- cross-posted to:
- buyfromeu@feddit.org
- buyeuropean@feddit.uk
- cross-posted to:
- buyfromeu@feddit.org
- buyeuropean@feddit.uk
We have a word for that in German: “Etikettenschwindel”
I appreciate German’s endless supply of terms 🙂
That’s just etikett and schwindle together!
Roughly translates to misleading or con labeling
“Label swindle” is the closest literal translation I think.
in other words, the boycott is working! Keep it up, lads!
I’ve been drinking Fritz Cola for about 7 years now, cheap tricks won’t win me back
Same here but with “Afri Cola”. German drinks do taste better than Coca Cola. 💪
Yeah, I have also switched to a local one here in greece, tastes better and does not have an aftertaste.
Maybe they should try adding back the cocaine.
It looks like they’re emphasizing local sourcing to distance themselves from U.S. associations, but that misses the real issue. The problem is not whether the ingredients are local, it is that Coca-Cola is still a U.S. company. The same applies to brands like Heinz, Tesla, and others. Their identity is tied to their origin, not where they source materials.
Who needs Coca Cola?
😍 SUPER-SEXY AFRI-COLA!
Pfanner 2L Grüner Tee Tetrapack Meisterklasse representiert
superior water drinking noises
It turns out to be quite hard to boycott USA products, but our household is getting there.
What are you struggling with?
How long do you have?
CPUs, GPUs…
Drinks have never even been an issue.
I’m pretty sure they’re doing this in most if not all, of Europe.
This should be illegal
too bad the corporations control their own regulation.
The amount of sugar they put on it is what should be illegal. Motherfuckers are co-responsible for an entire generation of obesity and we’re left holding the bag as tax payers.
Not a Coca Cola fan, but why? If it’s made in Germany, it should be okay to say that
It’s kinda hard to find out where Coca Cola is actually made. Coke for the German market is for sure bottled in Germany, but the Coke syrup which is the base for it (which Coca Cola is very cagey about) isn’t necessarily made there. I assume it’s made somewhere in Europe because according to a brief web search it’s made in about 4 places in the world and Europe is a big market, but there isn’t really a reason to assume that the European syrup plant is in Germany, insted of Spain, Netherlands etc. - certainly possible, but not at all certain.
But TBH, even if it was all made in Germany, it’s still kinda bullshit. Maybe not in a legally actionable way, but Coke is not that popular in Germany and the inventors and standard ingredients (other than water and beet sugar) have no connection to Germany whatsoever. The Coca Cola product that deserves to be called “the German drink” is Fanta, and I assume Coca Cola isn’t quite ready yet to use Fanta’s Nazi heritage as a selling point.
Simply because people should know exactly what they are buying and from who, without having to make a web search at the supermarket for every single product they want to buy (which sometimes is not even that easy because corporations are allowed to be pretty shady and you have to dig further than a simple search of the product/brand name)
So what are you proposing exactly? Should the be forced to put a “invented in USA” after the “made in Germany”? I really don’t see the point.
Just because there isn’t an obvious single-sentence solution to a problem doesn’t mean there isn’t a problem
Solution to what problem, though?
It’s made in Germany (and that’s not even relevant) and is subject to German and EU food safety standards.
The problem of companies misleading customers through marketing
Except there is nothing misleading about claiming a product is “made in Germany” when it is in fact made in Germany.
I wonder why you are so triggered, but ok.
In my country they are, for example, allowed to state that their product is made here even if it is ONLY processed and packaged here.
Assuming this is the same situation (and I’d be very surprised if it isn’t), “product of Germany” is false and should not be allowed.
It’s not correct in this case. Which is also easily researchable on the internet.
Coca-Cola in Germany is bottled in many different plants locally, by the biggest Coca-Cola bottling company worldwide. It is a british company licensing the use of the brand and name from the US Coca-Cola company, but a separate entity.
So all the ingredients are produced in Germany too?
That is something different from processed and packaged, which you talked about in your first comment.
Of course not, most ingredients however will be EU produced/processed and then processed into the final drinks in Germany.
But aside from pure agricultural product, almost no product would be “product of Germany” if using no imports would be the requirement to use that lable.
Standardized product labeling:
- Brand: coca cola, US
- Recipe market: Europe
- Material source: x and Germany
- Packaged (bottled): Germany
🤔
Not so much, if the money goes to the US. And at very least some licensing fees will go to the US with an originally US brand.
Got a news flash for you: lots of German made products send plenty of money to the US
Unfortunately.
Would you take issue with Nike having advertisements saying “made in Indonesia” on them?
Only if it’s from the official Koka region
I switched to Vita Cola and now I don’t even like Coca cola anymore. Just doesn’t feel refreshing anymore. And it’s cheaper.
Try Afri-Cola, it’s delicious 😇
I know it. Not my fave.
Too sweet. And the sugar free one has an aftertaste I don’t like. Still better than Cocacola though.
From Wikipedia:
Vita Cola is a cola beverage produced in Germany. Vita Cola’s flavor is described as cola-like with a strong note of lemon and fruit flavoring.
Do I have the right one? It sounds interesting
Yes, it’s from east Germany and survived the reunification. I also like its lemony flavour more than pure cola.
Oh nice, TIL! Thanks!
That’s the one
Alright thanks!
I’m a mio mio cola junge but vita and afri are both also better than coke.
They could try naming it Koker Koler and offering it in 1 liter mugs. I’d still prefer cheaper regional alternatives but it would be funny.
Koker being the German word for Coker, which is a thermal cracker unit in an oil refinery.
Too close to Kofola a legit EU brand cola Tastes awful to me
Can’t agree, Kofola out of the tap is glorious. Can’t wait to be in Czechia/Slovakia again
Prefer Radegast myself
I still have no idea why would anyone drink branded cola when your average grocery store cheap cola tastes exactly the same.
But again, maybe it is me. I don’t even feel much difference between normal cola, zero and light.
That is clearly you then. There is a massive difference between normal coke vs. light or zero.
I looked this take up on WebMD and it said your taste buds are wack.
Didn’t they do this during WWII as well?
They created Fanta because they couldn’t import the ingredients to make Coke because of embargoes.
Fanta is “we found this in the trashcan and made soda out of it because the show must go on (or something, but with bubbles)”.
I’ll be honest though, Mexican Fanta is pretty good.
i’ve noticed Coke, fanta and monster have been on sale in stores at least twice as often as any other beverage brand this summer. Often at a 50% discount and they had a huge Star Wars collaboration out of nowhere. I still didn‘t buy any of it. I bought European brands. Coke posing as „the german drink“ does bring back some memories though. Mostly bad memories.
Coke posing as „the german drink“ does bring back some memories though. Mostly bad memories.
Would have been even worse, a lot more truthful and also funnier if they did that with Fanta.
I only buy monster for my younger brother and only when it is on sale. I wished he’d drink a European brand energy drink such as Gönrgy.