Footnote: Two Things I Learned Today
Also: what's the legal age for 'transition' in your country of residence?
We’re preparing the candy give-away bags for our daughter’s birthday party tomorrow—you won’t believe what we found in a generic ‘share-size’ bag:
As you can imagine, I feared the worst (but it’s the expectable crap in terms of highly processed sugars and the like). Neither of our daughters wanted to eat it, though, because it’s disgusting to consider…
Moving on to decorations, well, here goes: we also got spray candles for the cake that came with the following ‘legal notice’ on the backside: ‘sale of, and use by, only legal for customers 16 or older’.
But you could, of course, get jabbed with modRNA injections without parental consent at 14.
What’s the age at which the decision to ‘transition’ is legal in your country of residence?
It might be that both options be legal but buying a can of beer (18+) in Norway or these spray candles (16+) isn’t.
I wish I could say something useful, but at this point I can’t. I just can’t.
I used to work in adverrtising/marketing, firstly on agency side then moved to client side, which was multiple supermarket, in top 3 UK. All supermarkets and brands want to achieve is increase market share, be number one. Who persuaded the confectionery buyer(s) to stock these sweets with these wrappers? What was the brief from Haribo Marketing to Ad Agency? Is this part of ESG rules if you want to stay in business?
I’m ashamed to say I might have eaten a bag of the “larvae” 🙈 a friend knows I love liquorice and bought them for me. I’m praying it’s not conditioning and normalising and an innocent marketing ploy due to their look (yeah not sure even I can convince myself of that any longer...) darn it!