Hershey's was concerned that if Briton-made Cadbury chocolate, made with a different recipe, were imported into the U.S., Americans would be confused and mislead by two different chocolate experiences. As the U.S. trademark licensee of Cadbury, Hershey's believes that two different tasting chocolate would negatively affect its licensed intellectual property.
However, as a lover of chocolate, might there not be a middle ground betwixt unrestricted Briton-made Cadbury flooding into the U.S. and a complete abolition of the milky-sweet delight? Can't we have our cake and eat it too? Options include special labeling of U.S. imported Briton-made Cadbury chocolate so that unsuspecting U.S. consumers who like their current U.S. (Hershey's made) Cadbury chocolate will not be confused with Briton-made Cadbury chocolate.
© Stephen J. Weyer 2015
Hershey's arguments are nonsense. Confusion? No, they are worried their inferior products will be upstaged by a quality import.
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