Money isn’t everything – or is it? To most corporations, making a  profit is goal number one – but some of those companies take it way too  far, sacrificing the health of the planet and its inhabitants for a  bigger bank balance.  Far too many corporations turn a blind eye to the  consequences of their destructive, exploitative practices. The worst of  them are committing atrocities that go beyond the realm of objectionable  into criminal, dumping toxic chemicals without regard to public health  and employing child labor. Nestle is environmentally and socially  irresponsible.
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| Blood in your coffee | 
More than 40% of the world’s chocolate comes from Côte d’Ivoire (the  Ivory Coast) in Africa, where tens of thousands of children are  estimated to be working in dangerous conditions on cocoa farms. Nestle  uses cocoa harvested by slave labor  and only when Senator Thomas Harkin (D-Iowa) led an investigation and  introduced legislation that would require chocolate sold in the US to be  labeled “slave-free” did the company act. Nestle promised that by July  2005 they would find a way to certify chocolate as not having been  produced by any underage, indentured, trafficked or coerced labor, but  since then, they have achieved very little.
Nestle’s bottled water business is also a major cause for concern.  Nestle controls one-third of the US market and sells 70 different brand  names of bottled water including Arrowhead, Deer Park, Perrier and  Poland Spring. The company buys up pristine springs in some of the most  beautiful natural spaces in America and builds huge factories on the  sites, releasing pollution into the air and drawing enormous amounts of  water out of the springs.
And, while the company claims an environmentally friendly ethic,  saying it would never harm an aquifer, that’s exactly what they have  done in places like Mecosta County, Michigan, damaging the watershed with excessive withdrawals, reaping huge profits and leaving the locals to deal with the consequences.
                                                    


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