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No Cheers for PepsiCo and Their Corporate Scrooges
A
BUZZFLASH READER COMMENTARY
by
John F. Borowski
The
PepsiCo Corporation, a monolithic giant in the soda pop and fast food
industry plays "cut throat hardball" with its competition. Fearing a 15
year old cheerleaders' attempt to fund raise at school selling bottled
water triggered the predacious instincts of PepsiCo to rear its ugly nature:
profit at any cost.
When Pepsi got wind of West Salem High (Salem, Oregon) cheerleader Andrea
Boyes’ creative idea to sell bottled water under the school logo, "Titans"
they claimed "turf rights" and squashed the idea. Pepsi has a 10-year,
$5 million contract with the Salem Keiser School District and only they
can sell their bottled water, Aquafina brand, on school grounds.
With September 7th, 2002 total assets reported at $23,793,000,000 one
could only imagine the financial damage young Ms. Boyes might create for
the soda giant.
Yes, young Ms. Boyes has learned a hard lesson in this brave new world
of public school funding, where corporate entities have no shame about
contractual powers and young adults are left jaded and powerless.
It isn't despicable enough that Pepsi lures cash-strapped public schools
into peddling its elixirs of sugar, water and coloring. Doesn’t every
good parent serve their children Pepsi in the morning, with a 12-ounce
can loaded with approximately 9 ounces of sugar? Possibly PepsiCo executives
can market an economics teaching packet for public schools, discussing
the future potential of insulin sales as we passively watch a generation
succumb to type-2 diabetes? Does being part of the "Pepsi Generation"
include a life long membership to the osteoporosis and obesity club?
PepsiCo actions offer a glimpse into a tragic trend. Public schools are
now forging collusive deals with the devil, while corporate taxes to help
pay for education diminish. Reading, writing and brand loyalty is the
mantra of companies like Pepsi and if even a young and motivated cheerleader
threatens a penny of earnings: stop her cold in her tracks.
This Pepsi debacle raises even more pertinent questions. Are we as a free
society not willing to fund the public school systems of this nation?
Are we afraid to ask corporate America, with its armies of publicly schooled
employees, to donate their fair share of the tax base? Will we allow fast
food, soda pop and candy to dominate the school day of some 60 million
students? Will we sit back and watch the most commercially manipulated
and marketed generation of children grow into adulthood facing a legacy
of malnutrition?
Apparently, PepsiCo has declined to discuss the issue. Maybe they can
buy off the cheerleaders at this Salem school with some free coupons to
go to one of their other culturally rich icons: Taco Bell or Kentucky
Fried Chicken.
Around the nation, including this weekend, crowds of cheering parents
and fans will urge on student athletes in an age-old American pastime.
Football games, soccer games, volleyball and basketball games will bring
together members of each community with a common sense of purpose: supporting
children. And when they look up at the scoreboard and see the Pepsi logo,
hopefully they will consider the story of one caring and motivated cheerleader
who tried to make a difference in her hometown and the soulless corporate
power that views children as vehicles for cash.
If you listen closely, maybe you will hear a rousing jeer from the high
school cheerleaders across the nation as they give PepsiCo a hearty Bronx
cheer. And maybe, just maybe there will be a shortage of quarters entering
the vending machines at those Salem high schools.
John
F. Borowski
Teacher
of environmental and marine science
North
Salem High, Salem, Oregon
He
can be reached at jenjill@proaxis.com
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