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Just Don't Do It: NIKE Digs Coal, Disrespects Coal Miners
Scandal of the Week: NIKE Runs Mountaintop Removal Football Ad
"If we are to remain leaders in the green economy, then we have to be relentless in our pursuit of clean energy. We have to constantly evaluate all aspects of our energy footprint. Find opportunities to collaborate and partner with other companies and organizations. And as one of Nike's long-held business maxims so aptly declares, never stop evolving, especially when it involves doing the right thing."--Sarah Severn, director of stakeholder mobilization for Nike Inc., August 17, 2010.

So much for evolution, NIKE.
Still embroiled in infamous sweatshop practices, NIKE is now running an ad with a background of a massive strip-mine or mountaintop removal operation in one of the most bizarre panders to Big Coal--and one of the most disrespectful slights of coal miners.
As part of their Pro Combat football uniforms, Nike's campaign is being run under the guise as a "tribute to the hardworking people of the Mountain State, as well as the fallen miners in the Upper Big Branch disaster in April."
Instead of featuring underground miners, such as those who died at the Upper Big Branch disaster, Nike features an open strip mine with a dramatic voice over: "It's just the way things are done in West Virginia."
It gets even worse.
In an act of total disrespect, Nike claims the West Virginia University football players put their lives on the line every day, just like coal miners.
What? Over 104,000 coal miners have died in disasters and accidents in our mines; over 10,000 coal miners still die each decade from black lung.
How many football players die?
And just how are coal miners benefitting from Nike's ad? The sports company made over $19 billion in revenue last year--how much is Nike donating to the Upper Big Branch family fund, or to the United Mine Workers or to black lung programs?
According to a recent report, West Virginia loses more than $97.5 million in expenses to support the coal industry.
Before buying into this sickening pander to Big Coal, WVU should read the studies of its own professors. Last year, a WVU study found that "coal mining costs Appalachians five times more in early deaths as the industry provides to the region in jobs, taxes and other economic benefits."
Instead of honoring fallen coal miners, WVU is already accepting blood money from Big Coal barons Murray and Massey--the companies responsible for the Crandall Canyon disaster and the Upper Big Branch disaster.
Meanwhile, Nike's blatant advertisement for devastating strip-mining and mountaintop removal operations, which have destroyed over 500 mountains---what are the WVU "Mountaineers" going to be called if they lose their mountains?--poisoned 2,000 miles of streams, left communities in ruin and poverty, and led to the largest forced removal of American citizens in a century, is one of the most offensive images in years.
Nike needs to pull the ads. More importantly, the company owes the mountaineers and coal miners more respect---if not a contribution, as their company representative claimed last week, toward a clean energy future.


15 Comments so far
Show AllAmazing and disgusting.
Environmental destruction as "cool". What a marketing concept!
Capitalism twists all values
I disagree on singling out Nike. What about the cosmetics and hosiery manufacturers? It takes more fossil fuels to make those non-renewable plastics.
The point of this article wasn't the Nike products, it was their Ad campaign hopping on "coal is cool" bandwagon of the West-Virginians and their beloved WVU football fanatacism.
Paradoxically, the whole raging popular defensiveness regarding the coal industry, and hatred of the EPA, MSHA, and UMWA among ordinary poor West Virginians seem to have arisen, paradoxically, _becasue_ of the 29 dead at Upper Big Branch. They are regarded as "fallen heroes" in the manner of US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Pretty twisted.
the only explanation I can think of is that West Virginians have been indocttrinated into a serf-like cult of sacrifice for moneyed powerful - be it in the mines or the roadsides and villages of a far-off land.
Read the "Confessions of an Economic Hitman" for a truly horrifying account of Nike's operations in Indonesia.
Nike is one of the worst transnational corporations - especially is regard to their treatment of the environment and foreign workers.
The big problem is that Amerika has bought into Nike and the misogenists like Tiger Woods. Just Do It - FU Nike
I read that book a long time ago and suspected most companies to be like Nike. Most commercials don't impress me much anyway.
Are you sure Tiger Woods is a misogynist btw ?
Sabocat, it wouldn't surprise me about WV residents but some of them have tried to stop these things.
I work for MSHA in Pittsburgh (itself in the coal fields) and visit the WV coal region frequently.
Certainly there are some anti-coal people in the WV coal region - in some "liberal" enclaves in Charleston and maybe even around the mostly abandoned downtowns of Beckley and Bluefield. But not many. Most of them don't blame Massey in the least for the 29 dead. They regard them as "heroes", Massey is blameless and represents the things that "make America great". If there is anyone to blame, it is "Big Government".
We get the same insanity out here in CO. Good luck working the coal fields. I hope you make it through the dirt and live to tell us about it.
Whatever the issue, try to make it about women and "their abuses."
You are one sick cookie. I hope you're impotent.
> You are one sick cookie. I hope you're impotent.
Beware of your karma that awaits you. Your ad hominem attacks are getting stale.
"the FALLEN miners." There's that word FALLEN again. The DEAD miners, murdered by homicidally negligent capitalists. Not "fallen."
I agree, lord_buckley -- I have been paying attention to this euphemism, too -- Fallen, versus DEAD.
Reducing the heinous evil and atrocities perpetrated by government and corporations to ultra-hip props for advertising campaigns seems to be a trend.
This travesty is very much like the Verizon horrorshow discussed here last week. See:
Evil or Just Very Stupid? by Abby Zimet*
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Is Verizon deliberately, incomprehensibly echoing Abu Ghraib, or are they really that clueless? Horrific.
* http://www.commondreams.org/further/2010/08/26-2
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The busy little Eichmanns who produce and promote this dreck are undoubtedly proud of their service to the infotainment division of ruthless and barbaric capitalism-- I'll bet that for a while they were really worried that they wouldn't be able to come up with anything with the pizazz and class of "herion chic".
Hey! Just do it! Boycott Nike! From Oreegone. Born there. Don't live there no more. Not bought a single Nike sweatshop product in over 20 years. Feels real, real good. Just do it! You'll feel right as rain.
The leatest news about this from Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward's "coal tatoo" blog, is that under pressure, Nike has changed the graphic. The strip mine in the background has been replaced with coal-toned stadium stands. See it here:
http://blogs.wvgazette.com/coaltattoo/