I read about the mighty ABs ditching Coke for Pepsi as sponsors. These sort of drinks (and the highly processed fast food diet that goes with them) are steadily killing off the Pacific peoples. 40% of people in Tonga have diabetes, huge percentages are obese. Several Pacific island nations top the "most obese in the world" list. You can argue that there's always a choice of what you eat, and I would agree if you have enough money to buy better food. But the processed stuff is cheaper and the majority of pacific people are not wealthy by any definition. This plus intergenerational "programming" from times when food was not plentiful (big is good) has combined to mask the problem until it has got out of hand.
With this generation seemingly all but screwed, its going to be up to the kids to change their outlook and eat and drink something better (always assuming they can afford it of course), unless the government bans the stuff and we all know that wont happen. Who do those kids most likely look up to and whose examples will they follow? Their governments or the ABs?
Given that (as much as us NZers like to claim them for our own) the ABs would not be the team they are without the Pacific Island members, wouldn't it set a great example to kids everywhere if the ABs said no to both Coke and Pepsi? Wouldn't it be great if they used their massive media clout to actually make a positive difference? And possibly help their future talent pool in the process? They are a great rugby team, no doubt, but in NZ they are held up to be more than that, they are a proxy for the national psyche. When they win, all is rosy but if they lose the whole country goes into mourning. So do they actually stand for something or are they just another brand like Coke and Pepsi.
The time when I admired NZ the most was when David Lange told the US where they could put their nuclear ships. Here's an opportunity to do something similar - I am hopelessly naïve and idealistic to think that it could happen, but hey, you never know do you?
The irony for me is that the island I'm on is about to run out of water, and what water there is cannot be drunk without further purification. Bottled water costs more than gas, as it does in NZ. In NZ its a choice, here its a necessity. Fizzy drinks are cheap. Somehow I doubt anything much will change.



As I said, too much time on my hands, better go and find something to do.............
Cheers