These
women want solutions for breast cancer, not pinkwashed corporate sales events.
That’s
a question more and more women suffering from breast cancer are asking about
the so-called “pinkification” of their disease.
They’re referring to the ubiquitous breast cancer awareness campaign that uses pink ribbons and pink everything to promote mammograms for early detection of the cancer.
They’re referring to the ubiquitous breast cancer awareness campaign that uses pink ribbons and pink everything to promote mammograms for early detection of the cancer.
Sounds
innocent enough, except for a couple of ugly realities.
Pink
Problem No. 1 is that the campaign has become a cheap way for profiteering
corporations to glom onto a feel-good cause, literally wrapping themselves in
pink to sell their products under the guise that they’re altruists helping
women fight this deadly illness.
For example, during October’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Delta Air Lines dresses flight attendants in pink and sells pink lemonade on its flights. Ford sells “pink warrior” decals for its cars.
And Dick’s Sporting Goods offers pink
football cleats and other specially tinted merchandise.
Pink
Problem No. 2 is that the millions of dollars thrown into these corporate and
charitable PR campaigns are focused on detection of the disease, rather than on
the more crucial needs of developing preventative measures and cures, caring
for those who do get the cancer, and mounting an all-out research effort to
determine its environmental causes.
“What
do we have to show for the billions spent on pink ribbon products?” asks Karuna Jaggar, director of the activist group Breast
Cancer Action. “A lot of us are done with awareness,” she says. “We want
action.”
We’ve
had 25 years of pinkwashing, yet the disease is as rampant as ever. Wearing a
pink ribbon isn’t enough. To help shift the effort into causes, cures, and
caring, go to www.BreastCancerDeadline2020.org.
OtherWords
columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker.
He’s also the editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown,
and a member of the Public Citizen board. OtherWords.org.