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What are some lesser known (so no Walmart, Nestle, Amazon etc) shitty, ethically bankrupt, evil companies?

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  • Ones I haven't seen mentioned here yet:

    Honeywell is a major millitary contractor.

    Meijer, Hanes, Circle K, Jimmy Johns, Thermos, Thortons, Hyvee, Milwaukee, Ryobi, Conair, AAA, Yamaha, Dixie, Roku, New Balance, Sparkle, Saucony, Hoka, Sport Clips, and Lowes - donate almost exclusively to Republicans

    Tripplite (bought by Eaton) - Barre Seid donated 1.6 billion to a dark money conservative group.

    It's a minefield out there.

    • There's a site called "goods unite us" that I'll check before making a big purchase or deciding to make a store a regular stop. It has the average donation history of the company and who they donated to. It sucks that we have a Home Depot in a really convenient location but they're especially egregious donators.

      • I use them as well. I wish there was a better agregator though, Walmart passes their check, but treat their employees and suppliers like dirt.

    • Minefield, you say?

      https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004SPIE.5441...13R/abstract

      The Self Healing Minefield (SHM) is comprised of a networked system of mobile anti-tank landmines. When the mines detect a breach, each calculates an appropriate response, and some fire small rockets to "hop" into the breach path, healing the breach. The purpose of the SHM is to expand the capabilities of traditional obstacles and provide an effective anti-tank obstacle that does not require Anti-Personnel (AP) submunitions. The DARPA/ATO sponsored program started in June 2000 and culminated in a full 100-unit demonstration at Fort Leonard Wood, MO in April 2003. That program went from "a concept" to a prototype system demonstration in approximately 21 months and to a full tactically significant demonstration in approximately 33 months.

      Ah yes, not self-healing as in able to be disabled after the war is over, but self-healing as automatically "hops" mines into different locations to cover gaps after a single mine explodes.

      (To be fair DARPA eventually dumped money into "smart mines" which can be disabled remotely. Still....)


      Also I'm reminded of military contractor KBR and Halliburton:

      https://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/jamie-leigh-jones-claims-iraq-rape-employer-held/story?id=13884264

      June 21, 2011

      A woman who says she was drugged and gang-raped while working for military contractor KBR in Iraq will face down an attorney for KBR in a Texas courtroom today.

      Jamie Leigh Jones, now 26, was working her fourth day on the job in Baghdad in 2005 when she says she was assaulted by seven U.S. contractors and held captive by two KBR guards in a shipping container. Jones, whose story was featured in an award-winning ABC News "20/20" investigation, is one of a group of women who claim they were harassed or assaulted while working for KBR and former parent company Halliburton in Iraq. She is suing KBR, former parent company Halliburton and KBR firefighter Charles Bortz, who she claims was one of the rapists.

      She never got her day in a real court, the contract to force her to take it through arbitration court stood firm.

166 comments