Jerry Greenfield, co-founder of the Ben & Jerry’s ice cream brand, has stepped down from the company he started 47 years ago citing a retreat from its campaigning spirit under parent company Unilever.

Greenfield wrote in an open letter late Tuesday night — shared on X by his co-founder Ben Cohen — that he could no longer “in good conscience” remain an employee of the company and said the company had been “silenced.”

He said the company’s values and campaigning work on “peace, justice, and human rights” allowed it to be “more than just an ice cream company” and said the independence to pursue this was guaranteed when Anglo-Dutch packaged food giant Unilever bought the brand in 2000 for $326 million.

Cohen’s statement didn’t mention Israel’s ongoing military operation in Gaza, but Ben & Jerry’s has been outspoken on the treatment of Palestinians for years and in 2021 withdrew sales from Israeli settlements in what it called “Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

  • 1234@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Every time you buy the ice-cream you vote for the company to exist - if you are not happy about the company’s actions in Palestine or elsewhere the next step should be very easy to figure out.

    In fact Unilever has a t least another couple of brands you can try to resist to show that maybe this shit show isn’t what you want in the world.

    Nothing says “let’s change” to a capitalist like a dripping sales.

    • kadotux@sopuli.xyz
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      13 hours ago

      Boycotting is easier said than done, given that there a really just a handful of companies who own all the companies in the world

  • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    I’m sick and tired of this clown. He keeps rambling about how he values “independence” and his “values”, but if that’s the case why the fuck did he decide to sell his independent company and it’s founding values to a giant soulless corporation like Unilever? He and Ben sold the company 25 years ago for a nice fat paycheck, and haven’t looked back since. Interestingly enough, the vast majority of their “moral consciousness” only started becoming public after they sold out and cashed out. They willingly gave up their independence and values for money, and now they’re acting shocked that they don’t have as much control over the company they sold as they imagined.

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      13 hours ago

      Him being a hypocrite doesn’t change anything.

      If people boycott the company over his comments it’s not like he benefits in any way.

      • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Maybe, but I have a hard time giving people like him the benefit of the doubt. I honestly would not surprised if he used moves like this launch a podcast or something like that in the not so distant future.

    • fodor@lemmy.zip
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      14 hours ago

      You’re cute, deflecting the issue away from Palestine and genocide. It almost slipped past us.

  • Gates9@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I met Jerry during the Bernie campaign. He was serving ice cream to campaign volunteers. He’s a nice man.

  • The Velour Fog @lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I mean, the first mistake was trusting a pinkie promise from a megacorp like Unilever. Maybe they shouldn’t have sold their brand?

    • StarryPhoenix97@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      20 years is still an impressive run. That contract must have been tight and their margins high. But when you fuck with Israel they tend to fuck you back.

      • Baked86@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        More like if you mind your own business jizzrael will swoop in to ethnically cleanse, steal your land and cry victim.

  • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    They should’ve made the company into a worker owned cooperative, but they prioritized personal profit.

    • yamamoon@lemmings.worldBanned
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      1 day ago

      Exactly.

      They maximized profit just like all the other corporations. They’re nothing special and neither is their ice cream.

      • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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        21 hours ago

        The workers are responsible for all of the wealth of the company. It’s only fair they become the owners. Without them, Ben & Jerry wouldn’t have been able to expand beyond their single ice cream parlor in 1978.

        • Lemming6969@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          Sort of… The workers got paid already. Sure they could gift the business to the workers I guess.

          • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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            19 hours ago

            The workers were not paid what they generated in value, they were paid just enough to make them do the work reliably without leaving. The excess value they made went into growing the business and employing yet more workers, which increased the value of the business tremendously. At the end, all of that extra value went to Ben & Jerry at the sale, not the workers who made that transfer of wealth possible.

            Ben & Jerry did not personally contribute 325 million dollars worth of labor into the company, they decided to take that excess value for themselves.

            If hypothetically Ben & Jerry’s had been a worker owned coop from the start, if they had decided to sell it in 2000 for 325 million, that money would’ve been split amongst all of the workers fairly evenly, and all of them would’ve been made very wealthy from their collective labor, instead of only two people.

            • applebusch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              15 hours ago

              I don’t think you can sell a worker cooperative the same way you can a private business as a scum sucking capitalist because it would be extremely difficult to exploit a work force that suddenly is flush with cash and has no personal stake in the business any longer. They would only agree to sell the business collectively, and they would likely all bail as soon as the sale was finalized, leaving a bunch of manufacturing equipment with no one to run it. They could probably convince some dipshit venture capitalist or hedge fund manager to buy but they wouldn’t have gotten anywhere near the same price because a large part of the value to those assholes is the potential for future exploitation.

              • Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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                14 hours ago

                I had to re-read your comment and the parent because it made it sound like any worker co-op would immediately turn to greed if it could lol. The reality is even if they sold the company (I highly doubt you would get even 30% to vote yes), there’s estimated 1200-1400 employees, looking at like maybe 200k per person. No ones giving up a great job with pay and benefits for such a shitty lump sum.

  • anon6789@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Why are so many people here mad at Ben and Jerry while they tried to do the best they could?

    The decision to sell sounds a lot more grey than comments are playing it off as. If people want to debate if they ever should have taken the company public that’s one thing, but B&J seem to have tried to make the best of their financial and legal situations while being beholden to shareholders, and laws that would have helped prevent being sold to Unilever didn’t exist in Vermont until over a decade after the sale.

    Instead of being forcefully bought out, removed by Unilever, and had all their social agendas canceled immediately, they made a deal to continue to be able to serve in some capacity after the acquisition. They remained active with the company for 25 years, so they seemed to do a lot with their “empty promise” they were given by Unilever.

    This is the summary I read on the story of their sale to Unilever. It doesn’t really support one side or the other, so take what you will from it, but treating them like jerks really doesn’t feel called for.

    • rowrowrowyourboat@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Did you even read the article you linked? It literally argues against your point.

      The literal first sentence of the article is:

      Contrary to myth, the sale of Ben & Jerry’s to corporate giant Unilever wasn’t legally required.

      And further down:

      This article aims to dispel the idée fixe that corporate law compelled Ben & Jerry’s directors to accept Unilever’s rich offer, overwhelming Cohen and Greenfield’s dogged efforts to maintain the company’s social mission and independence.

      Yet in the end, Ben & Jerry’s directors chose to accept a generous offer, even at a cost to the social mission, rather than allow the company’s defenses to be tested. Anti-takeover protections are only as effective as the people positioned to use them.

      • anon6789@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I did, and that was why I felt it was a decent source.

        The article is dispelling the part of the mythos, created by the public with some help from Ben and Jerry, that the sale was purely a legal issue of that they were forced to sell due to (mistakenly, according to the author’s take) believing they had to do what the majority of shareholders wanted them to do, which was to sell to Unilever, as their stock had lost 50% of its previous value.

        That may be true or not, I’m not a business lawyer. But the law itself wasn’t so much the interest I had in this source. With it being written as a legal paper, I’m going to lean that the background they are giving is pretty impartial facts on what actually did take place. The history of the sale and why it occured is what is relevant to the point I’m attempting to make here, disagreeing with people say Ben and Jerry deserved this treatment from Unilever for being sellouts. That’s a moral and ethical argument, not a legal one, so all the legal stuff here is moot to the conversation I’m having.

        The Ben and Jerry’s shareholder and Unilever prior to the buyout both wanted to ax the social missions of the founders to keep those profits for themselves. In response, they reached what they felt was a deal beneficial to all 3 parties, themselves, the shareholders, and Unilever, who was going to buy the company one way or another. In return for cooperation, Ben and Jerry ensured their social programs lived for another 25 years. My thoughts are that is a positive accomplishment and that rather than being greedy stakeholders, they extended their contributions to the betterment of society, while making Unilever do that, the exact opposite of what they would have done on their own. You guys want to crap on them, but they did an additional quarter century of good, at least partly at the expense of a megacorp that would not have done so. This is the kind of thing all you guys cheer here, but when executives do what you talk of doing, you still badmouth them.

        Leftists have no bigger enemy than gatekeeping leftists. Ben and Jerry have given over $70,000,000 away, and I’m sure a good chunk of that was taken out of Unilever at this point. How’s that a dick move on their part?

  • LoafedBurrito@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Unfortunately all good things come to an end in America. They get bought out by a company who only cares about the rich and their shareholders and hate their customers.

    We are all stuck in a cycle that will never change unless a giant meteor hits or something. No good deed goes unpunished in a capitalist country.

    • Lka1988@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Unilever has owned B&J’s for quite some time now.

      I just looked it up, Unilever bought them in April of 2000. That’s over 25 years ago. Part of that merger was an agreement that B&J’s could still be vocal about things, and it looks like Unilever has tried to go back on that several times. Something I also just found, Unilever is apparently spinning off the ice cream brands… I guess we will see what happens next.

      • redhorsejacket@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Important caveat: IANAL.

        I’ve seen elsewhere the response to the Ben and Jerry’s news hitting basically boiling down to “fucking cry about it sell outs, you got into bed with Unilever”. Which, sure, fine if that’s your (general “you”, not you specifically OP) perspective, far be it from me to yuck your yums. That being said, according to the AP article I read, they carved out (or attempted to) the right to continue to manage the social justice aspect of the Ben and Jerry’s brand without interference, in perpetuity, as a condition of the sale. As I understand it, Unilever has done a number of things to erode those carveouts, basically by repeatedly spinning off portions of the business into new companies, which they argue are not beholden to that agreement. For example, despite Ben and Jerry’s public support of Palestine and objection to their products being sold in Israel, Unilever simply licensed the product to Israeli manufacturers who sell it under their own brand names. Additionally, and this is what appears to be what precipitated this departure, they are now spinning all of their frozen confectionary brands off into something like Magnum Foods (because the two things I want to have on my mind while looking for ice cream are guns and condoms).

        Like, I understand anyone who looks at the hundreds of millions that these guys received in 2000 and has difficulty mustering sympathy for their plight. That being said, I don’t begrudge them their pay day. They said, at the time, that the partnership would enable them to extend their social justice campaigns beyond what they could do as independents. From what I’ve seen, they’ve largely lived up to that over the ensuing years.

        • StarryPhoenix97@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          Honestly, it’s incredible both of them lasted the 20+ years they did. This sounds like PE buyout and CEOs and company founders don’t tend to be around long after the transition. They did good. They should be proud. I’d love a list of what they accomplished with their social justice initiatives but I’m in bed. I’ll check tomorrow.

        • frongt@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          Yeah. They tried to have it both ways, though, and a corporate giant like Unilever was never going to let that go on forever.

          • redhorsejacket@lemmy.world
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            21 hours ago

            Perhaps. I won’t find fault with someone who took every reasonable measure within their power to try and maintain some degree of ethics. Bitching about Ben and Jerrys corporate management sounds a lot like letting perfect be the enemy of good. Just my take on it tho.

    • mad_djinn@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      you wrote that like you know about -the meteor- which is strange because I didn’t think anyone else knew about it.

  • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Dabbling in stocks and as I grow older and working longer under a corporation, I realised it’s hard to be ethical in a capitalist system.

  • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    Hopefully, they will build a successor to the brand. (Un?)fortunately, B&J’s Cream probably isn’t in the cards.

    Setting aside the puerile humor, Greenfield & Cohen’s, perhaps?

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    He should haven’t sold the company. Even if that was guaranteed as part of the sale, he is looking at a decade of legal battles.