[ CYPHER CODE #422 ]
When corporations target the poor, ā€œdinnerā€ becomes whatever crap they can get away with.

[ CYPHER CODE #423 ]
Campbell’s doesn’t season their soup. They engineer it.

[ CYPHER CODE #424 ]
If an executive won’t eat the product, that tells you everything.

[ CYPHER CODE #425 ]
Highly processed food isn’t an accident. It’s a business model built on desperation.

BRIEFING

Jett here. The story breaking out of Michigan tells you everything you need to know about how companies like Campbell's Soup Company really see the people buying their products. A former employee filed a lawsuit after secretly recording a senior executive bragging about how Campbell’s sells shitty ā€œfood for poor peopleā€ and uses bioengineered ingredients he claims he would never eat himself or feed to his family.

That one moment cracked the Big Food shell wide open. It showed a business model built on processed, addictive, low-cost ingredients and a customer base they assume will settle for whatever lands on the shelf. You think Big Pharma is poisoning you? They ain't got nothing on Big Food. This industry has never been about nourishment. It's always been about volume, margins, and turning struggling families into a captive market with slick, cozy, and comforting marketing and a can full of sludge, dressed up as high-quality all-American memories.

The formula is simple. Load the cans with modified starches, synthetic flavors, sugar, salt, and lab-created ā€œmeatā€ substitutes. Dress it up in warm and fuzzy branding and Americana nostalgia. Then hope nobody reads the label long enough to notice ā€œbioengineeredā€ and ā€œgenetically modifiedā€ printed right there in plain sight.

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The VP's comments weren’t shocking because they were extreme. They were shocking because they were honest.

And that honesty leads directly to the bombshell circulating on X…

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The Campbell Soup’s Vice President wasn’t just caught saying Campbell's soups are for poor people and use bioengineered meat He literally said on a secret recording the company is using ā€œ3D printed meatā€ This is a federal crime. It is illegal under US federal law to sell, distribute, or label lab-grown meat in a way that misleads consumers about its origin or nature. Disclosure is mandatory to prevent consumer confusion. 3D-printed meat is lab grown cultured meat Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA) and Poultry Products Inspection Act (PPIA): Overseen by the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). All labels for cell-cultured meat must be preapproved by FSIS before sale. Products can’t use terms like ā€œmeatā€ or ā€œchickenā€ without a clear qualifying descriptor, such as ā€œcell-cultured chickenā€ or ā€œlab-grown beef.ā€ Simply calling it ā€œchicken soupā€ without clarification could be deceptive.

According to the filing, the same executive who mocked his own customers as ā€œpoor peopleā€ also bragged about the company pumping out highly processed, bioengineered products he openly refuses to eat. The suit outlines what he said, how he said it, and how the company handled it when the comments were reported internally.

It gets worse. The complaint also describes remarks about workers, pressure not to report the incident, and a termination that followed. And now Florida’s Attorney General is stepping in, because if a major food company is using or mislabeling lab-grown or 3D-printed meat, that puts them under federal scrutiny fast.

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A lawsuit has claimed that a Campbell’s Soup executive called its product food for ā€œpoor people,ā€ dismissing it as ā€œbioengineered meatā€ that nobody would be caught dead eating. Filed in Michigan last week by Robert Garza, a former cybersecurity analyst for the company, the lawsuit claims that ā€œCampbell’s executive Martin Bally made the offensive remarks during a meeting in November 2024, which was intended to discuss his salary,ā€ per CBS News: According to the lawsuit, Bally made several comments about Indian workers and said that Campbell’s is ā€œhighly [processed] foodā€ for ā€œpoor people.ā€ Garza said he informed his manager, J.D. Aupperle, about the comments on Jan. 10 and claims Aupperle did not encourage him to report the incident to human resources. Bally also reportedly said, ā€œWe have s**t for f***king poor people. Who buys our s**t? I don’t buy Campbell’s products barely anymore. It’s not healthy now that I know what the f**ā€˜s in it.ā€ Garza claimed that his employment with the company was terminated and that a recording exists of the conversation between him and Bally. James Regan, a Campbell’s spokesperson, said the company had no awareness of the recording that aired on Detroit television station WDIV. The company said that Bally, vice president and chief information security officer, will be on leave during the investigation. James Ulthmeier, Attorney General of Florida, said on X that the state’s Consumer Protection Division will be investigating the quality of Campbell’s products. ā€œFlorida law bans lab-grown meat. Our Consumer Protection division is launching an investigation and will demand answers from Campbell’s,ā€ he wrote.

DEBRIEFING

What this Campbell’s story really exposes is the bigger machine behind it. Big Food has built an empire on the backs of people trying to feed their families on a budget. The cheaper the ingredients, the higher the profit. The more addictive the salt, sugar, and artificial flavors, the more customers come back. That's their business model.

Most people buying these cans are not looking for ā€œbioengineered meatā€ or ā€œ3D printed protein.ā€ They are looking for something warm, quick, and safe to put on the table after a long day. And instead of giving them that with any sense of human decency, Big Food floods the shelves with sludge that barely qualifies as food. They cut corners on quality, hide behind vague labels, and count on the fact that the people they target are too busy, too stressed, or too stretched thin to fight back. And hey, it tastes good, so how bad could it really be?

Oh, it's bad...

And this isn't just Campbell’s. Walk through any American grocery store and look at the ingredient lists. It is the same story in different, colorful packaging. Europe would never tolerate this because food there is treated like culture and health. Here, it is treated like a profit opportunity. And companies get away with it because Americans have been conditioned to expect less and accept less.

That is the real scandal. These corporations are not just selling cheap crap. They are selling slow poison marketed as comfort. And until people demand better, they will keep doing it, because the system rewards them for cutting quality and punishing the poor.

NOW YOU KNOW

What's really in the can...