Tell Pepsi executives that our water is not for sale
Last month, right before Coke’s annual shareholders' meeting, we delivered thousands of messages from activists just like you to Coke’s executives. By challenging corporate control of our water, you made Coke executives really feel the heat at this year’s annual meeting! Now it’s time to make Pepsi feel that same pressure.
Tomorrow, we are heading to Pepsi’s annual meeting in Plano, Texas, where Pepsi will showcase Aquafina—the #1 bottled water brand on the market. Pepsi’s top executives will be there—and so will we! With your help, we’ll send a strong message to Pepsi’s C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund that “our water is not for sale!” Join with thousands of people from across the U.S. by taking action now!
With campaign pressure mounting, Pepsi has made it more difficult for citizens to express their concerns about the corporation’s irresponsible and dangerous actions. To take action you must copy and paste the letter below into Pepsi’s web form found at http://www.pepsico.com/PEP_Investors/CorporateGovernance/contact/contactForm/
Corporations, like Pepsi, cannot turn water into a profit-driven commodity and determine who gets it and who doesn’t. Take action today! Tell Pepsi’s C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund that you are joining people around the world challenging corporate control of our water.
Onward,
Patti Lynn
Campaigns Director
Letter to CEO:
Please copy and paste the letter below into Pepsi’s web form found at: http://www.pepsico.com/PEP_Investors/CorporateGovernance/contact/contactForm/
Dear C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund:
This spring, thousands of people joined the Think Outside the Bottle campaign and took action to challenge the corporate control of water.
Despite claims that your company respects people’s “right to have access to water,” Pepsi is the leader in an industry that is turning a right into a commodity, like oil. Through misleading advertising of brands like Aquafina and interference in public policies, the bottled water industry is undermining people’s confidence in public tap water.
As you and the Board of Directors meet this week, I want you to know that I am joining people around the world in a common refrain: “our water is not for sale.”
And we want to know: When will your company stop prioritizing profit over people and the environment?
I await your prompt reply.
Sincerely,
Your Name Address
Pepsi's annual meeting is tomorrow, so be sure to encourage your friends to take action! Click the link below to pass this along.
http://www.stopcorporateabusenow.org/stopcorporateabuse/join-forward.html
Tomorrow, we are heading to Pepsi’s annual meeting in Plano, Texas, where Pepsi will showcase Aquafina—the #1 bottled water brand on the market. Pepsi’s top executives will be there—and so will we! With your help, we’ll send a strong message to Pepsi’s C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund that “our water is not for sale!” Join with thousands of people from across the U.S. by taking action now!
With campaign pressure mounting, Pepsi has made it more difficult for citizens to express their concerns about the corporation’s irresponsible and dangerous actions. To take action you must copy and paste the letter below into Pepsi’s web form found at http://www.pepsico.com/PEP_Investors/CorporateGovernance/contact/contactForm/
Corporations, like Pepsi, cannot turn water into a profit-driven commodity and determine who gets it and who doesn’t. Take action today! Tell Pepsi’s C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund that you are joining people around the world challenging corporate control of our water.
Onward,
Patti Lynn
Campaigns Director
Letter to CEO:
Please copy and paste the letter below into Pepsi’s web form found at: http://www.pepsico.com/PEP_Investors/CorporateGovernance/contact/contactForm/
Dear C.E.O. Stephen Reinemund:
This spring, thousands of people joined the Think Outside the Bottle campaign and took action to challenge the corporate control of water.
Despite claims that your company respects people’s “right to have access to water,” Pepsi is the leader in an industry that is turning a right into a commodity, like oil. Through misleading advertising of brands like Aquafina and interference in public policies, the bottled water industry is undermining people’s confidence in public tap water.
As you and the Board of Directors meet this week, I want you to know that I am joining people around the world in a common refrain: “our water is not for sale.”
And we want to know: When will your company stop prioritizing profit over people and the environment?
I await your prompt reply.
Sincerely,
Your Name Address
Pepsi's annual meeting is tomorrow, so be sure to encourage your friends to take action! Click the link below to pass this along.
http://www.stopcorporateabusenow.org/stopcorporateabuse/join-forward.html
rudkla - 2. Mai, 18:01