Just curious, why did you pick the Guardian to call out when it's not even one of the UK's worst offenders for headlines with puns in them (i.e. tabloids)?
> They also joked about killing Tetrick himself: “Can we pool our money and put a hit on him?” asked Mike Sencer, executive vice-president of AEB member organization Hidden Villa Ranch. Mitch Kanter, executive vice president of the AEB, jokingly offered “to contact some of my old buddies in Brooklyn to pay Mr Tetrick a visit”. (AEB apologized for those statements when contacted by the Guardian.)
Goodness. Good thing these guys are multi-millionaires appointed by the government, otherwise they might get in trouble for threatening to have someone murdered.
To be fair... I've made jokes like that, if you're saying it to somebody who knows you're joking then there's nothing threatening about it at all. They neither threatened the person with murder (I presume he was unaware) nor, as far as we know, made any plans to do it. Let's hate them for better reasons, that clearly exist, than making jokes about murder.
(Also, IANAL but pretty sure under those circumstances there wouldn't be anything to successfully prosecute, nothing to do with them being government-appointed millionaires.)
Agreed. It's the kind of thing where you can't ever completely write it off as a joke. Even if only for the sake of the person who made the joke: if anything terrible and mysterious were to happen to Tetrick, having previously joked about killing him unnecessarily makes him a suspect.
Do either of you have any evidence or statistics that joking about killing someone is in any way associated positively with actually killing that person? If not, I don't know what your points are other than that you find humor of that type distasteful. If you don't have any such evidence, then all I can guess is that you're arguing that we should fixate on innuendo as opposed to evidence, or avoid speech that could inspire other people to fixate on innuendo rather than evidence.
Has anybody who joked about bombs in the line to get on a plane ever bombed one?
That's not the greatest analogy. Obviously I don't suspect somebody standing in line and who doesn't fit the profile of a terrorist, just because they joke about doing something for which they have no obvious motive.
In this case we have business associates--who have already been trying to eliminate what they see as an existential threat--making a joke in private.
At the very least, it's rather distasteful that this is funny to them, especially when you realize that stuff like this actually does happen.
But inappropriate != illegal. The union of what each person considers socially inappropriate is a rather large set... both undesirable and impossible to legally enforce. As other comments say, there are better things to be upset at here.
You may want to grow thicker skin. People joke about all kinds of inappropriate things in private. It's often a bonding experience. If I were to tell you something that I don't necessarily mean, but would harm my reputation if it were to get out, it's a form of a secret. If you reciprocate, often we would feel closer.
There are a lot of reasons to get upset in this world, and a lot of things to get upset at. If this is something sensitive to you for personal reasons, I get it. Otherwise, you should probably just accept that people aren't going to always conform to your view of perfection.
I joke all the time with my family and friends that I'll kill them if they ever repeat something I say in confidence. It's tongue in cheek, an obvious over-exaggeration, and often used for humor.
IME, bullies actually say "stop hitting yourself". School administrators and parents of bullies (authority figures who could step in to stop bullying) are the ones who say to grow a thicker skin.
There's certainly nothing wrong with trying to be kind. however, this is an interesting issue because I see the desire to force other people to conform to your beliefs a form of bullying.
I suppose it depends on where you place the responsibility of offense. Should everyone be (socially) required to consider the feelings of everyone around them before they say anything? Or should people learn to accept that others won't have their same experiences and values, and in that sense, "grow a thicker skin"?
Put more succinctly, is offense given, or is it taken?
I have a friend, former colleague, who I regularly make jokes about pushing in front of a bus to his face. He knows I'm joking so guess what... he doesn't care.
If I made the same joke behind his back, but still without any wish for him to die... is it suddenly bad? Arrest me!
If you made that joke, you probably weren't also conspiring to do economic harm to a competing business. That puts the comment in a different light despite the speaker's intentions IMO, even if it ultimately amounts to nothing relevant to the prosecution.
In most places, to bring conspiracy charges, there has to be an "overt act" in furtherance of the conspiracy. So they'd have to do something to further a murder plot in order to be charged with that in those places.
That doesn't normally buy you a murder conspiracy unless there were overt acts that furthered a murder plot and you need a felony in there somewhere. There's no law against "economic harm" as such, but there are certain ways to compete unlawfully.
Rather, the article says there's a rule against disparaging other products. That sounds more like policy, rather than law, which is not usually a felony. It also merely says they're 'investigating', so there's nothing for us to even look at until we see whether or not they actually bring charges against anyone.
Does it change the perspective of anything else they've done, e.g. They could be viewed as more willing to do non-murder crimes? It of course shows they definitely don't like the guy, but that's obvious when they were trying to take out his company or whatever.
It's not an element of any crime I'm aware of unless there's evidence of a serious murder plot that we don't yet know about, so it wouldn't be very relevant. They generally try to keep things that make one party look bad, but which are not relevant to the case being tried, out of the courtroom.
For the U.S., this is Incorrect. That definitely does not meet the standard of a True Threat. It wasn't sent to the person involved, or even posted in their view by the speaker. Even if Elonis v. U.S. Had been decided differently, a Reasonable Person wouldn't look at that and conclude it was spoken seriously. But as it stands, a True Threat has a Mens Rea requirement.
I'm definitely aware of that case, but I wasn't seriously suggesting that this would pass muster in court, just that this is not a "threat" under the commonly understood definition of threat, and is only on the order of magnitude of "threats" prosecuted by government agents stretching their powers to the limits (charitably speaking).
Wow, does that article ever bury the lead by not describing what Hampton Creek's product is until the very last paragraph.
For those who didn't make it all the way down, Hampton Creek makes a vegetarian mayo alternative called 'Just Mayo' that is a threat to egg-based mayonnaise, and is evidently gaining popularity. As such, the American Egg Board has been attempting to destroy them.
I'd be pretty surprised if I bought a product named "Just Mayo" that didn't contain actual mayonnaise, but I guess it fits into the same pattern as American "cheese".
If you look carefully, it's not actually called "American cheese". It's usually something like "American slices (pasteurized processed cheese product)" instead.
I just... don't understand this mindset at all. To all intents and purposes, egg is an entirely utilitarian ingredient in mayonnaise, as an emulsifier for the oil and water. In the past, this would be our only emulsifier readily available for such a dish, and now we have many more alternatives. This product (supposedly, I don't live in the US so have never tried it) tastes and feels exactly like a good mayonnaise, and shares the two largest parts of the ingredients, why shouldn't it be referred to as a mayonnaise?
I think the American "cheese" thing is a bit of red herring too. What people are actually referring to is the fact that it's actually a cheap, heavily processed product that doesn't really bare any resemblance to cheese as we have known it before. This complaint about American cheeses is not usually dished out to, say, Treeline's nut cheese brand — presumably because it looks like "real cheese".
It seems incredibly arbitrary to just pick one ingredient and say "hey, this is what makes this a real version of [x]", especially when that ingredient is apparently so unimportant to the actual consistency and flavour of the product. It's as if we'd arbitrarily decided that something would stop being mayo if the type of oil wasn't canola or something.
The yolk affects taste, color and texture. I'm not sure what more you could demand from an ingredient.
No one has "arbitrarily" picked a single ingredient to define real mayonnaise, you'd have the same reaction if someone tried to replace the vegetable oil with lard, or the vinegar with sulphuric acid. The basic recipe for mayonnaise is pretty uncontroversial.
As for having the same taste, I'll believe that when I taste it. That's what Coca-Cola says about Zero as well. It's just marketing, they're not going to say that the product they're passing off as real mayo doesn't taste like mayo.
I'm amazed that these "checkoff" organizations are still allowed to exist in the US.
Do we really need to pay more for food to subsidize adverts for milk, eggs, pork, and beef? How is it fair to force producers to pay for marketing that they might not even support?
The idea is to prevent free riders in a commodified market and allow for collective action.
It's actually very similar to a union in that each individual member (or farm) is small and can't have much effect on their own. By organizing collectively you can become more powerful but there's no incentive for any individual member to join.
Think about the "Pork, the other white meat" or all the milk mustache ads. A single farm could never put that together but by working together they can benefit the industry as a whole.
So that's how you end up with these "checkoff" organizations and arguments against right-to-work laws.
A case involving raisins[1,2] might start and end to some of this foolishness, but some of these lobbies are pretty powerful. I direct the hemp lovers to look at the lobbying efforts of the cotton folks.
Is this really a threat to egg usage? If you make mayonnaise at home, you need 1 egg yolk per half cup of oil. With industrial equipment and science, you can use 1 yolk to emulsify 1 or 2 dozen cups of oil. (By law, mayonnaise is 65% oil and must contain egg yolk, but not a specific amount of egg yolk). Egg is the third ingredient in Hellman's, after oil and water.
Mayo is only the first product from HCF. The next planned product is cookie dough with further products planned where the egg is more and more obvious.
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[ 4.2 ms ] story [ 108 ms ] thread> “Can we pool our money and put a hit on him?” asked Mike Sencer, executive vice-president of AEB
Sounds like an Omeletized Crime Ring to me.
Goodness. Good thing these guys are multi-millionaires appointed by the government, otherwise they might get in trouble for threatening to have someone murdered.
(Also, IANAL but pretty sure under those circumstances there wouldn't be anything to successfully prosecute, nothing to do with them being government-appointed millionaires.)
Has anybody who joked about bombs in the line to get on a plane ever bombed one?
In this case we have business associates--who have already been trying to eliminate what they see as an existential threat--making a joke in private.
At the very least, it's rather distasteful that this is funny to them, especially when you realize that stuff like this actually does happen.
There are a lot of reasons to get upset in this world, and a lot of things to get upset at. If this is something sensitive to you for personal reasons, I get it. Otherwise, you should probably just accept that people aren't going to always conform to your view of perfection.
I joke all the time with my family and friends that I'll kill them if they ever repeat something I say in confidence. It's tongue in cheek, an obvious over-exaggeration, and often used for humor.
There's certainly nothing wrong with trying to be kind. however, this is an interesting issue because I see the desire to force other people to conform to your beliefs a form of bullying.
I suppose it depends on where you place the responsibility of offense. Should everyone be (socially) required to consider the feelings of everyone around them before they say anything? Or should people learn to accept that others won't have their same experiences and values, and in that sense, "grow a thicker skin"?
Put more succinctly, is offense given, or is it taken?
If I made the same joke behind his back, but still without any wish for him to die... is it suddenly bad? Arrest me!
IANAL
Conspiracy: http://lawcomic.net/guide/?p=432 Overt Acts: http://lawcomic.net/guide/?p=517
Rather, the article says there's a rule against disparaging other products. That sounds more like policy, rather than law, which is not usually a felony. It also merely says they're 'investigating', so there's nothing for us to even look at until we see whether or not they actually bring charges against anyone.
You should read up on the most recent Supreme Court case involving threats made on Facebook: A good intro to the case: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/201... Collection of Primary Sources and commentary: http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/elonis-v-united-s... An explanation of what "Mens Rea" means http://lawcomic.net/guide/?p=173 (yes, in webcomic form, but drawn by an attorney)
I was also obliquely referring to this case, which has a closer fact pattern: http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/02/tech/social-media/facebook-thr... (he was clearly joking and there wasn't any clear target to even send it to).
Based on the picture in TFA, they better bring the whole gang. I don't know if it's the egg-free mayonnaise, but the dude is ripped.
For those who didn't make it all the way down, Hampton Creek makes a vegetarian mayo alternative called 'Just Mayo' that is a threat to egg-based mayonnaise, and is evidently gaining popularity. As such, the American Egg Board has been attempting to destroy them.
https://hn.algolia.com/?query=hampton%20creek&sort=byDate&pr...
Margarine with yellow dye trying to look like butter (also dyed yellow).
"Milk" products such as almond milk and soy milk when both are just juice since neither almonds or soybeans have nipples.
There must be some law to prevent such desception.
I think the American "cheese" thing is a bit of red herring too. What people are actually referring to is the fact that it's actually a cheap, heavily processed product that doesn't really bare any resemblance to cheese as we have known it before. This complaint about American cheeses is not usually dished out to, say, Treeline's nut cheese brand — presumably because it looks like "real cheese".
It seems incredibly arbitrary to just pick one ingredient and say "hey, this is what makes this a real version of [x]", especially when that ingredient is apparently so unimportant to the actual consistency and flavour of the product. It's as if we'd arbitrarily decided that something would stop being mayo if the type of oil wasn't canola or something.
No one has "arbitrarily" picked a single ingredient to define real mayonnaise, you'd have the same reaction if someone tried to replace the vegetable oil with lard, or the vinegar with sulphuric acid. The basic recipe for mayonnaise is pretty uncontroversial.
As for having the same taste, I'll believe that when I taste it. That's what Coca-Cola says about Zero as well. It's just marketing, they're not going to say that the product they're passing off as real mayo doesn't taste like mayo.
Do we really need to pay more for food to subsidize adverts for milk, eggs, pork, and beef? How is it fair to force producers to pay for marketing that they might not even support?
It's actually very similar to a union in that each individual member (or farm) is small and can't have much effect on their own. By organizing collectively you can become more powerful but there's no incentive for any individual member to join.
Think about the "Pork, the other white meat" or all the milk mustache ads. A single farm could never put that together but by working together they can benefit the industry as a whole.
So that's how you end up with these "checkoff" organizations and arguments against right-to-work laws.
1) http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/06/22/supreme...
2) http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/horne-v-departmen...
http://www.businessinsider.com/hampton-creek-ceo-complaints-...
You could argue that it's a hit piece, but there's some pretty interesting observations that seem factually correct.