Dark History - 28: The Many Crimes of The Nestle Company
Episode Date: January 19, 2022How did Nestle go from feeding babies to poisoning puppies? Well let me tell you it is a bumpy ride. As Nestle continued to grow, their scandals got bigger and bigger. Today we dive into just a few ...of the shady, shady things Nestle has done over the years.
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Alright, hi friends. How are you today? I hope you're having a wonderful day so far.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to the library of Dark History.
That's right baby. Oh my nail just popped off. You know what? We're just gonna put it back
on. Everything's fine, everyone. Great. This is a safe space for all the curious cats
out there who are like, hey, this history really is boring, is it seemed in high school or
school or whatever? Oh, na na. Let me tell you, this is where we can learn together about
all the dark, mysterious, dramatic stories that maybe we just didn't learn about in school.
It's fun, it's a good time. Now, let me tell you something, if I seem a little dead today,
that's because I have bad cramps
and my insides are currently taken over by the devil.
So if I seem a little dead, let me tell you, it's not me,
it's the body.
Okay, thank you so much.
So let me tell you, rabbit hole, I went down one.
I was drinking a bottled water.
This is like a little bit ago.
Okay, and normally I don't drink bottled water.
I have my little canteen, whatever that I use,
but I forgot it.
So I was drinking this bottled water,
and it tasted so weird.
I was like, this water just tastes funny.
And I was like, still really thirsty
after drinking the water, it wasn't quenching my thirst.
So I looked at it, and by Nestle, okay. I looked at the water, it wasn't quenching my thirst. So I looked at it and, um,
by nesly, okay,
I looked at the ingredients and it said it had salt and sugar
in this bottled water.
Now some of you may remember this because on Twitter,
I was like, dude, why does this water taste like that?
And everybody was schooling me on
how they put sugar and salt in bottled water.
This was new news to me, I had no idea. Okay,
wow. Hello. I had my blindfolds on. My little blinders. No idea. So I went down this whole rabbit hole
of like, why is there sugar and salt in bottled water? Hello. So I started googling and let me tell you
of course all these doors started opening and I was like, oh, God, it's so much worse than I thought.
So then I ended up zeroing in on the Nestle company. And when I tell you Nestle is basically the Disney villain type of bad, um, it's more than just candy that we're talking about here. Nestle is out here just trying to take
over the universe I think and I don't know I wasn't paying attention at least.
Nestle, bad. What are you doing? Nestle, no. Stop it. They do make a chocolate
milk though I won't lie, but no. So where is the story? Start, let me tell you. It
starts with puppies. Yes, sweet innocent baby little puppies,
you know, who could do no wrong puppies?
But then, you know, it's gonna take a left hand turn per
use.
So don't get too excited about cute puppies.
So we're going back to the year 2015 and we're in
Berkeley, California.
Now there's this guy named Frank who has a pretty typical
life.
His, you know, he's, I got a wife, a big old house, and he's out there just living the American dream.
He also has a few dogs. He's got a German shepherd, an English bulldog, and a Labrador.
Now one day Frank starts noticing something a little weird.
His German shepherd is losing fur, and not just a normal amount of of fur he is losing a lot of fur. And on top of that
his little doki companion friend is acting very very strange. I mean we're talking in like he seems
majorly depressed his dog. And to make matters worse the puppy the pup the little young little
kitty petudi starts vomiting uncontrollably. Now Frank is concerned, I mean who wouldn't be.
So he goes to the vet, and then his vet's like, yeah, I don't know what's going on with
your dog.
But the vet's only theory is that maybe the poor dog has been poisoned.
Either way, there isn't much of a treatment to help the dog.
So Frank takes his sick little pup home and just really hopes for the best.
But a week later, when a Frank's other dog, his English bulldog, suddenly dies out of nowhere.
I mean, no warning?
Nothing, just falls over, plop, dead.
So that's one of Frank's dogs, who is super sick, and another one just sends up dead.
Now the vet performs an autopsy on the bulldog and finds signs of internal bleeding and
liver failure.
And you know what's interesting?
The symptoms are very similar to what had been going on with the German shepherd.
But unfortunately, it's not over for Frank and his dogs, because just a few days later,
the Labrador gets sick.
They are just going like flies.
At this point, Frank's really worried.
I mean, why are all of his babies getting sick and dying?
The vet doesn't have any answers.
So Frank pulls a Bailey and turns to Google for something, some kind of answer.
So Frank starts googling and the only thing he thinks to Google is maybe the brand of his
dog's food.
Purina Beneful.
He's like a bee-bob-boop.
And at first, Frank didn't really notice anything out of the ordinary.
He found the website for the brand in a Facebook page that had over like a million likes, so
it was kind of turning out to be a dead end.
But then he found a website that posted product reviews that had a page with 708 one-star ratings
for the Purina Beneful Food.
These reviews were fricking horrific.
They had descriptions of dogs going through the exact same thing as Frank's pets were
going through.
So as many of us would be, Frank was filled with his emotions.
I mean, he needed to do something fast.
This food that is supposed to be nurturing and take care of your dog may be doing something
really awful
to his dogs.
So he contacts a lawyer who decided to check it out for himself.
He ended up finding over 4,000 others who were experiencing the same thing.
So the lawyer asked Frank, like, hey, are you interested in doing or joining a class action
lawsuit?
And Frank quickly agrees. Now it turns out Purina-benefiled dog food contain fungal mold, lead, arsenic, and something
called industrial grade glycols, which is essentially an ingredient found in antifreeze.
Sorry.
Anti, antifreeze, whatever. anti-anti-whatever. In other words, literally eating poison. Someone is awkward to
funnying the dogs. What is happening? According to the FDA, the toxin levels
did not exceed allowable limits for humans. You see, the limits were never actually
set for dogs. Now Frank wasn't the first person to blow the whistle on Purina. He's just one of the
most recent examples in a long history of shady dealings. Because what if I told you the problem
isn't just with Purina? Oh no. This goes all the way to the top baby to the company that owns Purina,
the Nestle Corporation. We're coming for you.
The Nestle Corporation. We're coming for you.
Pfft.
Get them.
Get them, Joan.
We're coming for you, Nestle.
And your goddamn good and freaking chocolate milk.
Poising our dogs.
How could you?
We trusted you.
Now, when I tell you Nestle's past is dark,
I mean, that's putting it very lightly.
Scannels like Frank's story happened happening under Nestle's watch for a decade.
So like let's put them up there with DuPont. Remember DuPont?
We're looking at you, pieces of shit. But I'm getting ahead of myself.
So let's start at the beginning.
Let's go back, back to the beginning. I know, you should
give it, but whatever. Let me get my book. Joan, we're going to turn to the chapter about
Nestle and their little shenanigans that are killing us per use. What's new? I don't know
why they're trying to kill us. Where are their customers? Why are they trying to kill us?
Who's going to buy your shit when we're all dead?
Think about it, exactly.
Okay, anyways, oh my god, look.
I turned to the page where it's like,
someone's dead.
So, okay, anyway, carry on.
Dip, dip, dip, carry on, okay.
There you go.
Nestle was started by a German pharmacist named Henry Nestle. Um, carry on. Dip it out. Carry on. Okay. There you go.
Nestle was started by a German pharmacist named Henry Nestle.
Now this man was born in 1814.
There's really not much known about Henry's early life, but it was said that he was a salesman,
slash scientist, that was constantly chasing the next big thing.
At different points in his life, he sold oils, cement, mustard, mineral water,
but nothing really seemed to catch on for him. He was just kind of like dabbling around.
But then one day in 1866, Henry's reading the news when he sees that reports of infant mortality
are at an all-time high. Many women at the time couldn't breastfeed, so some kind of substitute to breast
milk could potentially save a lot of baby's lives. So he started reading reports about breast
milk. And he began conducting experiments with milk, bread, and sugar. I'm sure that's
why he went to it. I'm to help the babies, not because titties.
Then in 1867, Henry hit the jackpot by creating something called
Ferrine Lacti. Sounds exciting right? I know. Well it's just flour milk. So okay what's so special
about that Bailey? Well this flour milk was one of the very first recipes anybody had ever made
for baby formula. Okay right yeah? Yeah, that's good.
He started selling it almost immediately after he invented it, advertising his product
as something that could be given to babies who couldn't be breastfed.
And it worked. I mean, this was finally Henry Nestle's big break.
And suddenly, his flower milk formula became popular all over Europe.
I mean, this is a really great thing, right?
Great, we love this for us.
Yay, this led to the creation of the entire baby food industry
with Henry as the face of success.
Oh, Bravo, Henry.
And this very same year, 1867, Henry shared his recipe
with a Swiss chocolate maker.
Oh yeah, and it turns out
if you mixed Henry's condensed milk recipe with chocolate,
you got a smooth, sweet, delicious treat.
Basically, this is the invention of milk chocolate
as we know it.
Bravo!
We should have just ended it there.
So after this, Henry and the chocolate maker
decided to go into business together.
Baby food in chocolate? Oh, it's like perfect. It's a match made in heaven.
And this combination of products made Henry so rich that he decided to go out on top
and sells his steak in the company in 1875.
So it's around this point that Nestle's history starts to get a little bit more mysterious.
Instead of there being an obvious head of the Nestle company, suddenly there's an entire
board of directors. By 1905, Nestle had merged with so many other companies that they just became known
as the Nestle Group. No one really knows who that was, but the Nestle Group.
When World War I broke out in 1914, there was an increased demand in the US for powdered
milk for soldiers, so Nestle opened offices in the United States to do just that.
And then when the Great Depression happened, Nestle found a way to make cheap coffee.
And in World War II, Nestle was able to stay afloat
when most other international corporations were suffering
because Switzerland was a neutral territory.
Basically, every time a major event hit Earth,
Nestle found a way to profit and grow from it.
And as they grew and became more successful,
they swallowed up even more companies.
So by the 1970s, the Nestle Group had their hands in everything from more coffee to TV dinners
to make up. By this time, Nestle basically owned everything. And if Nestle had just stopped
at owning everything, well, this episode wouldn't exist, okay? So now it's 1974.
Nestle had their first real controversy.
Oh yeah, their biggest seller at the time
was still baby formula, but their profits were kind of,
they're evening out.
They needed to find a way to start selling more formula.
So they decided to market the formula as a necessity. I'm using quotes here.
Necessity that was better than breastfeeding. Now this was a departure from old Henry who originally
pitched formula as something to use if you couldn't breastfeed. It went from an alternative
option to really the only option for many women. Nestle even deployed saleswomen dressed up in nurses' uniforms to walk the halls of
maternity wards, giving away free samples, and other gifts to convince mothers that
formula was healthier than breast milk.
These, quote unquote, nurses, were paid on commission, which meant the more formula they
sold, the more money they made.
So I mean, you think they're going gonna sit around and do nothing? No.
So some of you may be thinking, well, okay, Bailey, what's so bad about that?
Well, if you're not happy with the formula, you could just go back to breastfeeding.
The problem is, the longer a woman goes without breastfeeding, the harder it becomes for her to lactate.
So by the time they figured out Nestle was selling them
a load of BS, it was too late. They could no longer make their own milk and they honestly
needed the formula. And that's only if the women even figured out that this was a load
of BS. Now Nestle sees how successful this new marketing campaign has been and they
decide to make it global worldwide. They expand their marketing into developing countries and start selling baby formula
there too.
By definition, a developing country is one with limited resources, things like food,
money, and water.
The last one becomes really important when you're trying to convince people to replace
breastfeeding with formula.
Why?
Well, you mix baby formula with water for it to become something
the baby can drink. So convincing people to only use baby formula in a place where clean
water is, and short supply, is not the greatest idea or the greatest plan.
So later that year, in 1974, a bomb shell expose called the baby killer came out. It was all about multiple companies selling baby formula and
their questionable practices. Aside from stating what we already know like how a formula requires water,
the report said that in developing countries the water that's available is contaminated. So the
water being used to mix the formula was contaminated. But as the report goes on, there's a whole
section specifically about Nestle, and the fact that they didn't care that there wasn't
clean water in developing countries. The instructions in the Nestle mother books say,
quote, wash your hands thoroughly with soap each time you have to prepare meal for the baby."
End quote. But 66% of the households at the time in the country of Malawi didn't
even have washing facilities of any kind, and even less people had a freeing kitchen.
The book further states to, quote, place a bottle and lid in a saucepan of water and bring
to a boil for 10 minutes on an electric stove. But most West African women at the time didn't even have an electric
stove, and did their cooking in a pot over a wood fire. When the authors of the Baby Killer
pointed all this out to Nestle, they pretty much ignored what the report pointed out and
continued to push their formula in developing countries. So what do you think happened
when these mothers in developing countries continue to mix Nestle's baby formula with contaminated water?
Question mark?
Well, their baby started getting sick.
And, to make an awful situation even worse, sometimes, when money got tight,
mothers would use less formula to make it last even longer.
This meant that even if their water wasn't contaminated, using less of the formula could still lead to malnutrition and illness.
So instead of creating a solution, Nestle created a whole new set of problems.
Thanks Nestle.
After the report came out, doctors noticed infant mortality rates and malnutrition, increasing
in countries where the formula was being sold.
So Nestle stopped selling their formula, right? No.
You see, there weren't any regulations in place to prevent Nestle's false advertising.
So instead of recognizing the problems they created, Nestle doubles down and keeps advertising
the formula the same way they did before, the report even came out.
But more and more people started reading The Baby Killer.
They see this big ass company basically making money off of ruining the lives of innocent babies.
And this makes everybody piss the frick off.
So in 1975, people took to the streets to protest Nestle, and instantly their sales started to dip.
So to address the concerns, Nestle joined with all of the other heavy hitters in the infant
formula industry to form the International Council of Infant Food Industries.
This organization announced a set of rules to try and address the criticisms people had.
First, milk nurses.
The fake nurses who walked around hospitals pushing the formula would no longer be paid on
commission.
Second, they
had to wear a pin that demonstrated who they were so nobody could confuse them for real
medical professionals. And finally, they agreed to cut down on all the formula commercials.
I mean, this was a start, but these rules were extremely weak and they were honestly
very easy to get around. I mean, a company who's getting caught doing grimy shit
is now allowed to make their own rules and quote, unquote,
fix it, of course, they're going to build in ways
to get around these rules.
So honestly, nothing really changed.
Around 1977, a group called the Infant Formula Action
Coalition, or in fact, for short, started to fix this. Now this group
called for a complete boycott of Nestle's marketing of infant formula in developing countries.
This boycott started in Minnesota and it really blew up from there. It spread to Australia, Canada,
New Zealand, and Europe. It even got attention of major US politicians like Ted Kennedy
and the World Health Organization, or who? Then in 1981, the who created a special
code that would officially prevent Nestle from promoting false advertising. The code would
have been great, but the United States President at the time Ronald Reagan refused to adopt
it. He thought Americans should have the freedom to do whatever they want, including marketing
crappy products and feeding them to their babies.
He's like, how it's a great idea.
Freedom.
But the boycott continued and finally started hurting Nestle where it counted.
After all the bad press and the loss of revenue, Nestle finally agreed to follow the WHO code.
It sounded like a jam owl.
Hooray!
And the Nestle became a wonderful company that changed their focus to creating
world, peace, and getting everyone on air and three chocolate bars.
Psych LOL.
This is Dark History. We know that's not where the story is going.
So remember, earlier when I said Nestle owned companies all over the world,
well, turns out during all the baby formula stuff, Nestle was covering up some pretty ugly
secrets with some of their other companies. Because all this bad shit was happening at the same time,
the timeline gets a little blurred, a little foggy, so we'll be jumping from scandal to scandal,
but just know like this is all happening at the same time pretty much.
So now I'm going to introduce you to a guy named Luciano Romero.
Luciano, Luciano, Luciano was a member of a union,
which is an organization that tries to improve
the working conditions for employees
and his union oversaw conditions at a milk factory
that Nestle co-owned in
Columbia with a company named Cicolac. Now this union that Luciano was in
wasn't small time. They were the Cinal Trainol Trade Union. Sure, what does that
mean? I don't know. They used to take on major companies.
They once tried to sue Coca-Cola, okay?
They're not trying to fag around this company.
They're trying to take down the big people.
We love that for us.
Go them.
I say them because I can't pronounce their names.
They should do something a little bit more catchy.
This one that flows a little bit easier,
but that's okay, enough about me.
Anyway, the most important thing to know about this factory
is that they had close ties with a paramilitary group,
which is a kind of private police force with tanks.
Great.
And this police force does whatever their employer asks.
So the union was causing a lot of noise in the factories
and starting to get on the nerves of the paramilitary
groups. And our guy, Luciano, was leading the charge. I'm laughing because I'm struggling really
hard. This wasn't exactly the safest move because these paramilitary groups have a history of
assassinating union leaders. This is getting sloppy. Okay. Luciano was trying to get the government
to support him and the labor laws that existed
in Columbia, but quickly became clear that the government was in cahoots with the paramilitary
groups.
Why?
Because money, bitch.
Hi, are you new?
Money, money, money, money, money, money.
Columbia's government was known to be very corrupt at this time, and they would look
the other way as the unions were constantly attacked by the paramilitary groups.
Between 1986 and 2010, there were 10,000 attacks on union members, including nearly 3,000 murders.
If we do math here, they killed 30% of the people they attacked.
As Luciano pushed on, he quickly realized he was being targeted.
He was getting death threats being followed around. He couldn't live like a normal life anymore,
okay? And then on September 10th, 2005, Luciano was kidnapped, tortured, and then murdered by
the paramilitary members. After Luciano died, there was an investigation into the assassination. And it wasn't just the local
law enforcement and prosecution looking into this, it was investigated by both the Colombian and the
Swiss government. I mean, it was huge. And everyone who looked into it found that Nestle had
involvement in the whole thing. I'm laughing because what the hell is going on? I don't know.
The investigation uncovered that Nestle knew Luciano was in danger and before he died, he Luciano had informed Nestle that he was receiving
death threats and Nestle refused to help him. Nestle is a global company so they were required by
international law to protect him and they just straight up were like, hmm, no,
I ignored it. So, Nestle was held accountable, right? Of course not. Why would they? A human
rights organization sued Nestle for their involvement in Luciano's death, but the case was dismissed
in 2014. And as we've all seen before, just because a case is dismissed doesn't mean that they're necessarily
innocent
The legal advisor for the European Center for Human Rights argues this case being dismissed shows that
huge companies like Nestle are
Intentionally too complex to be held accountable. I mean if we're being honest
Too big for accountability is actually the best way to describe any
Corporation and not just Nestle. But unlike many other corporations, Nestle has more of a paper trail to follow.
And the deeper you dig, the worse things keep looking for Nestle. Because on top of poison dog food,
mess up baby formula and the murder of a union leader,
Nestle is now coming for your water.
Oh yes they are.
So in 2005, the CEO of Nestle,
his name's Peter Brobick.
Brobick.
Yeah, he said it's a little extreme to call water,
a human right.
He's wild, the speeder guy.
He said, quote,
water is a food stuff, like any other.
And like any other food stuff, it should have a market value.
Translation.
We should be allowed to make money off of water,
even though it's a free resource.
How can it be profited off of?
Now to be fair, Peter said later that he was only pointing out that water should have
some kind of monetary value and not that he was saying water isn't a human right.
But why would Nestle care about water so much anyways?
Well, some of the many companies Nestle owns produced bottled water.
So this whole thing is starting to get a little
sush. Okay, let's jump back really quick to 1949. A little bit of context here. Back
in 1949, the United Nations declared access to a reasonable standard of living as
a human right. It is your right to have reasonable standards of living. That makes sense. Yeah, we should have that.
And having clean water definitely fell under a reasonable standard of living. And on paper,
Nestle agrees. They're like, yeah, or sure. But here's the problem. Nestle owns and distributes over 51 brands of bottled water
in various countries all over the world, which earns them more than $7.8 million per year.
So corporations like Nestle have little to no incentive to actually protect the sustainability
of any water supply. Because if a place can get clean water from their own natural resources,
why would they ever need to buy bottled water?
So a way around this is to start buying up
natural water supplies, which is what Nestle would do.
They would start buying up the bottling rights
so that they would essentially own the water.
This means they controlled what happened to the water,
which makes it very easy to make it inaccessible
to the people who lived nearby and needed that water.
Now, this is technically not illegal.
It's highly unethical, but it's not illegal.
Nestle could go to a place like Flint, Michigan,
and pay for a permit that gives some of the rights
to the city's water.
And with that permit, Nestle could do pretty much whatever they wanted with, said water.
And if Nestle didn't want to give the people access to this water source, the people would
then need to get bottled water.
And this is exactly what they did.
And it leads us to Nestle's part in the Flint water crisis.
What a fucking mess, is it not?
Now the Flint water crisis is still a developing story, and we could do a whole episode on Flint,
Michigan, like their water situation, because it's a whole shady ass mess. But here's what we do know.
In 2014, Flint, Michigan switched their tap water source to the Flint River, which was a dumping
site for chemicals used in the car manufacturing.
Even back then, people warned Governor Rick Snyder that this was a really bad idea, but
he wanted to cut the costs of the city's ballooning water budget.
And even though the Flint River was super polluted, Governor Rick was hoping to switch the
water back before anyone even noticed.
But he quickly discovered how much cheaper it was to keep the water flowing out of the polluted
source and decided to quietly cancel the plants to find a better one. As you might imagine,
polluted water is not safe to drink and people started getting extremely sick. On top of that,
nobody was able to take showers, cook, do laundry, or do the dishes.
Cancer rates have risen in the area because of the poisoned water supply.
There were so many political cover-ups and people sneaking around trying to hide how bad
all this was that it cost the city hundreds of millions of dollars.
Way more than it would have cost if they just gave people clean water in the first place.
And while everyone was yelling at the politicians about the crisis, Nestle saw a business opportunity.
Nestle had found a clean water source right next to Flint.
And instead of doing something with their billions of dollars to help their residents,
they paid a tiny fee of $200 per year to get the bottling rights to this water source. And once they bottled it,
they started selling it back to the residents of Flint. Now a lot of Flint residents were already
paying $200 per month for their water bills for the polluted water. And then on top of that,
now they were having to buy bottled water from Nestle. Once people started to notice that Nestle
was doing this, they called them out, okay? So Nestle did end up giving a lot of the water back to the community, but we are not going
to celebrate that because it was the community's water to begin with.
So let's recap everything we've learned thus far about Nestle.
Poisoned dog food on the sanitary baby formula, the murder of a union leader, the privatization
of water, but surprise, surprise,
it keeps getting worse.
Nestle just comes out with more and more hits, okay?
In 1998, an African newspaper reported that a bunch of work
on the local cocoa plantations was being done
by enslaved young boys, and who owned the plantations.
Oh, what you guess here?
Nestle!
The Nestle Coco plantation was being run by enslaved children.
Some sold for as little as $140.
Remember, this isn't $18.60?
Shit, this was 1998.
I mean, not that it would have been better, but you know what I'm saying.
Like, hello.
The United States government reported that about 15,000 children were working on cocoa
and coffee plantations that supplied the Nestle company.
Most of these kids were under the age of 12 and somewhere as youngest five years old.
Not all of them were enslaved.
Some of these children were paid $135.
Thanks.
Well, you know, like, is that supposed to make us feel better?
I guess so, I don't know.
I'm sure Nestle is patting themselves on the back like we fucking did it.
Yeah!
Word of this started to spread.
A few documentaries were made and articles were written, and once again, Nestle is in
the spotlight.
The United States government pitched a few ideas for how to end child labor abuses, and
the Cocoa industry, including Nestle, they agreed to take how to end child labor abuses, and the Cocoa industry, including Nestle,
they agreed to take steps to reduce child labor by 70% by 2015.
That's right, they're like, we'll reduce child labor.
Not stop it, okay?
We're just gonna tone it down a little bit.
And even though they are, quote, unquote, trying to reduce child labor, some economists
say that to this day, Nestle hasn't actually started the process at all.
Great! Man, I freaking love that chocolate milk, but I fucking hate it now.
Hey, fucking hate it! Whenever someone calls up Nestle and asks a representative if they're still using child slave labor,
they say it's impossible to completely keep track of what's going down on their plantations.
That's fucking weird, right? It's not like Nestle misplaced a few chocolate bars or whatever.
They straight up can't keep track of what are the farms they use to make Coco have enslaved children working on them.
I don't know, just an idea. Why don't you go down and visit the farms and see what's going on in your company?
I don't know, just an idea though.
People don't come to me for these ideas.
But there are even more scandals from Nestle.
Yes, there's even more than child labor and slavery.
It turns out the building of the Cocoa plantations directly contributes to the illegal cutting
down of trees all over Africa, which is linked to a drop in population for a number of
animals such as chimps and elephants. freeze all over Africa, which is linked to a drop in population for a number of animals,
such as chimps and elephants.
There was also that time in 2008 when Nestle used a sketchy chemical to make their milk
look like it had more protein than it really did in China.
This stunt was dangerous enough to hospitalize 54,000 babies.
Then in 2009, there was an Ecoli outbreak linked to their cookie dough.
Fuck, I love cookie dough. And a few years later one of their noodle companies was found to have
a fucking lead in the noodles. I mean the list just goes on. Nestle does not give a shit about you,
okay? They do not. I bet you the CEO of Nestle doesn't even eat their own products. I would bet you.
I would bet you. Anyways, maybe you've heard of Nestle's healthy hydration campaign? Oh yeah,
healthy hydration. Great. They try to spin this idea that bottled waters eco-friendly and that
every bottled gets recycled. Now this idea sounds cool until
Nestle admitted that most of their bottles end up in landfills. It drives me nuts
when they tell us that it's our responsibility to recycle. Recik-a reuse
beacuse. You know it is important that you recycle and do our part but why don't
these companies stop making this trash? Hello? why don't we hold these companies accountable
and not one another, you know what I'm saying?
Like it's not, it's not,
why don't they not make the trash in the first place?
Anyways, just an idea, again, no one comes to me.
That's fine.
Okay, so let's circle back to our good friend Frank.
Remember him, the dog food guy?
So a few years after he managed to
get that big ass lawsuit set up against Purina, the courts dismissed the whole thing, saying
there simply wasn't enough evidence proving that over 4,000 dogs were being poisoned
after eating Purina Beneful. Now this meant, Nestle, couldn't be held accountable at all.
And if you've been paying attention today, you're probably not
surprised. But if you want some kind of silver lining to the story, we have one, just one
for you. Her name is Dr. Yasmin. In 2000, she worked as a high-ranking food executive
at Nestle when she discovered that Nestle's food safety controls were lacking a bit. She
also saw other major issues in the supply chain that
made the food at high risk for contamination. So she raised these issues with her boss in 2003,
but she got ignored. She was determined though and she kept alerting her bosses at every chance she
got until she was fired from her job in 2010. They're like, shut up, they're talking too much.
So after she got fired, she took Nestle to court for firing her illegally and she actually
won.
But according to Yasmin, the culture of fear at Nestle left her traumatized.
She has since become an advocate for stronger whistleblower protections globally.
If you google Nestle whistleblower, it brings you to a site called Nestle Speak Up.
Because this company has so many issues, they've had to set up a freaking whole website
which allows people to contact them.
And like whistleblow.
Using numbers from this site in 2020, they received over 1600 internal complaints relating
to abuse of power, harassment, bullying, labor practices,
and freaking fraud.
And these are just internal numbers.
The site received 1,681 messages from outside the company.
Okay, so this might sound or look responsible on Nestle's part.
But if you look at it from another way, you could see it's their attempt to control the
narrative.
They would much rather you just go to their website
and give them all the details of how deplorable they're being.
That way they can cover up before any
of this information goes public.
Or maybe not.
Maybe there's a world in which they are finally trying
to do right by the people.
But let's not hold our fricking breath.
OK, have you been paying attention?
Nestle!
You suck.
Everything sucks!
In conclusion, Nestle has a history of abuse,
false advertising, child labor happening, exploitation,
being tied to murders, poisoning people, trying to own all of the water,
and then acting like that's normal.
Playing God, they're trying to own all of us,
poisoning us all, and then for what?
For money, is this not the stupidest place ever?
But when you look at what Nestle owns bitch,
let me tell you, Nestle owns everything.
We are so screwed.
What do we do?
Panic.
Just breathe.
I wish I had a solution or an answer here.
I think we would have a really pay attention to what these big companies are doing a lot
of the time.
So we're going to uncover some very shady shit.
They are always cutting corners to fill their pockets.
And they will do whatever it takes to make money.
It's really gross and I'm sorry that this is the way it is.
So what do we do?
What do we do now?
How can I end this in like a positive?
Cause I'm really sorry to like dump all this on you.
I guess the positive takeaway here is that,
I started out good.
I was just trying to help, you know, feed some babies. That was nice. I started out good.
I was just trying to help feed some babies.
That was nice.
Cool.
Yeah.
So anyways, I'll let you enjoy your crunch bar.
I'm gonna all enjoy kind of girls that, Nestle.
Let me know down below.
I'm really sorry to kind of end it on such a Debbie Downer.
I wish I had something like a call to action.
Like here's what we can do.
But you know, girl, I'm drawing blinks right now.
I'm drawing blinks because it's like, what can we do?
Besides fucking burn it all down,
but legally, I don't think I can say that.
I'm probably gonna be sued.
Actually, I'm probably gonna get murdered.
So if I don't come back,
there's probably Nestle that did it, you know what I'm saying?
Ah!
John, they're coming for us.
Anyways, I hope you have a good day today.
You make good choices, and don't forget, you know.
Nestle socks, okay?
And let me close my book.
This has been a very dark chapter. Thank you so much for learning with me today.
Remember, don't be afraid to ask questions. Don't be afraid to be nosy either.
Look into these shady ass companies, okay? I would love to hear your thoughts about this story.
So make sure to use the hashtag dark history on social media so I can follow along.
If I disappear, it was probably
Nestle.
Join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after the
podcast airs, and also you can check out my murder mystery makeup, which drops on Monday's.
I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day. You make good choices. And I hope to be
talking to you next week. We'll see.
Bye.
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by
Bailey Sarian, Kim Jacobs,
Junior McNally from Three Arts,
Ed Simpson, and Claire Turner from Willhouse DNA.
Produced by Lexi Kiven,
Research provided by Thomas Mezzar Smith,
writers, jed book out, Michael Obers,
Joyce Gavuzzo, Kim Yagid, and me, Bailey Sarian.
A big thank you to our historical consultant
on today's episode, Professor George Kent.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sarian.
Fuck these nails.
They are all gone.
This whole hand is gone.
Serian. Fuck these nails. They are all gone. This whole hand is gone.