What is NaturalNews NaturalPedia? | Information for Authors Home | About Natural News | Contact Us | About the Consumer Wellness Center
NaturalNews.com > NaturalPedia > Soft drink companies

Soft drink companies

page 1 of 2 | Next -> Email this page to a friend

Want news about Soft drink companies and more e-mailed to you? Click here for free email alerts


Grocery Warning: How to recognize and avoid the groceries that cause cancer, diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and other common diseases

Mike Adams
See book keywords and concepts
Making people sick and promoting diseases like osteoporosis has absolutely financial consequences to soft drink companies themselves. The medical costs of dealing with these diseases are fully shouldered by the customer. Soft drink companies spin the science to claim their products are harmless There's a tremendous amount of spin coming out of the public relations departments of soft drink companies.

Stop Prediabetes Now: The Ultimate Plan to Lose Weight and Prevent Diabetes

Jack Challem
See book keywords and concepts
In the United States, the giant fast-food and soft drink companies compete for increased sales using marketing plans that resemble military battle plans. With the U.S. fast-food and soft drink markets now largely saturated, the giant food companies have worked to open new markets in Europe, Asia, and Central and South America where they can make greater financial gains. The companies have succeeded in selling more and making more money—getting fat financially by making people fat and unhealthy. That's no better than how the cigarette companies marketed their products.

Sugar Shock!: How Sweets and Simple Carbs Can Derail Your Life-- and How YouCan Get Back on Track

Connie Bennett, C.H.H.C. with Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D.
See book keywords and concepts
Then, in May 2006, the nation's three top soft drink companies, faced with threats of a lawsuit from the Center for Science in the Public Interest advocacy group, announced that they would voluntarily stop selling caloric soda and iced teas in school vending machines and cafeterias at public schools nationwide by the 2009-2010 school year. The much-ballyhooed deal was brokered by the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, a collaboration between former President Clinton's William J. Clinton Foundation and the American Heart Association.
Specifically, reports Nestle, "soft drink companies unapologetically name 8- to 12-year-olds as marketing targets. Advertisers encourage marketing directed to 9-year-olds as a logical consequence of the fact that children—and girls in particular—are maturing earlier." In fact, corporations have devised ways to win over young people by hooking up with organizations that cater to them.
Specifically, family groups seek to abolish highly lucrative "pouring rights," contracts whereby soft drink companies fork over millions of dollars to school districts by making payments over a 5-to-10-year period in return for the exclusive rights to sell their soft drinks in vending machines on school premises and at school events. This financial arrangement is particularly loathsome to health advocates.

Neurological disease names sound complex, but they often share a common cause

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
The American Diabetes Association, for example, accepted millions of dollars from soft drink companies and candy manufacturers. None of these disease organizations have been willing to stand up and tell the truth about nutrition and chemical toxicity. They aren't willing to stand up and say you should have absolutely no refined sugar in your diet, or that high fructose corn syrup promotes diabetes and obesity. If you have good nutrition and you avoid exposure to environmental chemicals, then you won't express a disease even if you have the so-called gene that has been linked to it.

Grocery Warning: How to recognize and avoid the groceries that cause cancer, diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and other common diseases

Mike Adams
See book keywords and concepts
Soft drink companies spin the science to claim their products are harmless There's a tremendous amount of spin coming out of the public relations departments of soft drink companies. Not surprisingly, the soft drink spin machine has infected all sorts of scientific-sounding groups and organizations whose employees unabashedly defend the soft drink manufacturers: Corporations also fund "nonprofit research institutes" which provide "third party experts" to advocate on their behalf.

Soft drink company marketing tactics: the experts sound off

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Children also influence a substantial proportion of the total annual sales of certain foods… 30 percent on soft drinks." "Soft drink companies unapologetically name 8-to-12-year-olds as marketing targets. Advertisers encourage marketing directed to 9-year-olds as a logical consequence of the fact that children -- and girls in particular -- are maturing earlier." "The reason they chose Coke or Pepsi had nothing to do with taste. . . . [We] think the advertising media targets their advertisements to appeal to teenagers because . . .

Disease-promoting ingredients in everyday foods and groceries are far more dangerous than terrorists

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
It's no more complicated than good old-fashioned food politics: the soft drink companies, sugar industry and mass food producers lobbied the USDA to make sure the new guidelines would not cause a decrease in the sales of their products. So the anti-sugar message was censored. The result, no doubt, is that more Americans will continue to consume added sugars, and they will increasingly be diagnosed with diabetes and obesity as a result. The food lobby, the big sugar lobby and the soft drink lobby have all blockaded what would have otherwise been good nutritional advice.

The health effects of drinking soda - quotes from the experts

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Earl Mindell Earl Mindell's New Vitamin Bible "Recent research has linked soft drinks with childhood obesity— and an estimated 200 school districts nationwide have contracts with soft drink companies that give them exclusive rights to sell their products in schools.

The Cleveland Clinic battles with McDonald's over fast food in hospitals

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
It's time to boot fast food restaurants and soft drink companies from all our institutions of learning and health.
In a sane world, none of these institutions would have ever agreed to let fast food restaurants and soft drink companies onto their premises in the first place, but it seems like sanity is sometimes late to the party, especially here in the United States where free market greed tends to be the number one priority regardless of who gets hurt in the process.

Soft drink company marketing tactics: the experts sound off

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
John Robbins "The Food Revolution: How Your Diet Can Help Save Your Life and Our World" "Coca-Cola and other soft drink companies are giving millions of dollars to cash-strapped school districts in return for exclusive rights to sell their products in schools. In one such deal, a school district in Colorado actually requires teachers to push Coca-Cola consumption in classrooms whenever sales fall below contractual obligations." Earl Mindell PhD and Virginia Hopkins MA Earl Mindell's New Vitamin Bible "There's a good chance that one of the leading contributors to osteoporosis in the U.S.
Mountain Dew" "Some soft drink companies go so far as to license their logos to makers of infant-feeding bottles." William Duffy Sugar Blues "A product like Coca–Cola, which contains known poisons and destroys [one’s] teeth and stomach, has one of the most stunning ad campaigns in the history of the Western world…. Coke executives have learned from extensive research that young America is searching for what is real, meaningful in this plastic world, and one bright ad executive comes up with the idea that it is Coke.

Everyday groceries contain ingredients that cause heart disease, diabetes, cancer, osteoporosis and other chronic diseases

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
And the decision makers in our federal regulatory agencies who claim to be acting on your behalf are actually censoring the information, making sure the American public doesn't learn the truth, because the truth would hurt the corporate profits of soft drink companies, food processors, fast food restaurant chains and drug companies. After all, there are lobbyists to please. The public be damned. To turn the tables on the food lobbyists, and in an effort to educate the public about the details of which grocery ingredients to avoid, I've written a book on the subject called "Grocery Warning.

Soft drink company marketing tactics: the experts sound off

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Soft drink companies are especially comprehensive in their approach to young consumers…. Coca-Cola puts its logo on so many items that it runs a chain of stores to sell them; it even has stores at international airports." "Coca-Cola company, for example, sends multiple copies of "Coke cards" to "teen influentials" -- school officers, cheerleaders, and sports participants -- expecting that they will pass the extras along to their network of friends.

CounterThink Roundup: The Chinese currency blame game and corporate ethics in America (satire)

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Talk to soft drink companies, which continue to use a downright toxic chemical (aspartame) in products that are heavily marketed to children. Grill DuPont over the hidden story on Teflon, and why it took so long for the truth to come out on its dangers to humans. Gee, if you're looking for evil corporations to grill, you don't have to look very hard. From diabetes treatment centers that don't teach nutrition to medical journals that sell out their science to Big Pharma advertisers, there's evil, manipulation and censorship all around us.

The unauthorized history of Coca-Cola (satire)

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Earl Mindell Earl Mindell's New Vitamin Bible "Recent research has linked soft drinks with childhood obesity— and an estimated 200 school districts nationwide have contracts with soft drink companies that give them exclusive rights to sell their products in schools.

If It's Not Food, Don't Eat It! The No-nonsense Guide to an Eating-for-Health Lifestyle

Kelly Harford, M.C., C.N.C.
See book keywords and concepts
In an aggressive effort to increase sales, profits and create lifelong customers, fast-food and soft drink companies have contracts, often worth millions of dollars, to provide food service and vending machines, at more than 5,000 U.S. schools to date. As the Scary Statistics reveal, acquired tastes and regular consumption of high fat-sugar-sodium, processed and fast-food items are leaving children and adults prone to obesity and dis-ease at increasingly younger ages.

Appetite for Profit: How the Food Industry Undermines Our Health and How to Fight Back

Michele Simon
See book keywords and concepts
Types of groups/programs: • Trade associations lobby on behalf of their members • Front groups also lobby, but often hide their corporate backing • Scientific institutes give the appearance of legitimate research • Educational programs usually emphasize physical activity as the "solution" • Public-private partnerships co-opt government and nonprofit groups Industry Trade Associations—Food and Beverage American Beverage Association Represents soft drink companies; formerly called the National Soft Drink Association. Local bottlers are also represented by regional trade groups. www.
When Marr repeats Coke's lies, she speaks with the authority of both her own expertise and the prestigious Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior} In another example of industry-sponsored research resulting in pro-corporate results, soft drink companies collectively funded a 2004 study to show that soda intake was not linked to decreased calcium. Many health experts are concerned that soda is displacing milk in children's diets.
He also questioned the journal's complicity in bolstering Coke's position: In short, to dispel the "myth" that soft drink companies market to young children, Marr merely parrots Coca-Cola's false claims about its own marketing practices. But when Coca-Cola makes these claims, some people, at least, may recognize that these are the self-serving words of a company desperately trying to maintain its access to children.
Isdell was especially eager to play up Marr's attempt to dismiss the "myth" that "soft drink companies market to young children." In her article, Marr insisted that "for nearly fifty years, the Coca-Cola Company has adhered to a policy not to market soft drinks to children under the age of twelve years. Recently, the company expanded that policy to apply to all of its beverages, including juices, sports drinks, and water."4 But other experts aren't convinced.

Soft drink company marketing tactics: the experts sound off

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
Recent development in food marketing: large payments from soft drink companies to school districts in return for the right to sell that company's products -- and only those products -- in every one of the district's schools." "The company's most evident marketing strategy is advertising. Coca -Cola’s global advertising budget exceeded $1.6 billion in the late 1990s. In 1999 the company spent $867 million for advertising in the United States alone -- $174.4 million for Coca-Cola beverages, $68.4 million for Sprite, $41.4 million for Minute Maid, and $17.

Food Plants of the World: An illustrated guide

Ben-Erik van Wyk
See book keywords and concepts
Major soft drink companies have started to produce imitation brands but the original Brazilian brands are still the most popular. These fashionable "energy drinks" are rich in caffeine and are therefore used as general tonics and to counteract fatigue. Guarana is also available in the form of chocolate bars, chewing gums, syrups, powders and tablets. The product allegedly has aphrodisiac properties and is widely used to help with weight loss programmes (claims are often exaggerated). Guarana is nevertheless listed as a functional food. Nutritional value Limited.

The Cure Con: how you're being deceived by charities that claim to be racing for the cure for cancer and other chronic diseases

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
I've seen races for diabetes sponsored by soft drink companies. That's right! The race sponsors manufacture the very products that cause diabetes! Wow, what a racket! The race promoters, for their part, don't seem at all concerned about the fact that they're providing publicity to a company selling products that actually promote the very disease they claim to be fighting against! I can't wait to see the AA run sponsored by Absolut Vodka. Or the cure for lung cancer run sponsored by tobacco companies.

The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health

T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D. and Thomas M. Campbell II
See book keywords and concepts
M&M Mars candy company and a consortium of soft drink companies. Is it possible that the U.S. group felt an obligation to these sugar companies? Incidentally, the sugar industry, in their fight against the WHO conclusion, has relied heavily7 on the FNB report with its 25% limit. In other words, the FNB committee produces a friendly recommendation for the sugar industry which then turns around and uses this finding to support its claim against the WHO report. THE INFLUENCE OF INDUSTRY This discussion still leaves unanswered the question of how industry develops such extraordinary influence.

Grocery Warning: How to recognize and avoid the groceries that cause cancer, diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and other common diseases

Mike Adams
See book keywords and concepts
Health and Nutrition Secrets That Can Save Your Life Making matters worse, soft drink companies put their liquid products containing aspartame in containers made of aluminum. When this aluminum - a known neurotoxin - is combined with aspartame, the results are multiplied: In the case of diet drinks in aluminum cans, the very brain-toxic aluminum fluoride compound co-exists with multiple toxins found in aspartame, thus creating the most powerful government-approved toxic soup imaginable.

What is a "normal" diet? Consumers and food industry pundits have it all backwards

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
See article keywords and concepts
You usually hear this from companies that are selling you the most disease-causing food and beverage products in the entire food supply. soft drink companies, for example, say that soft drinks can be part of a healthy diet. They are implying that you can eat a little bit of everything, no matter how bad it is for your health, and still somehow be healthy. This goes along with the idea that processed foods and junk foods are normal. What's really compatible with your body?

page 1 of 2 | Next ->

FAIR USE NOTICE: The research quoted here is provided under the protection of Fair Use provisions and published by the 501(c)3 non-profit Consumer Wellness Center for the purposes of public comment and education. Authors / publishers may submit books for consideration of inclusion here.

TERMS OF USE: Read full terms of use. Citations of text from NaturalPedia must include: 1) Full credit to the original author and book title. 2) Secondary credit to the Natural News Naturalpedia as a research resource and a link to www.NaturalNews.com/np/index.html

This unique compilation of research is copyright (c) 2008 by the non-profit Consumer Wellness Center.

ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.

Refine your search
with Soft drink companies...

...and Objects:

...and Companies
...and Company
...and Industry
...and Market
...and People
...and Report
...and Journal
...and Television
...and Product
...and Diets

Related Concepts:

Companies
Drink
Children
Company
Coke
Coca-cola
Industry
Market
Drinks
People
Food
Soda
Marketing
Report
Journal
Trade
The who
Example
Young
Myth
Public
Sugar industry
Beverages
Research
Results
Meeting
Sugar
Soft drinks
Study
Products
Nutrition
Scientific
Television
Product
Product placement
Sugars
Pressure
Giant
Fast-food
Group
Snacks
Access
False
Sales
Industry-sponsored research
New
Schools
Nutrition education
Journal of nutrition
Childhood
Making
Corporate
Calcium
Decreased
Intake
Juices
Positioning
Coca-cola company
Greater
Negative
Sports drinks
Water
Tool
Wrong
American
Diets
Health experts
Sports
Calories
Obesity
South america
Educational programs
Food safety
Government
Saturated
Funding
Europe
James
Physical activity
Food companies
National
Physical
Local
Interpretation
Fear
Science
Damage
Military
Activity
Mars
Muscle
Solution
Candy
United states
Play
High-sugar
Referred
Asia
Fats
Finding