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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Rise Again August 10-12, 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)28. A Critical Mass for Real Food (AGRICULTURE AND SLAVERY ENTWINED IN HISTORY)
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/10779-a-critical-mass-for-real-food
...If, back in the 18th century, you could see all the way across the Atlantic, you would find an unbroken line of plantations that stretched from Buenos Aires to Baltimore. Down this entire line, slaves harvested sugar for British tea, rice for the West Indian consumption, and cotton for the textile mills of New England. These were vast monocrops that broke the body and ruined the soilbut made money for planters and big companies that traded the goods.
Here, you see the logic of the modern industrial food system in its rawest forma logic of prioritizing profit over human and environmental welfare. A lot has changed in the 400 years since the Elmina Fort was built, but this principle has not gone away. The logic of the plantation is the logic of today's industrial food system...In this system, it is in the interest of the middlemanlarge companies that dominate the processing and distribution of foodto squeeze farmers and externalize costs. The industrial model may work for some things, but it's time to admit that it doesn't work for food. It doesn't work for Lucas, a tomato-picker in Florida, who toils from dawn to dusk without protection or health care and still cannot escape poverty. It's not good for the farmers in Illinois who have nearly been bullied out of existence by Monsanto. It's not good for teenagers in Brooklyn who, when asked how many of them have diabetes or know someone with diabetes, raise every hand in the room. And it's certainly not good for the 99 percent of us who are left holding the bag of rising health care costs.
It doesn't work for anyone who wantsand needsreal food: food that nourishes the earth, communities, and individuals, both eaters and producers.
If the logic of the industrial system is based on profit, the logic of real food is founded on respect and balance. Real food isn't opposed to profit, but it is opposed to profits that aren't shared fairly with those who work the hardest to feed us. The Door of No Return represents what's we're up against: a global industrial food economy 500 years in the making that exploits both people and land...
SEE ARTICLE FOR WHAT THE AUTHOR PROPOSES AS A SOLUTION--IT'S REVOLUTIONARY!
...If, back in the 18th century, you could see all the way across the Atlantic, you would find an unbroken line of plantations that stretched from Buenos Aires to Baltimore. Down this entire line, slaves harvested sugar for British tea, rice for the West Indian consumption, and cotton for the textile mills of New England. These were vast monocrops that broke the body and ruined the soilbut made money for planters and big companies that traded the goods.
Here, you see the logic of the modern industrial food system in its rawest forma logic of prioritizing profit over human and environmental welfare. A lot has changed in the 400 years since the Elmina Fort was built, but this principle has not gone away. The logic of the plantation is the logic of today's industrial food system...In this system, it is in the interest of the middlemanlarge companies that dominate the processing and distribution of foodto squeeze farmers and externalize costs. The industrial model may work for some things, but it's time to admit that it doesn't work for food. It doesn't work for Lucas, a tomato-picker in Florida, who toils from dawn to dusk without protection or health care and still cannot escape poverty. It's not good for the farmers in Illinois who have nearly been bullied out of existence by Monsanto. It's not good for teenagers in Brooklyn who, when asked how many of them have diabetes or know someone with diabetes, raise every hand in the room. And it's certainly not good for the 99 percent of us who are left holding the bag of rising health care costs.
It doesn't work for anyone who wantsand needsreal food: food that nourishes the earth, communities, and individuals, both eaters and producers.
If the logic of the industrial system is based on profit, the logic of real food is founded on respect and balance. Real food isn't opposed to profit, but it is opposed to profits that aren't shared fairly with those who work the hardest to feed us. The Door of No Return represents what's we're up against: a global industrial food economy 500 years in the making that exploits both people and land...
SEE ARTICLE FOR WHAT THE AUTHOR PROPOSES AS A SOLUTION--IT'S REVOLUTIONARY!
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