but don't care even slightly - that they're the nazis. And it takes top priority on their hierarchy of wokeness.
Remember just a few years ago when “punch a nazi” was all the rage among leftists? You know why they’re not saying that anymore? Because they now fully appreciate – but don’t care even slightly – that they’re the nazis. And it takes top priority on their hierarchy of wokeness.
Pepperidge Farm remembers.
*Responding to the photo/people who support it*
I will gladly join the boycott of anyone that supports the genocide of Israelis.
Oh, you mean you want people to support Hamas-Nazis and the eradication of Israel? No thanks Nazi scum.
Can I blame them for selling poison?
seriously whatthefuck I got a Coke on a flight to Denver last Saturday it didn't even taste like Coke I mean it's been years since I had a Coke but it tasted like Coke then what are they putting in the cans now?
Maybe it was a Shasta cola. An actual Coke is an upcharge.
Of course I'm bullshitting. But it does sound like something an airline might do.
I would expect to see Shasta on Southwest. Budget cola for a budget airline.
have a cousin named Shasta I was always a little jealous lol
I loved RC Cola and not just for the baseball player cans
Some prefer an actual Jewish soda.
How a Jewish Soda Company Helped the Insane Clown Posse Fight the Nazis
Faygo, started by Jewish immigrants, helped fuel the Juggalos’ anti-Fascist march on DC
https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/jewcy-faygo
I keep getting Faygo mixed up with Fanta, which was the Nazis' brand. That aside, it's easy to confuse things with their opposites. At least for me. If I hear A killed B, I'm as likely to remember it as B's having killed A. I just remember they were associated, their relative roles a bit fuzzy.
What happened to the premium Royal Crown in small bottles they had ~25 years ago? It tasted a little like chocolate, but at any rate good.
Amazon
Do they still do those “I wanna pop pop pop” commercials?
Poor sarc must have lost his TV in the divorce.
Doesn't even take years. I've been a Cocaholic since Daddy mixed it with the milk in my baby bottle, and had a strong preference for Cokes over other colas, but especially Pepsi. But lately Coke's price has been so outrageous I've gone for cheaper colas. After a couple months of WalMart cherry cokes, I splurged on a can of Coke from the vending machine at the exit. I didn't taste like Coke any more, and certainly no better than I'd been drinking over the summer.
And if you mix it with rum, make it the cheapest, lightest rum, because you won't taste the difference once it's mixed with cola.
seriously whatthefuck I got a Coke on a flight to Denver last Saturday it didn’t even taste like Coke I mean it’s been years since I had a Coke but it tasted like Coke then what are they putting in the cans now?
I'm not going to say that Coke doesn't or can't taste different now than it did 20 years ago, but I will say that it's a known phenomenon that food and drinks taste different in flight.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150112-why-in-flight-food-tastes-weird
(Feel free to Google search for some other source, there's plenty)
fascinating!
AFAIK, Coke hasn't changed their formula since they introduced "New Coke" and then rolled it back to "Classic Coke" 39 years ago - NOT 20 years ago. I strongly suspect they changed most of the sugar to high-fructose corn syrup under the cover of those two changes. If you want to judge how it affected the flavor, many supermarkets have Mexican Coke with cane sugar at a considerably higher price - but it's possible that Coke has always varied the formula to conform to local tastes, so maybe Mexican Coke is just sweeter or something.
OTOH, air travel and brand changes aside, nothing tastes like it did 20 years ago. Your taste buds deteriorate as you age. At 70, I put on more pepper than I used to, and now eat some things that are spicier than I could stand once.
"Those who morally object to the war in Gaza, which has claimed the lives of thousands of civilians, often say that it's wrong to hold Palestinian civilians responsible for the heinous terrorism of Hamas. Objectors rightly argue that merely living under, and paying taxes to, a government does not make a person morally responsible for that government's actions."
Ha, I've got you there; logical consistency is an oppressive construct, whenever it is applied to an oppressed group! And we all know, as stated by the Chicago Teachers Union, that logic [math, objectivity, a sense of urgency...] is white supremacy anyway.
Now repeat after me: "From the Jordan to the sea...."
Wait until Jack learns how to do research and finds out what the support level is for Hamas is on Gaza (2nd place support also a terrorist front) or how many supported 10/7.
The boycott is not assigning blame per se. It is attempting to pressure the companies into pressuring the government to change the policy. It is not an exercise in morality, it is an exercise in power.
Companies are more responsive than governments to the sort of pressure schlubs like us are capable of bringing to bear.
It is not an exercise in morality"
It can be. Companies are capable of both moral and immoral actions.
That's what happens when your advertising of yesteryear comes back to bite you in the present day. These companies have spent untold money associating their brands with 'America' which worked great in a lot of places.
Try and advertise an 'As American As Apple Pie' campaign in a place that is overtly hostile to the United States in particular and (shocker) sales might not be great. Add on the fact that most in the region are also poor as shit and one wonders how many people in Palestine represent that 7% market share reduction. A few thousand? Less?
Hamas, Hezbollah, the PLO, etc. are the new Nazis.
They want to kill every Jew and anyone who isn't a Muslim, take our our property, our country and believe they are the light of the world and will kill anyone who tries to stop them.
When I look at a picture of Hitler, and I see a Hamas member.
Correct. Grand Mufti Al-Husseini had a similar ideology to Hamas and colllaborated with the Nazis. Nothing new under the sun.
Talk about an easy bit of agitprop for the moron contingent here.
If you want to write an article about the BDS movement, then use Ben and Jerry's as an example.
….government loses tax receipts, which may, in theory, reduce military aid to Israel.
Lol! They don’t have a clue.
In these days of professional activists and astroturf protests, how much would it cost me to get someone to stand next to the guy with the "This Company Supports Israeli Genocide" with another sign that reads "This Idiot Supports Terrorist Kidnapping and Murder"?
It's the old innocent sword/innocent shield problem.
You think muslims are rational? Bwah hah hah. And why do 'libertarians' care if the government loses tax income? Isn't that your desired outcome? More proof 'reason' is a false flag operation of the low-IQ left.
Bullshit. We are all responsible for how our tax money is spent. That's why we have a representative form of government in which the people's elected representatives are responsible for allocating all tax monies. This means that, theoretically at least, all of us are participating in those allocation decisions when we vote our representatives in or out when we like/don't like the way they spend our money.
And perhaps sometimes "all are punish-ed" when poor decisions are made. For you it might be the entire New Deal; for me it might be the un-turn-off-able money faucet in the Pentagon. For many, sending more weapons to Israel after almost a year in Gaza seems unwise. The actual money is going to American-owned arms manufacturers, of course, and many see that as an unqualified good.
So, yes, all of us are responsible for the actual offensive weapons we buy for Israel. I'd like to say that Coke and Pepsi are no more responsible than the rest of us, but that would be an error: large corporations certainly do have unrepresentative levels of influence on all policy-making, including spending policy, and they are not accountable for that when they do it through lobbyists, country-club friendships, judicial decisions, and trade organizations. When they burn down K Street I confess I will feel somewhat more empowered than I do now. But not a lot, and Coke and Pepsi et al. will go on doing what they do best (shareholder value!!!!!!!!!), as will the arms manufacturers I mentioned above.
But in the end, who cares what people in other countries decide to consume, and for what reasons? Like seriously, what the fuck do you expect us to do about people in fucking Bangladesh not drinking Coke anymore?
Jack Nicastro seems sadly unaware that his link to the claim that "thousands of Arab civilians have been killed" in Israel's campaign to destroy the genocidal death-cult Hamas offers no source for that claim but...Hamas itself. That's right, the source is the "Health Ministry" of Gaza, which is to say, the Hamas-run government of Gaza.
So, what he did here (and he's far from alone) is he just took the claim of a genocidal death-cult noted for its total lack of any shred of decency or honesty at face value. Claims which were subjected to statistical analysis months ago and found to be obviously manufactured lies. Have a look at my link, immediately below.
https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/how-gaza-health-ministry-fakes-casualty-numbers