Cliff Kluge, from Coca-Cola’s home state of Georgia, is selling the document that might contain the original top-secret recipe in an old box of papers he bought at an estate sale.Kluge has listed the ‘historical document’ on eBay, with a ‘buy-it-now’ price of $15 million, and an auction price starting at $5 million.Kluge doesn’t expect the item will sell for the asking price, but does think the document is worth at least a few hundred thousand dollars, TheDailyMail reported.The sale ends at 22.11 GMT on May, 14. There are currently 0 bids.If somebody buys it, that doesn’t mean they would be able to reconstruct the unique beverage, as Kluge says on eBay that “the recipe states it, that there are some ingredients that cannot be processed but by anyone except for the company in Maywood, NJ, and they won’t sell to anyone but the Coca Cola Company. According to this 70-year-old letter, it takes a month to make the formula – it’s fairly complicated.”The document is a yellowed, hand typed and written recipe from 1943, which the seller believes is the original Coca-Cola formula.Kluge lists the following description on eBay: “Typed on January 15th, 1943, this single page (front and back) breaks down the formula into exact amounts of specific ingredients to make one gallon of concentrate, which, when combined and processed yields enough to make 16 gallons.”On the eBay site, it is advertised as a “70+ year-old recipe on yellowed paper that was purchased out of an estate of a local chemist in a city that claims the right of being where Coca-Cola Bottling originated.”It is unknown whether Kluge knew the box contained the recipe before purchasing, or if he stumbled upon it by luck. It is not clear how much he paid for the box of papers.The Daily Mail reported Coca-Cola denies the recipe is an original, but admit it may come close to the original 19th-century formula.Coca-Cola is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, where the company keeps the original recipe locked in a vault.Coca-Cola’s first quarter results exceeded forecasts, with the biggest rise since 2009, boosted by Latin American sales as well as a deal to sell bottling distribution rights in North America.First quarter net income fell 15 percent to $1.75 million, but profit was still 46 cents a share, which outperformed analysts’ estimates.Coca-Cola shares increased 17 percent in 2012, above the 10 percent S&P 500 Index gain.And for those a bit short of the $5 million needed for a copy, but who want to brew their own version of the sweet soda, one of eBay user provided his own Coca-Cola recipe: “FE Coca (Fluid Extract of Coca) 3 drams USP 4 oz FE Coco Citric Acid 3 oz 3 oz Caffeine 1 oz 1oz Citrate Caffeine Sugar 30 # 30 # Water 2.5 gal 2.5 gal Lime Juice 2 pints (1 qrt) 1 qrt Vanilla 1 oz 1 oz Caramel 1.5 oz or more to color Color sufficient Use 2 oz flavor (below) 2.5 oz flavor to 5 gals syrup 7X Flavor Alcohol 8 oz 1 qrt Or ange Oil 20 drops 80 Lemon Oil 30 120 Nutmeg Oil 10 40 Corriander Oil 5 20 Neroli Oil 10 40 Cinnamon Oil 10 40 (The Pemberton formula for 7X is the same as the Beal, just four times as much.)” … Read More
CIA requested ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ rewrites, memo reveals
Document shows agency requested removal of interrogation scene with dog, and shots of operatives partying with AK47 A newly declassified CIA document suggests members of the US agency did help to shape the narrative of Zero Dark Thirty, Kathryn Bigelow’s recent film about the hunt for Osama…
Original iPhone to become ‘obsolete’ in Apple’s eyes soon
It looks like Apple is going to start calling the original iPhone “vintage,” according to an internal document leaked by 9to5Mac. This title is more than just a name, as it has some ramifications for device owners. The phone, which first hit the market in 2007, will be confined to… … Read More
Netflix: Online streaming will replace traditional television in the future
Netflix recently outlined their vision for the future which, surprising to nobody, will see online streams completely replace traditional means of watching television. The company makes some compelling arguments in the 11-page document titled “Netflix Long Term View”, highlighting a number of factors they believe will lead to the demise… … Read More
Beijing slams US ‘woeful record of human rights’
The report’s release on Chinese state outlet Xinhua accused Washington of “double standards” and turning a “blind eye to its woeful record of human rights.” The lengthy document rounds on the US government for its failure to protect its citizens and its disregard for their safety.”The lives and personal security of the United States citizens, who were haunted by serious violent crimes, were not duly protected,” the report said. It emphasized that women’s rights in particular were being degraded, citing rising levels of domestic violence reported in 2012.”Religious discrimination is also rapidly on the rise, with an increase in insults and attacks against Muslims,” it added. In addition, gun crime was centered on in the report as one of the key failings of the Obama Administration who have still not introduced any concrete measures to mitigate violence after two high-profile attacks. The report also contained an attack on the US political system, targeting the influence of political donations in shaping policies which it claimed amounted to a degradation of democracy.“In the US, elections could not fully embody the real will of its citizens. Political contributions had, to a great extent, influenced the electoral procedures and policy direction. During the 2012 presidential election, the voter turnout was only 57.5 per cent.”Those in glass houses…Referencing US foreign policy, the report criticized Washington for styling itself as a “world judge” and encroaching of human rights abroad.“The US seriously infringed upon human rights of other nations. In 2012, US military operations in Yemen, Afghanistan and Pakistan caused massive civilian casualties,” wrote the report. It cited reports of US soldiers burning copies of the Koran in Afghanistan last year which it condemned as “serious blasphemy.”Guantanamo prison, “where the US has illegally imprisoned foreigners,” was targeted in the report as a gray area in the US’ attitude to human rights. The report came in response Washington’s annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012, in which it denounced China for the repression and coercion of advocates of human rights. Beijing dismissed the report as flawed as it was based on unconfirmed media reports and speculation. Beijing and Washington have consistently traded blows over the years over each other’s human rights records. The US put sanctions in place on China in 1989 following a deadly crackdown on demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. Washington’s human rights report is now in its 36th year and has repeatedly flagged China for its dubious rights record. … Read More
A Boston bomber’s Amazon wishlist
According to an Amazon wish-list registry registered to an email account believed to belong to Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bombing suspect was at one time very interested in making fake IDs and learning how to win friends and influence people. He was also brushing up on his Chechnyan and was hoping someone would buy him a copy of Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.(Politico’s Glenn Thrush found the email. Conservative political blogger Justin Hart found the Amazon registry.)From beginning to end, the wish-list spans a period of just 18 months. The most recent entry dates back to July 8, 2007: “Voice Power: Using Your Voice to Captivate, Persuade and Communicate.” There are also five different books relating to fake ID creation and document fraud — all dated August 27, 2006. And then there’s “How to Win Friends and Influence People.”Continue Reading… … Read More
‘No justification’ for US torturing terror suspects – ‘Truth Commission’ report
The 600-page document, the most comprehensive published study of US anti-terrorist policies of the last 12 years, concluded that there was “no justification” for torture in moral or strategic terms, as information obtained through it was frequently unreliable. It also noted that the behavior of the US authorities, which includes the continuing operation of the Guantanamo detention center, has “damaged the standing of our nation, reduced our capacity to convey moral censure when necessary and potentially increased the danger to US military personnel taken captive.” The report also calls for the closing of Camp Delta and questions officials’ assertions about the likelihood of released captives returning to fight against the United States. Although many of the indictments have been aired at various points over the last decade, they have never been delivered to the public in more detail or with greater authority (an even longer Senate Intelligence Committee report on torture based on classified data has been completed, though it may or may not be made public). The study was commission by the Constitution Project, a legal advocacy group, and jointly led by two former congressmen –Republican Asa Hutchinson, who was an Under Secretary for the department of Homeland Security during the George W. Bush administration, and James R. Jones, a Democrat and former Ambassador to Mexico. The report asserts that “President Bush’ authorization of brutal techniques by the CIA made US personnel throughout the world believe that the “gloves are off”, and that they could indulge in systemic “illegal” activities, “where rare exceptions [of torture] fast became the rule”. The document states that “sleep deprivation, stress positions, nudity, sensory deprivation and threatening detainees with dogs” were used in “many instances” and “across many theaters” – with witnesses describing similar techniques used in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo. Aside from waterboarding – which it alleges may have been used on a wider scale than the White House originally claimed – it also details regular use of humiliation techniques, such as leaving captives covered in their own feces for days on end. The Constitution Project says most of those involved made the “best efforts to protect their fellow citizens”, but “good intentions did not relieve them of their obligations to comply with existing treaties and laws. The need to respect and maintain legal and moral codes to maintain the minimum of human rights is especially great in the times of crisis”. To determine whether torture took place, the Task Force says it avoided “subjective” criteria, but used international law and previous instances where actions were defined as torture, including times when the US condemned other countries for using the same techniques it later adopted itself. Now, the authors fear the United States has lost any moral high ground, while its deeds “aid to repressive regimes elsewhere when they seek approval or justification for their own acts.” While the testimonies pertain mostly to the years immediately after the Twin Towers attacks, the Obama administration is accused of maintaining “ongoing secrecy” in its dealings with suspected terrorists, raising “troubling questions”, even if it “ended the most inhumane treatment of detainees”. The report says its lack of accountability, inconsistency and an unwillingness to place a firm legal framework in its interactions with suspects, means that the now-abandoned techniques could be brought back as a result of any serious future terrorist attack on US soil. It is even more scathing of the Obama Administration, and the Congress’ failure to shut down the Guantanamo detention camp in Cuba. The authors call for authorities to shut down Guantanamo as early as next year, arguing that those prisoners who have been cleared, must be released, while the US mainland penal system and courts can process those who are still under suspicion. Regarding force feeding at the Camp, which has been a regular tactic to counter hunger strikes “is a form of abuse and must end”, referring to previous ethical guidelines declared by the World Medical Association. At least 45 inmates are currently on a hunger strike in a protest against their conditions that’s lasted over two months. In conclusion, the reports authors, who believe they are attempting the role of a “Truth Commission” that Obama failed to establish when he was elected in 2008, say that the administration has only one way to rebuild the tarnished image of the country. “The United States has a historic and unique character, and part of that character is that we do not torture,” says the study.”Publicly acknowledging this grave error, however belatedly, may mitigate some of those consequences and help undo some of the damage to our reputation at home and abroad.” … Read More




