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Disagreement over the Coke Boycott

FtP | 03.04.2004 10:55 | Analysis | Globalisation | Social Struggles

Why there are serious doubts over the underlying ethics of the agenda behind the current Coke Cola boycott

Why the Coke Coca Boycott is wrong

This article is highlights two important questions raised against the present call for a boycott against Coke Cola in support of workers rights in Venezuela. This is not a criticism of workers rights and I automatically boycott Coke Cola for a number of reasons already. However, with in the wider context of the anti-globalisation movement there would appear to be a conflict with the stated aims of this boycott.

The problem is that the core of this boycott is a demand for the rights of workers to WORK IN ACOKE COLA FACTORY. This implies that Coke Cola factories are actually acceptable in the first place! How different is this to asking people to support workers rights in an armaments factory? It ignores the fact that there is a large question mark over whether Coke Cola factories are a good thing in the first place, something farmers in South India having their land destroyed by the water extraction by their local Coke Cola factory are in a good position to disagree with.

Coke Cola are a company of dubious ethical value from an environmental, globalisation or animal rights perspective, which leads us to the heart of the dilemma – it is important to support workers rights, but what happens if this leads us to compromise our other ethics? There are many other workers rights abuses that need to be tackled, but don’t actually involve supporting a nasty multinational in some manner.

Consider also this aspect; say Coke Cola does give in on the Venezuelan workers rights issue. The result is that Coke Cola is handed a PR victory as people will believe that it is okay to drink Coke Cola once again since they have thus acquired a sheen of ethical responsibility when the very opposite remains true.

There are those who will disagree with me on the grounds that workers rights are more important than the other issues. That is a debate for elsewhere. Here I simply wish to point out that those coming from perspectives with a pro-environment or anti-globalisation bias need to evaluate just how well the demands of this boycott fit in with their other aims.

Secondly, there is the notion of fashionable campaigns, flash-in-the-pan issues that raise a lot of interest but do not sustain themselves. It has been recognized that this is a problem, as people leap from one campaign to the next seeking out the latest issue without actually seeing the previous ones to a close.

It seems that this Coke Cola boycott already falls into this pattern. It is being pushed heavily in grassroots media and a buzz is being generated around it, but will it be still there in a few months? Will people do it for a while and then move onto the next thing?

Given the recent history of campaigning in the UK, the desire to be working on ‘fashionable’ campaigns appears to be increasingly the norm, as we are, in turn, increasingly led by our own media as opposed to that media following our agenda. The Coke Cola boycott is heavily pushed at the moment; in a while it will be something new – what affect will that have on the Coke Cola campaign? Will the people planning to do stuff in support of it now, still be doing it in a few months if the boycott is still in place? If you think me cynical, consider these campaigns – Nestle Baby Milk, Shell, Baku pipeline, Papua New Guinea, hardwood deforestation. These issues still exist but are now forgotten by most activists. Briefly fashionable, people did them for a while before moving onto the next big thing.

Yes, activist movements have sustained campaigns and won them, but they are a minority really. If we don’t have victories then it is hard to have credibility among those we target. All we ultimately achieve is teaching them that they can resist us. That is a terrible thing as it is a great waste of resources and energy. It is better to stick to what we have started, and ensure it won before moving on.

FtP

Comments

Hide the following 9 comments

The real agenda

03.04.2004 11:27

I'm amazed people have been conned over the so call Coke boycott for this long. The hand of their competition (Pepsi ?) is all over it.

As usual the activist movement is easily manipulated (remember Nike and Puma)

Water Drinker


Why did reclaim the streets support striking car workers in Birmingham?

03.04.2004 14:40

Why did Relcaim The Streets support striking car workers in Birmingham a couple of years ago? That is like saying that it is alright to work in a car factory to produce cars which wreck the environment, make are cities dangerous and also lead to wars - remember the recent and 1991 Gulf Wars fought over oil! The people who work in those car factories may be working class but so are paramilitary death squads hired to protect oil pipelines in Columbia, so are soldiers who are used to fight wars over oil. There has to be a point where don't support people in jobs that wreck the environment!



cars cost the earth!


Get your facts straight

03.04.2004 15:42

The boycott is about Coca-Cola in Colombia. Not Venezuela.

Nine Colombian trade union leaders have been assassinated by death squads backed by the local Coca-Cola bottler. The Colombian trade union SINALAINAL is taking the US Coca-Cola HQ to court in the USA, because of their refusal to do anything about it.

SINALTRAINAL needs international backing while the court case is going on. They've asked us all to help with a boycott, to help focus international press attention on the court case.

 http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk/cocacolacampaign.html

This week there was also trouble in the Venezuelan Coca-Cola plants, but that's an entirely separate issue.

Ian


"Workers Rights"?

03.04.2004 16:27

Yeah, I guess the right to not get your fucking head blown off can be called "workers rights", since it's workers that are getting killed.

The hand of the author's paymaster (Coke ?) is all over this article.

Mick


Complete disregard for the worker's situation...........

03.04.2004 16:33

Working in a coca cola plant in Colombia isn't like working for one in the UK. The economic situation in Colombia is so fragile and work so scarce people need to take whatever jobs they can get.

This article stinks of first world priveleged arrogance and holier than thou attitude. Not everyone gets to choose where they work - freedom of career choice is one that only we in the first world have. It is based on a complete misunderstanding of the situation colombian people and others like them in the third world are in. Don't criticise these people for trying to survive in the only way they can.

The Voice Of Reason


i agree with the author

03.04.2004 16:54

The company should not be boycotted in order to support worker's rights in columbia... It should just be avoided in general for the many reasons that exist.

I agree that being shot for being in a Union is wrong. However this is a single point that should not be the only reason. There is a hell of a lot wrong with Coca Cola.

commenter


Replies

03.04.2004 17:06

My apologies over getting the country wrong. A mistake in my notes.

If you are so hot on the right to work for dubious multinationals in thirdworld countries are you supporting the livelihoods of the Indian farm workers in India, loosing their farms due to Coke's water extraction practices? How does that balance with the claimed right to work in the Coke factories. If the Coke factory in India is forced to close, what about the rights of it workers to work in that factory? This is a choice that has to be made and what I am trying to bring out.

Maybe we should ignore the rights the tribes being screwed by Shell, BP and the other oil multinationals in favour of the rights of the people working for these companies. Or for that matter, maybe we should start supporting the rights of people to work in McDonalds, and ignore the fact that it is only logically consistant if McDonalds are acceptable in the first place.

The anti-globalisaion movement and socialist/workers rights movement are not completely compatible and this is a clear case of there a contradiction arises out of this incompatibility. Where people stand on this is up to them; I am with the former and want to point out this error for those who are coming from this perspective. Though, if all people are interested in is the latest fashionable campaign, I doubt that any of this debate or logical consistancy matters much.
(Voice of Reason, I suspect your reason is solely that of a workers rights perspective.)

Coke, like McDonalds and the oil companies are part of the globalisation process which play havoc with third world economies and drain money/resources from third world countries to feed western consumerist lifestyles. Thus supporting the right for these factories to exist is supporting part of the problem. Yes there is a problem with thirdworld employment, but are we helping the issue by effectively supporting companies who helping creating this problem?

I have being boycotting Coke of my own accord for many years now on their general mistreatment of the environment and their promotion of the worse parts of globalisation. If the situation in Columbia changes, is Coke then acceptable to drink again? This is a dangerous message being sent out and it is important that it is recognised as to date nobody seems to have picked up on this contradiction - for the anti-globalisation lobby at least. Surely that much is obvious.
(Mick, I am totally against Coke, so hardly in their pay, and there is no way that I wish to support a campaign which tacitily gives approval to the existance of Coke factories in the first place. I say boycott coke, but not just for anti-union killing in Columbia but for all their other bad practises as well. Oh, and boycott Pepsi as well for being just as bad, if not worse.)

I accept that there are other lobbies which place different priorities on these matters, but the contradictions I have pointed out for the environmental and anti-globalisation movements do not necessarily apply there.

Yes, getting ones head blown off is outrageous, but there are many other worthy campaigns where there is just as much violence that do not require us to imply that multinationals are okay. Get out there and support the people of the Amazon, Papua New Guinea, the Ogoni and all those others who are not fighting to sell their souls to multinationals, but face daily violence and death.

FtP


more comments

04.04.2004 13:13

A few points:

1. I think the anti boycott post is a bit behind events: links have already been made between the campaigns against Coke in India and Colombia. For example, a joint declaration by the Colombia Solidarity Campaign and South Asia Solidarity Group. (You can get it from  sasg@southasiasolidarity.org)

2. So as links are made between campaigns for workers rights and peasant community survival the anti globalization ‘ultras’ would actually take a step backwards! The point is to find common ground in and through struggle. Strong workers organization ‘on the inside’ is one way to undermine the power of these corporations.

3. The idea of trying to boycott everything going is just impractical and it means boycotting loses all effectiveness in general. We live in a capitalist world and there’s practically no ‘outside’ left - change has to come from within that world, not just those remaining pockets of resistance from indigenous communities. (Or maybe we should campaign for nice, small capitalism rather than the current variety!).

4.Supporting coke workers rights does not imply we support MNCs, any more than renting my flat means I 'believe' in private housing. (Ultimately of course the discourse around 'rights' is problematic in itself, but it is a terrain on which workers have cosen to struggle for the real gains it can bring. Ultimately we don't want rights but control over production itself, but that's an argument that needs to be had in the course of struggle, not critisizing from the outside).

5. To have practical effect boycotts should be a tactical weapon in our armoury to force limited changes. And they should be as fashionable as possible while they last! I don’t give a damn if Pepsi benefits from the Coke boycott. The point is to win some gains before moving on to the next battle. We operate on a constantly shifting terrain. This makes struggle trickier, but think also of the ripple effect – a strong campaign against one company, for example, makes the others think twice about their practices.

6. Don’t forget that the TUC despite trying to gain international street cred by expressing solidarity with their Colombian ‘brothers’ have in fact effectively opposed the boycott, leaving the Colombian coke workers union to rely on more grassroots support around the world. Which is no bad thing....

7. The great thing about the coke boycott, for all its limitations, incompatibilities etc (like any campaign, funnily enough) is precisely the chance it offers to link struggles and break out of the ghettos of traditional ‘workerist’ and ‘environmentalist’ campaigns – ghettoes it would appear that most trade unions and some radical environmentalists (judging from some of the posts) would want to shove us back into!

8. Ultimately ‘peasants and indigenous tribes’ and ‘factory workers’ come from literally the same communities, they shouldn’t be set up against each other. The ultimate goal is surely the control of those communities over production, and doing battle with the company ‘from the inside’ can be one step along this path to attaining this goal.

9. Likewise workers in the ‘First’ world and the ‘Third’ should not be set up against one another either, as radical environmentalists and ‘third worldist’ Leninists often do. The difference in exploitation and repression is one of degree – often quite a big degree but of degree nonetheless. But all workers (that’s us, people who work for money) face the same problem ultimately: the imposition of waged work and the struggle against that. That is capitalism – a phenomena which seems to have been left out of the discussion so far. And capitalism is global – it is not confined to the so-called third world!


jacobin


support this boycott

05.04.2004 12:05

why support this boycott

1. the colombian food&drinks workers union, sinaltrainal has called for world solidarity and requesting that people boycott coke but more importantly highlight companys' invovlement in the assassination of 8 sinaltrainal trade union leaders in colombia since 1990.

2 the world social forum supports the boycott.

3. 15/3/04 30 coca -cola workers began a hunger strike in front of 8 coke bottling plants, the bosses have closed down production at 11 of their 16 plants. more than 500 workers have been pressurised into "voluntarily resiging" .most have refused.

the campaign to stop killer coke supports the union 's call for coca-cola to relocate those workers, in line with its obligations under agreements directed by the cololbian courts.

red letter
- Homepage: http://www.killercoke.org/