Snopes pepsi can iraq
Today, bartering is usually associated with countries in turmoil. Take fisherman in Venezuela who now swap their catch for other food stuffs or medicines, because after years of hyperinflation the country's currency is now nearly worthless.
Or the bartering networks that emerged in Greece at the height of its financial crisis eight or so years ago. However, it is not just individuals who continue to engage in bartering, it is also used by governments. And again, this is often the case when a country is facing financial woes and isolation on the world stage, such as Venezuela or Iran.
For both countries bartering has enabled them to get around US-led economic blockades. Bartering also continues to occasionally be used by companies, such as Indonesian aircraft maker Industri Pesawat Terbang Nusantara IPTN agreeing to trade two of its transport aircraft for , tonnes of Thai sticky rice back in That was all the Thai buyer had to offer. And in an even more eye-opening historic example, back in the s US giant Pepsi traded its soft drink for Soviet tomato paste, so it could enter the USSR market.
Pepsi, which owned Pizza Hut at the time, spread the tomato paste across its pizzas in western Europe. It also bartered its fizzy drink for Russian vodka, and even Soviet warships , which it sold on for scrap. Swedish chart-toppers Abba did something similar in the Soviet Union, where they earned royalties in the form of fruit, vegetables and crude oil, which were then sold on the global market.
Back in Iran, it has used bartering to support its economy ever since the US first imposed sanctions after the Iranian revolution of The Iranians then had to start bartering even more when tough curbs were imposed by the United Nations between and With the UN sanctions making it impossible for Iran to buy goods on the international markets with its own currency, Tehran started offering crude oil, and gold held in vaults abroad, in exchange for basic staples like rice, cooking oil and tea.
This has forced Iran to return to bartering, such as reviving its old agreement with India, whereby it exchanges its oil for rice. Experts called in by PepsiCo's lawyers offered a stomach-churning explanation for why it couldn't be true: the Mountain Dew would have dissolved the mouse, turning it into a "jelly-like substance," had it been in the can of fluid from the time of its bottling until the day the plaintiff opened it, 15 months later.
Forget legal disputes over canned vermin. The new question has become: Is Mountain Dew really so corrosive that it can dissolve a mouse carcass? And if so, what does it do to your teeth and intestines?
Is Mountain Dew's classic slogan — "It'll tickle yore innards" — the world's most sickening understatement? Key to Pepsi's legal argument is that there's no chance a mouse's corpse could survive, intact, for 15 months swimming in Mountain Dew. While published studies have not been conducted on how rapidly Mountain Dew would dissolve a mouse, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the neon green soda can eat away teeth and bones in a matter of months, and would likely do quite a number on a rodent.
It will be like rubber. According to Ren, Mountain Dew contains citric acid, a substance naturally found in citrus fruits that exists as a powder in its purified, industrialized form.
Most citrus sodas mix in the stuff to give drinks their tangy bite, while most colas, such as Coca Cola and Pepsi, incorporate phosphoric acid for the same effect. Consequently, these drinks have a low pH value around 3 very acidic.
Coca Cola, with its dark coloring and non-fruity flavor, may be the soft drink most often compared to battery acid, but in , a well-known study led by dentist J. Anthony von Fraunhofer found that citrus sodas like Mountain Dew and Sprite erode tooth enamel around six times faster than colas.
When Fraunhofer's team soaked human molars in Mountain Dew for two weeks a period of time comparable to approximately 13 years of normal beverage exposure, the researchers calculated the molars' enamel lost more than 6 percent of its volume.
Example: [Collected on Facebook, December ]. Origins: The photograph displayed above is a genuine picture of a can of Diet Pepsi manufactured in Dubai by Pepsi Arabia and available, among other markets, to U. The depicted scene features a road leading to a city skyline which has two similar but not identical tall buildings, with other shorter buildings between them in the foreground, and an airplane flying above not within the scene. In fact, the can design was based on the Dubai skyline with its distinctive pointed skyscrapers :.
We understand that the design of the can be misinterpreted, which was never our intention. We understand from some of our consumers that a Diet Pepsi can designed and sold in the Middle East portraying the growth of active regional cities has been misinterpreted.
We are sorry that some people found this design insensitive, which was never our intention as the graphics on this can were inspired by the Dubai skyline.
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