 One company is breaking our hearts this Valentine's Day, Cargill. Time and time again, this agribusiness giant has made promises to end human rights violations on its plantations. And every time, the company has broken those promises. One promise in particular has yet to be fulfilled, the Cargill-Coco Promise. In 2001, Cargill publicly acknowledged the human rights issue of child labor in its cocoa and then committed to eliminating it. 23 years later, things are worse, not better. Terry Colling's work of International Rights Advocates visited several Cargill-Coco Plantations just last year and this is what he found. This is the reality. Every farm that we have visited had young children like this one here who's only 10 years old using a machete to open up cocoa pods and performing other hazardous work instead of being in school. That's the Cargill-Coco Promise. We will lie to you until we get caught. Cargill is one of the world's largest producers of cocoa. Last year, the company made a profit of four billion dollars. Surely, Cargill could afford to pay families a fair wage to keep kids in school instead of working in dangerous conditions on a cocoa plantation. This Valentine's Day, join us in telling the Cargill-McBrillan family, stop indulging in child labor, stop breaking promises and breaking hearts. Change your company's burning legacy.