Thursday, April 07, 2022

Boycott Companies That Refuse to Boycott Russia

In the face of  Russia's invasion of Ukraine and now obvious commission of war crimes, hundreds of corporations have either exited Russia, suspended operations and/or ceased investion in that rogue nation.  However, at the latest count, 162 corporations - most notably and not surprisingly, Koch Industries and its subsidiaries (Charles Koch is pictured at left) have failed and refused to stop helping fund and support Putin's war machine.  Sadly, a chance at perceived profit is more important to the leadership of these corporations than morality and decency.  They need to be treated as pariahs just like Putin and Americans need to boycott their products and instead support competitors who have rightly sought to help punish Putin's evil regime.  No moral person should be giving their hard earned dollars to corporations that ultimately have innocent blood - including that of hundreds, if not thousands of children on their hands.  These corporations represent corporate greed at its worse and are despicable.  A column in the New York Times looks at companies who have acted morally and those that have not.  Boycott those that have put money ahead of the lives of civilians and children.  Take the time to check out their names and products (you can look up companies here) and spend your money elsewhere.  Here are column highlights:  

In the latter half of the 1980s, roughly 200 American companies withdrew from South Africa, partly in protest against its apartheid system. As businesses fled the country, South Africa’s segregationist president, P.W. Botha, came under increasing economic pressure. The corporate exodus contributed to the end of apartheid, and was a remarkable display of the power that companies have. When they’re courageous enough to use that power for the good, it can help topple repressive governments.

Over the past six weeks, we’ve witnessed a similarly extensive response from the private sector to Russia’s war in Ukraine. Hundreds of American companies have announced that they are voluntarily curtailing or halting their business in Russia, according to data compiled by our team of 24 researchers at the Yale School of Management. While it’s impossible to say whether all of these companies are motivated by purely moral concerns, they’ve all gone above and beyond what is legally required by international sanctions.

It’s still too early to tell whether their moves will help to force Russia to end the war. But sanctions from Ukraine’s allies have already shaken Russia’s economy. The country’s stock market is on an IV drip, and the Kremlin has imposed strict controls to prop up the value of the ruble.

Companies have a role to play in keeping the economic pressure on President Vladimir Putin. To that end, our team has placed businesses in one of five categories based on their response to the war. Consumers should know whether the companies that make their food, clothes and goods are fully committed to ending Mr. Putin’s atrocities.

Our goal is absolute, and some might even say extreme: Every corporation with a presence in Russia must publicly commit to a total cessation of business there. Russians who rely on the food or medicine those companies make or jobs they provide may suffer hardship. But if that’s what it takes to stop Mr. Putin from killing innocent Ukrainians, that’s what businesses must do.

Here are some of the biggest brands that are leaving Russia, along with companies that are staying put and supporting Mr. Putin with their imports, exports and taxes.

At least 253 companies are making a clean break from Russia, leaving behind essentially no operational footprint.

BP, Exxon and Shell have said they are divesting billions of dollars in Russian energy assets. Bernard Looney, the chief executive of BP, explained that the invasion had caused BP to fundamentally rethink its position in Russia.

The tool and household product manufacturer Stanley Black & Decker also ended its operations in Russia, potentially forgoing millions of dollars in profit.

At least 248 companies have suspended all or almost all of their corporate operations in Russia without permanently exiting or divesting.

In many cases, these companies have ceased doing business in Russia but are continuing to pay their Russian employees, thereby leaving the door open to returning. Adidas, Disney, IBM and Nike all fall into this category.

At least 75 companies have suspended a significant portion of their business in Russia.

PepsiCo, for example, has halted work across all of its sodas in the country, including Pepsi-Cola, 7Up and Mirinda, but not in its dairy products. JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs also fall into this category. Both have said they are winding down their operations in the region. The companies haven’t totally divested, however: They are still reportedly continuing to snatch up depressed Russian securities for pennies on the dollar.

At least 162 companies have not announced substantial voluntary changes to either their operations or their investments in the country.

Some of these companies have donated to international humanitarian organizations or announced vague re-evaluations of operations in Russia but have not taken any concrete measures to suspend or reduce their business there, beyond the bare minimum legally required by international sanctions. Others haven’t addressed the war at all.

Koch Industries — which makes products including Brawny paper towels, Quilted Northern and Angel Soft toilet paper and Dixie cups . . . has condemned Russia’s invasion and the subsidiary that runs the plants has halted new investments in Russia. But it refuses to close its manufacturing plants, suggesting that if it did, Russia would nationalize the facilities. That may be true. But it’s a risk that hundreds of other companies have taken in deciding to pull out of Russia, and it’s one that a multibillion-dollar company like Koch can afford to take as well.

Hundreds of companies are forfeiting profits in order to hamper Russia’s war machine. Their divestment will slow the country’s growth for years to come. Even if the war ends tomorrow, business leaders will think twice before investing in a country with such a capricious leader.

Yet many Western businesses refuse to quit a country whose soldiers are apparently executing Ukrainian civilians. Fortunately, Americans who are sickened by businesses’ indifference to the bloodshed can make their voices heard: If the companies won’t boycott Russia, boycott the companies. 

2 comments:

John said...

I was never comfortable with becoming friendly with Russia. As a schoolkid, we spent too much time hiding under our desks in case they bombed us. As a teen, I spent years being part of the tripwire that would slow down a soviet invasion of western Europe. Much of my adult life was spent developing air defense systems that kept their bombers at bay. Then, the wall came down and all of a sudden we became buddies, mostly, it seems, in the name of dubious profit for US companies. As we got to know them, though, it became clear that Communism was not the problem. Communism was irrelevant. They are gangsters. Not all Russians of course, just the bosses.

EdA said...

For YEARS, the Koch family has displayed sociopathic behavior. It owns the second largest privately owned company in America, which means that realistically it is accountable only to two brothers, who are extremely generous to right-wing and reactionary groups, including the Republicans forming the Sedition Caucus. And their active indifference to the crimes against humanity being conducted by Vladimir Putin's forces is simply the most recent demonstration.



Brawny
Sparkle
Angelsoft
Quilted Northern
Soft n' Gentle
Dixie
Vanity Fair
Mardi-Gras
STAINMASTER carpet