thaiboxerken said:Yes, advertisement often sells their product as being more than it is. I agree.
But I don't agree that we should protect people from advertisements. Nestle giving out free samples is just a form of advertisement.
"Is it unreasonable to make that choice for what seem like all the best reasons?"
If someone is stupid enough to use those reasons to bottlefeed vs breastfeed, it's their fault. I don't agree that we should protect stupid people from their own stupidity.
But what if these people aren't informed that "breast is best".
Look at my link again Thai - the one to the BMJ - Nestle appear to offer incentives to the Drs and Nurses. They do not comply with the voluntary code laid down with by the WHO. You can dismiss this as junk science again if you wish - but I did winnow through a whole load of sites trying to come up with independent ones - such as the news site, rather than anti Nestlé sites.
If someone advertises the plus side of a produce and gives it away for free for a time yet no one is telling you of the negative side - does that make you stupid for assuming there is none?
Does it make you stupid if you don't ask the right questions and you just place your trust in what a multinational company says?
I would say that we are pretty sophisticated when it comes to advertising and pretty cynical too - yet we are taken in time and again
What chance do people in the third world have with less exposure to marketing ploys than we do?
Sou