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Andrew Harvey
Andrew Harvey
3 years ago

Stop using Twitter.

There, problem solved.

Warren Alexander
Warren Alexander
3 years ago

I am deeply shocked that a company that is owned by a vast multi-national has not acted with the highest of moral values. Where am I now to go for moral guidance?

bob alob
bob alob
3 years ago

If this is the stuff Twitter users obsess about then I am glad not to use it, but please Polly, leave this nonsense in Twitter where it no doubt belongs.

William Gladstone
William Gladstone
3 years ago

I think its good, we shouldn’t take anything anyone or any organisation says at face value. We need to rebuild genuine critical thinking (as opposed to critical theory) so people can use reason rather than bias or more likely tribalism.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Really, who cares? It is the job of commercial brands to attract attention or gain sales with various wheezes and claims. It is our job, as consumers, to see through them, or decide that we want to buy into it. Innocent sells overpriced smoothies that probably do you no good whatsoever and come in plastic bottles, but if people want to buy them that is their choice.

The problem is that, over the last 40 years or so, the tricks and tactics of harmless brands have been applied to all areas of our life, including the so-called mainstream media and all areas of governance. Thus the average govt department probably disseminates more disinformation in a day than the ad industry disseminates in a year. The ad industry is at least regulated to some extent as to various product claims, which cannot be said of govt departments.

Vivek Rajkhowa
Vivek Rajkhowa
3 years ago

Oh please, are you really that surprised that a company is trying to play this old trick? If you are, I think you’ve got some growing up to do.

episodenull
episodenull
3 years ago
Reply to  Vivek Rajkhowa

I think what this article highlights is not that brand marketing is manipulative — of course it is — but that the post-reality “fake news” meme has attained such cultural penetration that it’s now a viable marketing strategy. We should be worried about that, since by the time megacorporations adopt something (gay rights, feminism, wokeness) it’s after that thing has attained cultural hegemony. In other words, it’s not any more worrisome than usual that some oat brand (that, frankly, I’ve never heard of) is doing deceptive advertising; but it is worrisome that it’s doing it in this way.

Adrian Hopper
Adrian Hopper
3 years ago

It’s not a friendly neighbourhood company,that’s just their marketing shtick ,they’re part of a vast multinational !
Part of the problem of contemporary discourse,lack of trust, was deliberately cultivated by ‘brands’ as far back as the 1950s when tobacco companies deliberately introduced obfuscation and fake ‘evidence’ to help promote their products, their methods permeated politics and now ,here we are . . . . .

bsema
bsema
3 years ago

The whole article reads like an April Fool’s, lol.