Dr. Oetker opened a facility to make pizzas around here about a decade ago. So I figured I should try them out, to support a company who was bringing jobs to the area. But I ended up not liking them nearly as much as Delissio, so never continued buying from them. May have to give them another try now that options have dwindled.
Good point, I hadn't thought that one far enough through. I'd say it's because Canada and the USA often get lumped together as one market in a lot of sectors, but then as you say it begs the question of labelling products for Mexico. The EU seems pretty universal, but heaven only knows what regulations the UK might come up with as they try to decide what Brexit means. And I've zero clue what happens in the APEC, ASEAN, RCEP countries, and so on.But they're a global brand. Every market would have their own idiosyncrasies they have to deal with if they want to compete on a global scale. It's just how the world works. It doesn't really make much sense to pull out as they are, especially seeing as kleenex is so well-known and synonymous with tissue paper.
So this week, the Saskatchewan government showed that they're perfectly fine with trampling on the rights of children. And the constitution allows them to do it.
Shameful.
Saskatchewan passes school pronoun bill using notwithstanding clause
Murray Mandryk: Sask. Party MLAs tuned out serious pronoun bill peril
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