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Ethics of Beauty: L'Oreal Funds Business Ethics Program
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Julie O'Malley10/23/08 Report as spam1
RE: Ethics of Beauty: L'Oreal Funds Business Ethics Program
This is analogous to the "enriched" flour used in white bread. It wouldn't need to be enriched if all the nutrients hadn't been stripped out to make it unnaturally soft and white.
Women wouldn't need to buy L'Oreal's beauty products if we weren't bombarded with messages (from all sides, certainly not just L'Oreal) that the perfectly natural signs of human aging are ugly and must be "hidden" with gels and lotions and bleaches and dyes and depilatories and perfumes and exfoliators and...
Business ethics, yeah. -
ivana23510/23/08 Report as spam2
RE: Ethics of Beauty: L'Oreal Funds Business Ethics Program
The idea is perfect if I am asked, since this world alarmingly lacks ethics, but theory's one thing, yet practice another one. Among other things (L'Oreal, but also many other organizations and companies included) let's see if L'Oreal would dare to make a commercial without having it "Photoshopped".
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mmoi10/29/08 Report as spam3
RE: Ethics of Beauty: L'Oreal Funds Business Ethics Program
Lettuce Look THIS Way: If a super surgeon was in the biz only for the bucks, Her expert procedures would--nonetheless--be *expert*.
Here also, relating2public via educating public is the Gem! If the primary L'Oreal goal is mere public relations, AlleluiaAmen. A little runoff 2L'Oreal won't diminish public betterments.
Ideally, initial seminar will include THIS query as case study!
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