"... where he was administered electric shock therapy, according to his family. After making an audacious escape, he hitchhiked to California, where he began his lifelong, peripatetic crusade to heal mankind. Bronner would hand out bottles of his product after delivering his idiosyncratic public lectures about humanity’s need to save 'Spaceship Earth,' but he soon realized most people were more interested in his free soap than his spiritual ideology. His remedy? He began printing those philosophic ramblings on the labels, which also explained the 18-in-1 uses for his concentrated liquid Castile soap. (Teeth cleaning! Dishwashing! Dog shampoo!) Though a suggested birth-control use has since been discarded, the Bronners have left much of the label’s 3,000-word verbiage untouched, a decision that reflects the family’s deep reverence for a man whose zany presence is inescapable more than two decades after his death at age 89. The patriarch’s writings and his image are scattered throughout the company’s headquarters in Vista, Calif., about 40 miles north of San Diego. A frighteningly large blowup of his grinning face greets visitors in the lobby. Nearby a papier-mâché figure wearing a leopard-print Speedo is a goofy homage to his predilection for conducting business in skimpy swimming trunks. (Fun fact: For decades, the phone number printed on soap bottles rang through to a collection of red rotary phones that Emil Bronner answered at all hours from his living room recliner.)"
Emil Bronner "didn’t do drugs, and he was distrustful of Western medicine, refusing to see a doctor even as he began losing his eyesight in his 60s." But the grandsons are donating millions of the company's money to the drug cause. David Bronner, a grandson executive, extols his own experience with LSD and Ecstasy: "I died five times but it got me out of my dark hole and set me on my path." The founder Emil." And he contends that Emil would approve of their promotion of drugs: "Our grandpa was all about shifting consciousness and opening hearts and minds... He probably would have put LSD in his soaps."
As an ex-law professor, I know all about the manipulation of the intent of the founders.
२८ टिप्पण्या:
The intent of the founders is better seen as the intuitions about systems of the founders. If you inherit the intuition (Richard Epstein, e.g.), or stick closely to the text in lieu of that (originalist), you can be a judge.
Or you can go with feelings (just about every judge these days) and to hell with systems.
Soap is made up of vegetable oil, 100% pure lye, distilled water an various fragrance oils and colorants that you may not be able to pronounce.
From there, any wild claim printed on the label likely is just that, a wild claim. In this case, profit takes precedence over honesty. So the founders original intent isn't worth much from a mind splintered by the Nazis and electric shock.
From the few real facts available about Emil Bronner, it is impossible to get to the more complex and noble endeavor of interpreting the intent of our nation's founders as it relates to the Constitution.
Interesting that Dr Bronner lost his eyesight. I once had a mishap while trying to pump Dr Bronners into my hands, and it shot like a laser into my eye and it burned and felt bruised and was swollen for two days.
Maybe Biden should start wearing a Speedo around the Oval.
so...
Crazy guy makes a soap (that i've NEVER heard of)...
Crazy guy's kids do massive amounts of psychoactive drugs, to make THEM crazy...
Crazy guy's crazy kids think that EVERYONE should be forced to do drugs and become crazy
Crazy man! just Crazy!
"As an ex-law professor, I know all about the manipulation of the intent of the founders."
Well put.
I've never taken a moment to read the label on the iconic bottle of Dr. Bronner's Castile soap, though we've had those bottles in our house for years.
I guess we'll always have a backup for toothpaste. ??
As an ex-law professor, I know all about the manipulation of the intent of the founders.
Heh. Well played...
In our business a recurring theme is the loss of the family business and associated wealth in three generations. It is persistent and the causes are complex...
...but it appears families are becoming more efficient and accomplishing it in less than three...
It's good soap though. I've been using it for 30 years. It is scented but not perfumed (they even have an unscented one). I use the bars not the liquid, which are great as long as you soap dish doesn't fill with water. The bar will soak up water like crazy. The liquid is good too, but you probably want to dilute it 1/3 soap to 2/3 water for everyday use.
If he was under psychiatric care in the 1940’s, they probably did give him psychedelics.
oh I see! this Dr Broomer's Soap is BABY BOOMER soap! this explains why
a) I've NEVER heard of it
b) y'all think it's SUPER IMPORTANT
All One!
Been using Dr Boners Jeebus soap since forever. All the older Boomer hippies in So Cal were using it back in the 70's. It's strong stuff and will burn the shit out of your eyes. Also, I wash with it and completely rinse before shaving. If you shave in the shower and then lather up with Jeebus soap, it will burn your face more than Skin Bracer ever could
Freaked out his family to the point of having him committed, bizarre rambling, eccentric behavior, paranoia about institutions -- the guy wasn't just "zany", he was some form of high-functioning schizophrenic. What a country we live in where even the mentally ill can get ahead in business.
The photo on his Wikipedia page is worth seeing.
I always loved the bottles but never thought to look into why they were made that way. Knowing that it's the ravings of a lunatic makes it even better.
Never heard of it before and can't read the Times article. From your post, Ann, I get the impression that it is both a floor wax AND a dessert topping!
Gadfly, not always a vegetable oil. Unless palm trees are a vegetable. Some soap and detergent is made from palm oil. Other oils are also used.
I once spent a week in a plant in Ecuador that made both soap and cooking oil from palm nuts. The process was similar enough that changing the processing plant output between them took an hour or so of opening and closing valves, changing temperature settings and so on.
John LGBTQBNY Henry
As an ex-law professor, I know all about the manipulation of the intent of the founders.
You certainly appear to approve of it.
My girlfriend in the 70s, having studied a soap bottle in the company of her friends one night, called the number on the bottle. Dr. Bronner, in fact, did pick up.
Despite his welcoming phone presence, she was shocked and at a loss for words. He encouraged her to call another time.
Have used it for decades, though the bar-soap version is much more convenient than the bottles of concentrate. When my older son was a teenager, he was so amused by the label that he started using it, and I believe he still does.
In a lot of ways, hippie capitalism has all the best aspects of American Exceptionalism. Benn using this stuff since the 70's.
I think Canada has decriminalized almost all narcotics: Heroin, Meth, Cocaine, LSD, Opium, MJ, etc.
Letting the weakest members of society kill themselves with dangerous drugs. And painting themselves as noble for promoting it.
The packaging design on Dr Bronner products is so severe, I feel like I’m being lectured at when I read the ingredients.
I discovered the soap when I got a free sample at a health fair in NYC, circa 1970. I loved it and would use it faithfully until the Great Disruption of my life circa 1983. Since then my life has more or less gotten back on track, but I don't see Bronner's on the shelves as often as I used to. It's been a case of Out of Sight, Out of Mind. Glad to learn that it's still around. So much of my life from the 1970s and early 1980s isn't.
Howard also knows about the eye burning properties!
Bronner was born in Heilbronn, Germany, to the Heilbronner family of soap makers.[4] He immigrated to the United States in 1929, dropping "Heil" from his name because of its associations with Nazism.[5] He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1936.[5] As the family was Jewish, he pleaded with his parents to emigrate with him for fear of the then-ascendant Nazi Party, but they refused. His last contact with his parents was in the form of a censored postcard saying, "You were right. —Your loving father."[6] His parents were murdered in the Holocaust.
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very sensible young man.
From the Seventies on, never went backpacking without it.
What you two guys said about LSD shows that you don't have the slightest knowledge of the subject.
Anyway, Bronner was a quite a character; made a lot of money, too.
Bilwick- blessings to you.
Glad you’re here…
Thank you, farmgirl.
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