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Black Workers Claim Racists Run Georgia General Mills Plant

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Jun 11, 2024
  • 1 min read

General Mills, the manufacturer of Cheerios and other well-known cereals, is being sued by eight Black employees working at a Georgia plant who say it’s rampant with racism under the control of its White managers, Jordan Valinsky reported for CNN.


The employees accuse the managers at the General Mills Covington plant of favoring White employees for promotions over Black workers, issuing more disciplinary actions against Black employees, and a manager calling them “colored,” a racist term. I Photo: Choate Construction 



In a recently filed federal lawsuit, the employees accuse the managers at the Covington plant of favoring White employees for promotions over Black workers, issuing more disciplinary actions against Black employees, and a manager calling them “colored,” a racist term.


The lawsuit points to two White managers who “formed an organization of White employees in management and human resources called the ‘Good Ole Boys’” favoring White workers over their Black counterparts and going back as far as the 1980s.



“The ‘Good Ole Boys’ believe that history and symbols that have been co-opted or misappropriated by the Ku Klux Klan and other White supremacist hate groups are useful to keep Black people ‘in their place’ and discourage Black people from speaking or taking action against the disparate treatment of Black employees at the Covington facility,” according to the lawsuit.



In one example, a mural was displayed in the factory from 2005 to 2021 as a memorial for Confederate leaders using General Mills mascots, like the Cocoa Puffs cuckoo bird portraying the president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, and the Honey Nut Cheerios bee depicting General Stonewall Jackson, the lawsuit said.




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