[ CYPHER CODE #1330 ]
The tradition didn’t disappear. The name did.
[ CYPHER CODE #1331 ]
You can remove the label and still sell the meaning.
[ CYPHER CODE #1332 ]
When identity gets uncomfortable, it gets rebranded.
BRIEFING
Grant here. Easter used to be one of those things brands didn’t have to explain or justify. It's a classic Christian holiday that was understood, named, and marketed as exactly what it was. But now, in this day in age, where Christianity has become taboo, so have the famous brands like Cadbury, and as a result, they're abandoning their Christian roots. Let’s break it down.
Cadbury is basically known in a majority of Western society as the classic chocolate Easter egg. You really can't say "Cadbury" without immediately thinking about Christianity's most important holiday. But now Cadbury is going through what seems to be a bit of an identity crisis, and now you walk into a store and see their displays, something fundamental has shifted.
As shown in this X post, the word “Easter” has now quietly become “This Season.” The chocolate eggs are still there. That hasn't changed. But they're clearly watering down the Christianity factor big time.
SOURCE
Cadbury has changed Easter to “This Season.”
But they’re still profiting from selling Easter Eggs.
Christianity is not shameful. It is not offensive.
Not another dime should be spent on Cadbury products by any Christian. Anywhere.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH! pic.twitter.com/wM7TD5aomX
— Kentucky Girl (@Notwokenow) March 23, 2026
Now, Cadbury hasn't completely abandoned Easter. If you go on their website, the Easter messaging is still there, but there's no denying that it's been intentionally toned down.
What's interesting though, as Cadbury is minimizing their Easter marketing, they do offer a specialty gift box made for Eid, a Muslim holiday.

DEBRIEFING
What we're seeing here is how a classic English and Christian company has shifted into the world of so-called "inclusion."
Cadbury is no longer operated as a small British company. It's now owned by global food giant Mondelez International, which was spun off from Kraft Foods.
So with all of that in mind, the shift from openly being an Easter-specific brand to a more inclusive one feels pretty expected. They're following a familiar formula we've all seen time and time again.
The brand's goal now is to reach as many people as possible, in as many places as possible, without creating friction. Because the more specific the language, the more it has a chance of "offending" or "excluding" people.
So “Easter” becomes “This Season.”
It's a move that many will call "reframing," but it's more like a silent removal.
NOW YOU KNOW
They didn’t remove Easter. They just stopped celebrating it.
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No more Cadbury for us.
Goodbye, woke turds!
Actions have consequences. Go woke, go broke. I intend to help.
Hershey’s isn’t afraid to say Happy Easter on their packaging