And there are so many more…
And there are so many more…
UPDATED BELOW!!!!
The following is a comment I have just submitted at the Campbell’s Company Canada’s contact page – if/when I get a response, I will be sure to post it here:
Hello Campbell’s!
I have always enjoyed your soups, especially Cream of Mushroom. I love cooking and used it a lot.
However, the last time I went to purchase it, I noticed that it had a ‘Halal’ certification marker on it. I am not sure if you are aware of this, but Christian and Sikh teachings strictly forbid the consumption of Halal food. Some of my Hindu friends also avoid it, because of Halal’s meat connotation of animal cruelty.
Sikh religion forbids Halal food explicitly.
Christian religion, in both the Old and New Testament, forbids the consumption of food that had been prayed over/sanctified to any religion/god other than its own. Since ‘Halal’ means ‘having been made ritualistically pure in the eyes of Allah’, that makes ‘Halal’ food sanctified to a non-Christian religion and thus forbidden for observant Christians to consume. As more Christians are becoming familiar with what it means for food to be Halal, more of them are becoming aware that it is indeed forbidden for them to consume it.
On the other hand, Sharia rules that in non-Muslim land, the consumption of Halal food is not compulsory, only recommended when easily available: ‘If no transgression is intended, then none is incurred, for Allah is merciful’.
As mine is a very inclusive home and I love cooking for my friends from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds, I cannot, in good conscience, purchase Halal food and serve it to people for whom it may be religiously forbidden. Therefore, it will be more culturally sensitive for me to shy away from purchasing your brand of products from now on.
It saddens me greatly that I will not be able to include your products in my household in the future. If, however, you re-introduce your soups without Halal certification, please, do let me know and I will be very glad to become your customer once again.
Sincerely yours,
Alexandra Belaire
UPDATE: Here are some additional comments submitted to Campbell’s:
Hello Campbell’s,
I have long been a Campbell’s soup fan.
But I have just noticed that you are doing Halal certification. As an animal lover, and supporter of the humane slaughter of animals, this means that I can no longer buy your products.
Please watch the Halal slaughter of animals. Animals that have been Halal slaughtered show high levels of stress hormones – unlike, for example, animals that have been slaughtered to be kosher. The traditional slaughterhouse methods are bad enough – Halal is far worse. Again, please watch.
Then, there are also religious reasons not to do Halal certification, as this is against Christian doctrine, and also other religious doctrines. I don’t know why you are doing something that is against Christian doctrine, but conforms to Muslim doctrine. Please let me know.
A friend who is more versed in religion has put together the following:
Christian and Sikh teachings strictly forbid the consumption of Halal food. Some of my Hindu friends also avoid it, because of Halal’s meat connotation of animal cruelty.
Sikh religion forbids Halal food explicitly.
Christian religion, in both the Old and New Testament, forbids the consumption of food that had been prayed over/sanctified to any religion/god other than its own. Since ‘Halal’ means ‘having been made ritualistically pure in the eyes of Allah’, that makes ‘Halal’ food sanctified to a non-Christian religion and thus forbidden for observant Christians to consume. As more Christians are becoming familiar with what it means for food to be Halal, more of them are becoming aware that it is indeed forbidden for them to consume it.
On the other hand, Sharia rules that in non-Muslim land, the consumption of Halal food is not compulsory, only recommended when easily available: ‘If no transgression is intended, then none is incurred, for Allah is merciful’.
As mine is a very inclusive home and I love cooking for my friends from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds, I cannot, in good conscience, purchase Halal food and serve it to people for whom it may be religiously forbidden. Therefore, it will be more culturally sensitive for me to shy away from purchasing your brand of products from now on.
It saddens me greatly that I will not be able to include your products in my household in the future. If, however, you re-introduce your soups without Halal certification, please, do let me know and I will be very glad to become your customer once again.
Best regards,
And:
Dear Public Relations,I disagree with buying anything that is ‘halal’. Firstly, halal is cruelty to animals and standards of hygiene are less. Secondly, part of the money paid for halal supports supremacism and misogyny.For those reasons, I will not purchase any halal product ever and will encourage all my family and friends not to buy them as well.I hope Campbell’s will abandon their support for misogynistic totalitarianism immediately.Cordially,[name redacted]
UPDATE: Videos are being added as they come out – just scroll down!
Today, across Ontario, people took to the streets to protest our Provincial government’s mismanagement of our energy supply, which has resulted in doubling or more of our energy costs…with more cost increases coming soon.
Living in Ottawa, I came to the protest nearest me: at Bob Chiarelli’s constituency office, on the corned of Carling and Woodrooffe.
And what a protest it was!!!
While I’ve heard radio reports of ‘more than 300 people’, and while the numbers did fluctuate over time, at the height of the protest, my count put the crowd at somewhere between 500 and 600 people and dogs. (Yes, there were cute doggies in the crowd.)
Right away, I saw some familiar faces – Ruth and Beth (frequent callers to CFRA’s Lowel Green show – a couple of fine ladies who are not afraid to speak their minds), there was Debbie J., and Gordon and Jeremy and many, many other familiar faces. A strong contingent from the Landowners’ Association – and a petition against rising hydro costs by Randy Hillier was circulated. But, there were also people I’ve never seen at any of the protests I’ve been to – a lot of younger people than usual, despite this being a Friday noon protest.
The weather was icky and the wind was sharp and bitterly cold – which is probably why the size of the crowd fluctuated as people snuck off to their cars to warm up, then came back.
The organizers of the rally – led by Beth Trudeau from the Canadians for Language Fairness – ought to be very proud of the fine job they did!
They had a makeshift platform set up, with a bullhorn – and they had a large number of excellent speakers.
Lisa MacLeod and I have had our differences, but, I give credit where credit is due: not only had Lisa done a most excellent job following this issue as the Energy Critic, she also came out and spoke at this rally. I wish I could have heard better what she was saying, but I only caught snippets of it as at that moment I was on the median of Carling Avenue, and rather far from the podium. But, Lisa did notice me and waved to me and I waved back, acknowledging the great job she’s been doing following this issue and not letting go.
There were other speakers – politicians, journalists, citizens. One guy told us how he had just started a family and his energy bills were driving him out of his home and into an apartment. Another urged people not to vote for any political party, as they do not differ that much from each other: we need real people in government, not career politicians!
I also got up and spoke a few words of encouragement to support all the people standing up and saying enough is enough, we will not suffer energy poverty!
All in all, it was very exciting, but I underestimated the wind and turned into a bit of an icicle…
Still, I think this protest was not the end – rather, just the beginning of the wave of unrest as people refuse to be reduced to energy serfdom.
UPDATE:
Here are some videos from today:
Shirley:
Please, do keep in mind that in order to remain functioning, unions had to be made exempt from racketeering laws.
On my recent and most excellent trip out West, I talked to a lot of people about all kinds of things. So much food for thought… and me, a slow thinker!
The upshot of this will be that in the next few weeks, I’ll probably be mulling it over and posting answers to the questions that had been raised.
One of the questions that was thus raised was how to accomplish communicating some core principles to the younger generation. After all, they ought to learn from our generations’ mistakes!
Which brings me to YouTube: it is a resource chock full of awesome tools for getting kids interested in learning through fun, catchy videos.
For example, my son became quite the expert on ancient warfare after a video game creator who made games about Roman warfare decided that rather than paying for extra ads, it would be a better marketing idea to pay some established video game reviewers to educate their audience about the Punic Wars. Brilliant!
Not only did my son watch that series of videos, he got so interested in the story that he went and looked up much, much more quality online material on ancient Roman history.
Isn’t it awesome how free market not only helps everyone involved, but its by-product is a better educate populace?
Which brings me more to the focus of my post – how to teach kids about basics principles of the competing economic theories? It sounds dull – unless you set them to rap:
And, round two:
Another useful resource that explains that the source of our rights determines their nature, a set of videos that I have posted over the last week, from LOOKandLISTEN.
If you have other good videos, let me know and I’ll feature them!