• pedz@lemmy.ca
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      54 minutes ago

      But they have local beef, local potatoes, local millionaires owning the restaurants, so it’s totally not American. Even the workers are locals!

      It’s like Frito-Lay adding “Made in Canada” on their bags. So many American companies are now suddenly so proud to make their stuff locally, in <insert country name here>.

      • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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        40 minutes ago

        It’s like Frito-Lay adding “Made in Canada” on their bags. So many American companies are now suddenly so proud to make their stuff locally, in <insert country name here>.

        The Lays chips I was getting in Alberta were American-made before the shit started, they’re Canadian made now

  • GeriatricGambino@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Saw the same type of ads fronting plant workers here in France, trying to give the coke company a “very french and human face”. Asked myself the same question, if the company noticed a dip of profit important enough to spit out this “don’t think of us as American, we’re also totally local. Look, our wageslaves have first names resembling yours. You wouldn’t hurt our wageslaves would you ? They’re just like you” psyop.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    What I see is: “Continue the good work, the boycott is working.” 👍

    Ever since Trump became president and began to threaten allies with all kinds of shit, I stopped buying American.
    And although Coca Cola is bottled locally, it remains an American brand with money going to USA for the secret sauce and licensing.

    So 100% buy a truly European/local brand instead.

    PS: Here (Denmark) Coca Cola has been half price for I think it’s about 4 months straight now, and I love it every time I see it’s still sold at a reduced price.

    PPS: Coca Cola is exactly among the companies we should boycott, because we get next to nothing from them, all we get is a bit of vastly overpriced added flavor, and Coca Cola gets almost all the money and the brand recognition to continue to dominate markets.

    • aramis87@fedia.io
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      10 hours ago

      You forgot the resource extraction to create the product and the environmental damage and pollution that results :(

      • dickalan@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        I wrote a paper in community college about externalized costs and I’ve never been the same since. This was 20 or so years ago

    • Lena@gregtech.eu
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      9 hours ago

      I really like Cockta, used to be owned by a Slovenian company, currently by Croatians. Still european!

  • macniel@feddit.org
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    10 hours ago

    Lol no? The Coca Cola was made, rinsed and filled by a machine. A rinsing and filing machine if you will. And I’m sure its not named Daniel.

    • Petersson@feddit.org
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      9 hours ago

      They actually name their bottles like humans, “Share a coke”. I recently bought an “Ivan”, because I didn’t want to buy a Coke and had never heard of “Share a coke” to this point, only to see the Cola-logo while paying for the bottle.

      E: Lol, Daniel is listed two times on Cola's Share a coke website.

  • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 hours ago

    Isn’t the coke syrup actually made in the US and shipped to the world, where it’s mixed with local water?

  • biofaust@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I hope Germans are smarter than that. Also, Daniel is not the most German name they could have found, I am sure a Klaus or a Reinhardt would have worked better. Unless Daniel is an American employee conceived in Germany by his parents and the tagline refers to him.

    Also, here in Denmark and in Italy Coca-Cola relies on local bottling companies who would surely lose volumes, but those would be also freed up for local or do-good alternatives, such as Fritz Cola (which is very good in it’s zero calories version) and Gaza Cola (yeah, that’s probably never gonna happen in Germany, but still a good example).

    • KumaSudosa@feddit.dk
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      3 minutes ago

      I’ve been a proud supporter of nothing but Faxe Kondi since the orange clown got into office. Pretty much looked over all of my consumption habits… something I should’ve done before but rather late than never

    • ook@discuss.tchncs.de
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      9 hours ago

      You think that Daniel is “not the most German name” but suggest Klaus or Reinhardt is more representative? What else, should he wear Lederhosen?

      • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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        5 hours ago

        Daniel can be plausibly American as easily as it can be German. Klaus or Reinhardt sounds American only if it’s someone’s great-grandfather from before WW1, whose parents immigrated in 1848.

      • RudeOnTuesdays@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        I don’t know how accurate this website is, but forebears.io has a list of common German names, and the top three are: Peter, Michael, and Wolfgang. Daniel was listed as 171st most popular.

        • ook@discuss.tchncs.de
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          22 minutes ago

          I was kind of expecting that question, there is actually an official listing of the most popular German names for babies every year. Goes back a few decades: https://gfds.de/vornamen/beliebteste-vornamen/#topten

          Daniel is among the top ten in almost every year up to 2000. After that it is other names taking over but I didn’t check where Daniel lands, might have been top 20 or top 50 still.

          Seeing as the guy in the ad is not likely under 20, Daniel isn’t a weird choice of a name. Certainly better than Klaus or Reinhardt.

        • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          That list is almost exclusively old fashioned names, which, combined with the website name makes me wonder if they’re scraping obituaries for the names. I’ve lived here for most of a decade and I’ve never met a Wolfgang or Ursula under 60 (actually of the top ten, I only know young people named Michael, Peter, Thomas, and Maria). I do know several older Wolfgangs and Helgas, so they certainly were common names at one point-the data might just be 80 years delayed. Actually going through it, all of my husband’s older family members’ names are in the top thirty. (Edit: also no idea how accurate this list is, but the most popular names from the 50s are all the same as on the other list, so I suspect it is just gathering data upon death)

          I know at least five Daniels in their 20s and 30s though. I’m a) an immigrant, and b) just going off of my own experience, so take that with a grain of salt.

          Quick aside about Maria as a man’s name: it’s traditionally Austrian, afaik, and it’s more commonly a second name (like Rainer Maria Rilke), but there’s no chance that 0% of the Marias in Germany are men.