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Ben & Jerry's founders want their ice cream — and their voice — back

Ben & Jerry's founders want their ice cream — and their voice — back

Yahoo04-03-2025

Ben & Jerry's co-founders are reportedly exploring the possibility of buying back their brand, citing concerns that its corporate owner, Unilever, has stifled the company's social activism.
According to Inc.'s Bruce Crumley, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield are 'reportedly looking to reacquire the beloved ice cream brand, claiming its corporate owner has muzzled the company's social activism.' Per a report in Bloomberg, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield are "exploring possibilities to repurchase the company they sold in 2000 to Unilever for $326 million.'
In January, Ben & Jerry's filed a lawsuit against Unilever, arguing that the parent company had violated a settlement agreement by 'inappropriately halting Ben & Jerry's social mission,' according to court documents.
'Specifically, during the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza, which has claimed the lives of over 18,000 innocent Palestinian children, Ben & Jerry's has on four occasions attempted to publicly speak out in support of peace and human rights,' the lawsuit states. Unilever has silenced each of these efforts.'
The suit also details additional instances of alleged censorship, including efforts to 'resist the Trump administration' that were reportedly blocked following his November 2024 election victory.
Despite the co-founders' reported interest in reacquiring the brand, Unilever appears unwilling to sell. In a statement to Bloomberg, the company said, 'Ben & Jerry's is an important part of the ice cream business, and it's not for sale.'

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Dangote's $20B refinery sources U.S. crude, raising questions on Nigeria's output

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Harvard withheld their degrees for participating in a pro-Palestinian protest. They don't regret it.

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He had several ongoing student disciplinary cases at the time related to what he described as 'a long and storied career' in on-campus activism. 'They kept trying to evict me,' Sanders said in an interview this week, 'They would go by my dorm and be like, 'Why is all your stuff still here?'' Sanders was the final of the 13 students to receive a degree, to his knowledge. Advertisement 'They mailed it to me in February,' Sanders said. In a statement, Harvard spokesperson Jonathan Palumbo said that the university does not comment on student matters and did not further comment for this story. The impact of the withheld degrees varied by graduate. Phoebe Barr, 24, was among the protesters who were placed on an involuntary leave by the university, meaning she lost access to her dorm room and could not work at her on-campus job for the remainder of the semester. 'I was homeless and unemployed very suddenly,' Barr said. She stayed on the couch of someone who offered her a place to crash. 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