Please. This thread is so silly. If you want to "support Kodak", buy its products. Plain and simple. There is nothing else to "do". The magic of the market will "do" it all for us.
Kodak owes nothing to anyone but its shareholders. It owes to them the maximum return on their invested capital. It achieves this by manufacturing products customers want to buy, as best it can discern this market, in a way that comports with the laws and customs where it operates. If it fails to do so, it will fail, and its employees will be un-employees and its customers deprived of its one-of-a-kind products.
If Kodak treats its employees badly, which mistreatment they are presumably in the position, as adults, to judge for themselves, they will seek other employ, Kodak will be unable to hire suitable employees, its business mission will suffer, and it will fail. Kodak, and other (present, or formerly) large companies, are profit-seeking entities, not perpetual job banks. (q.v. General Motors for further information.)
Kodak owes to "society" obedience to the laws of the locations in which it does business. The taxes "it" pays as a corporation--a convenient fig leaf, since they are actually paid by Kodak's customers--I imagine support a lot of government in those places. More, larger, and more "active" government is a real good thing, isn't it? It can't care for all of us in its warm snuggly embrace without someone generating profits it can confiscate for "better" use, so place your order for HIE or TMax 400 or Xtol, and smartly.
So if you like the company's products, and wish to have more of the same, buy them. If not, or if you are worried about some aspect of the company's behavior, don't buy them. If enough people share your concerns, you will all thereby collectively punish Kodak for its corporate misdeeds. You can then feel noble for having claimed the moral high ground, from which you can behold the liberated ranks of its workers freed from their involuntary servitude; and rejoice that its customers can no longer be subjected to all those useful products. That'll teach 'em.
How appropriate a thread for the 50th anniversary year of the publication of Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged." q.v.