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Michael Pollan: "Don't Buy Any Food You've Ever Seen Advertised"

"The real food is not being advertised. And that's really all you need to know."
May 15, 2009  |  
 
 
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Amy Goodman: Energy, healthcare, agriculture, climate change, global outbreaks like swine flu—what do all these topics have in common? Food. That’s right, none of these issues can really be tackled without addressing some of the fundamental problems of the food system and the American diet.

Well, my next guest is one of the leading writers and thinkers in this country on food. Michael Pollan is a professor of science and environmental journalism at University of California, Berkeley, author of several books about food, including The Botany of Desire, The Omnivore’s Dilemma and his latest, In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto, which just came out in paperback. ... Let’s start with the latest news over the last month, swine flu. How is that connected to industrialized agriculture?

Michael Pollan: Well, we don’t know for sure yet. We’re still kind of investigating. But the best knowledge we have is that this outbreak came from a very large industrial pork operation, pork confinement operation, where, you know, tens of thousands of pigs live in filth and close contact. And this was in Mexico.

And, you know, it’s very interesting. Last year, eighteen months ago, the Pew Commission on animal agriculture released a report calling attention to the public health risks of the way we’re raising pork and other meat in this country. And they actually predicted in that report—they said the way you’re raising pigs in America today creates a perfect environment for the generation of new flu pandemics, basically because once you get that mutation, which sooner or later is about to happen, it very quickly—you have ... so much genetic material coming together, so concentrated, and then so many pigs can catch it, and ... we’ve created these Petri dishes for new diseases. And here we go.

Goodman: And what has been the industry response?

Pollan: Oh, the industry response and the media response, by and large, is not to pay attention to that part of the story. We haven’t gotten a lot of investigation of, well, exactly how do these things evolve and how did these conditions contribute to it.

The other angle, too, is that, you know, as we bring any pressure to bear on American animal agriculture, the tendency is going to be for it to move to Mexico. And indeed, that appears to be the case here, that these are American corporations who have to escape any kind of environmental regulation, have moved their confinement, animal operations, south of the border.

 Goodman: Explain how these animal operations work.

 Pollan: Well, a pig confinement operation is a pretty hellish place. They are, you know, tens of thousands of animals, kept jammed together. The animals are so close together that they have to snip their tails off, because the animals are so neurotic—I mean, pigs are very intelligent; they’re smarter than dogs—that they will nip at each other’s tails. They’ve been weaned so early that they have this sucking desire, and so they take it out on the tails of the animal right in front of them. So they snip the tails off, not to stop the procedure, but to make it so painful that animals will avoid having their tails bitten, just to make them raw and painful.

 They administer antibiotics to these animals on a regular basis, because they could not survive without them. And the waste goes down directly below the animals into this giant cesspool that’s flushed, two or three times a day, out. I mean, ... they’re incubators for disease.

 The sows remain in crates their whole lives, so they can be conveniently inseminated, and they have their babies right there in their crates. You know, to go to one of these places is to stop eating industrial pork, basically. If we could see into this industrial meat production, it would change the way most of us eat.

Goodman: It’s amazing, because the whole coverage, it seems, of swine flu is to be afraid of human beings coming over the border, that they are the main problem.

 Pollan: Yeah, that they’re carrying it, yeah, yeah. No, it’s not—we don’t—it is not contracted by eating the pork. That doesn’t, you know, seem to be a problem. And some countries have taken that tact, used this to keep out American pork. But that link hasn’t been made.

 Goodman: Can you talk about corporations in other ways, like Monsanto, talking about the sustainability of genetically modified foods?

 Pollan: Yeah, Monsanto is very much on the attack right now, pushing its products, particularly in Africa, and making the case that the most sustainable agriculture will be intensive production on the land base we have. The argument is that there’s only so much arable land in the world, we have ten billion people on the way, and that the only way to feed them is to get more productivity over the land we have, to further intensify agriculture, using their genetically modified seeds.

 And the word “sustainable” is never far from their lips. And they have this amazing ad campaign. Two things are notable about it. One is that the language of sustainability and the critique of industrial food is being picked up by some of the major players within industrial food, either as an effort to co-opt the rhetoric or simply confuse the consumer and the citizen.

 The other thing is that it’s very interesting that Monsanto should be arguing that it has the key to improving productivity. If indeed what we need to do is improve productivity, don’t look at genetically modified crops. They have never succeeded in raising productivity. That’s not what they do. If you look at the—the Union of Concerned Scientists just issued a report looking at the twenty-year history of these crops, and what they have found is that basically the real gains in yield for American crops, for world crops, has been through conventional breeding. Genetic modification has—with one tiny exception, Bt corn used in years of very high infestation of European corn borers—has not increased productivity at all. That’s not what they’re good at. What they’re good at is creating products that allow farmers to expand their monocultures, because it takes less management. So, if indeed we need to go where Monsanto says, there are better technologies than theirs.

Goodman: What about companies boasting that they use real sugar, like that’s a health claim.

 Pollan: Well, you know, it’s very interesting. Since this book came out, where I argue don’t buy high-fructose corn syrup and don’t buy products with more than five ingredients, suddenly the industry is—you know, they’re so clever. I have to hand it to them. But now they’re arguing that their products are simpler, and there’s new Haagen-Dazs 5, which is a five-ingredient Haagen-Dazs product. You know, it’s still ice cream. Ice cream is wonderful, but we shouldn’t treat it as health food because it now has only five ingredients. ... Frito-Lay potato chips now is arguing that they’re local. Now, you have to remember, any product is local somewhere. Right? This food doesn’t come from Mars. But to think that Frito-Lay as a local potato chip is really a stretch.

 So—and on the high-fructose corn syrup thing, now that you’ve got Snapple and soon-to-be Coca-Cola making a virtue of the fact that they contain real sugar, no high-fructose corn syrup, what that is is an implicit health claim for sugar. And that is an incredible achievement on the part of industry, to convince us that getting off of high-fructose corn syrup has made their products healthier. It has done no such thing. Biologically, there’s no difference between high-fructose corn syrup and sugar.

Goodman: Well, explain why you were going after high-fructose corn syrup.

Pollan: Well, my argument about high-fructose corn syrup and why you should avoid it is it is a marker of a highly processed food. I’m just trying to help people, when they’re going through the supermarket—the main thing you want to avoid is processing, you know, extreme processing. And high-fructose corn syrup—I mean, think about it. Do you know anyone who cooks with high-fructose corn syrup? It’s not a home—it’s not an ingredient you’ll find in a home pantry. It’s a tool of food science.

 My problem with it is its ubiquity through the food system. You have high-fructose corn syrup showing up where sugar has never been—in bread, in pickles, in mayonnaise, in relish, in all these products—that they basically have found that if you sweeten anything, we will buy more of it. High-fructose corn syrup is a very convenient, cheap ingredient, because we subsidize the corn from which it’s made.

But to boast about your product not having high-fructose corn syrup as being some kind of virtue is really stretching it. And I think what we see here is another example of the food industry’s ingenuity in taking any critique of industrial food and turning it into the next marketing strategy. It’s a lot like the low-fat campaign, you know, which began as a government critique of food, you know, beginning with George McGovern in the ’70s saying we should eat less red meat because of heart disease. Whatever you think of the science of that, which turns out not to have been that good, it was a well-meaning campaign to improve the American diet. Industry came back and re-engineered the whole food system to have less fat in it and no fat in it. And that campaign sold a lot more food. And, in fact, since that campaign, we’ve been eating about 300 more calories a day, and we’re a lot fatter. So, you can’t—you just can’t underestimate their ability turn any critique into a way to sell food.

So, I’ve had to update my rules. And with all this new marketing based on these ideas, my new suggestion is, if you want to avoid all this, simply don’t buy any food you’ve ever seen advertised. Ninety-four percent of ad budgets for food go to processed food. I mean, the broccoli growers don’t have money for ad budgets. So the real food is not being advertised. And that’s really all you need to know.

Goodman: Michael Pollan, the Food and Drug Administration is slapping General Mills with a warning over its claim that Cheerios is clinically proven to help lower cholesterol. They say it makes it a drug under federal law.

Pollan: Yeah. Well, good for them. I mean, you know, the FDA has been so lax, and the reason you see this proliferation of bogus health claims all through the supermarket has basically been the FDA has been hands-off for a decade. And to see them tighten a little bit and make these companies prove these health claims—

You know, another piece of advice from In Defense of Food is, don’t eat any food that comes with a health claim. It sounds counterintuitive, but if you’re worried about your health, that is not the healthy food. The healthy food is in the produce section. It’s sitting there very quietly, without budgets to do this research, without budgets for marketing, without packages to print health claims on. So just kind of tune that out.

Goodman: What do you make of the new Agricultural Secretary, Tom Vilsack?

Pollan: Well, it’s interesting. When Vilsack was appointed, I was disappointed initially. And I said something like, this was agribusiness as usual. He has surprised me in various ways, and I have some reason, cautious, for hope. I think he has a mandate from President Obama to begin reforming things.

He has appointed as his number two—the woman running the Department of Agriculture, Kathleen Merrigan, is a proven reformer. She developed the organic program in the department and as a staffer to Senator Leahy back in the ’90s. And she is really committed to sustainable agriculture. This woman will be running the Department of Agriculture. I think that’s wonderful. We’ll see what she can do. She’s up against an incredible amount of opposition.

He made an initial move to go after subsidies that was not very well handled and was rebuffed very easily by the agriculture committees in the House and Senate. He, I think, will do a lot to support local agriculture. He’s very committed to farmers’ markets and developing these local food chains, and I think that’s very encouraging.

But he has a mission to make “nutrition” the watchword of the nutrition programs in the Department of Agriculture: School Lunch, Food Stamps, WIC. Now, that sounds kind of “duh,” but, in fact, those programs have nothing to do with nutrition right now. They’re essentially ways to dispose of agricultural surpluses. So if they actually raise the nutrition standards and make that the focus—

 Goodman: What do you mean, they’re the way to—

Pollan: Well, the reason we have a School Lunch Program, you know, it began as an effort really to get rid of this incredible overproduction of American agriculture. I mean, we’re using our children as a disposal for excess, you know, cheap ground beef and cheese and all these corn products, and that the—you know, under the School Lunch Program, we feed our kids chicken nuggets and tater tots in school. We’re using the School Lunch Program to teach them how to become fast-food consumers. So, it’s not about health, and it needs to be about health. So, if he can move that program in that direction, I think that will be wonderful.

Goodman: Michelle Obama’s organic garden, that the pesticide industry had in a memo that they shuddered when they heard her use the word?

Pollan: Yes. You know, I think her garden is actually a significant development. I mean, you can dismiss it as symbolic politics, but in fact symbols are important. And the word “organic” are fighting words in this—is a fighting word in this world. And she did not have to say it was an organic garden; she could have simply said it’s a garden. And that she did was noticed.

And the Crop Life Association, the trade group of the pesticide makers, wrote her a letter, being as cordial as you must be to a First Lady, saying, you know, “You’re really casting aspersions on industrial agriculture, and we really hope you will use our crop protection products.” In other words, “Buy our poisons, whether you need them or not.”

Goodman: We’re talking to Michael Pollan. His latest book, now out in paperback, In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto. Your words of wisdom? Your food for thought? Eat food, not too much, mostly plants?

Pollan: Yeah, it’s very simple. It really is. I mean, you know, as a journalist, you know this, that usually when you drill down into a subject, you find things are more complicated than you thought, and the blacks and whites don’t quite work anymore. When it came to nutrition science, the deeper I went, the simpler it got. And by the time I had spent two years studying what we know about nutrition and health, I realized that, you know, all the—that you could dismiss so much of this sketchy science, and as long as you ate real food, and not too much of it, and emphasized plants more than meat in your diet, you would be fine, and that the over-complication of food by industry, by government, is something really to be avoided.

And so, the challenge is, though, how do you identify food? Because now the market is full of these edible food-like substances, the ones that carry the health claims, the—

Goodman: What do you mean, “edible food-like substances”?

Pollan: Well, these are products of food science. These are the stuff in the middle of the supermarket, the stuff that doesn’t go bad for a year, deathless food, immortal food. You have to think, well, what does it mean to say a food has got a shelf life of six months or a year? It means it has been engineered to resist bacteria, pests of all kinds, fungi, mold. And what does that mean? Well, it has no nutritional value for those things. The insects, the bacteria, they’re not interested in the Twinkie, because there’s nothing of nutritional value in it.

Goodman: Can you talk about how the food system affects healthcare and the whole issue of healthcare reform?

Pollan: Well, I think that we are soon to recognize that we are not going to be able to reform healthcare, which depends on getting the cost of healthcare down, without addressing the American diet, the catastrophe of the American diet.

The CDC, Centers for Disease Control, estimates that of the $2 trillion we’re spending on healthcare in this country, $1.5 trillion is for the treatment of preventable chronic disease. Now, that’s not all food, because you have smoking in there, too, and alcoholism. But the bulk of it is food. Food is implicated in heart disease, which we spend, you know, billions and billions on. It’s implicated in type 2 diabetes. It’s implicated in about 40 percent of cancers. It’s implicated in stroke, all sorts of cardiovascular problems.

And, you know, in a sense, the healthcare crisis is a euphemism for the food crisis, I mean, that they are identical. And I do think that President Obama recognizes this. And I think that you will see programs to address this, because that is how you could—you know, a better School Lunch Program would be a down payment on the healthcare reform, because you would reduce long-term the costs of the system. Treating a case of type 2 diabetes costs the City of New York, every new case, $500,000. It is bankrupting the system. And it’s preventable.

Goodman: How is it treated?

Pollan: Well, type 2 diabetes is, once you contract it, it’s $13,000 a year in additional medical costs. It takes something like ten years off of your life span. It means an 80 percent chance of heart disease in your life, a possibility of amputation and blindness, you know, being tethered to machines and drugs your whole life. It’s a very serious sentence, and it’s entirely preventable with a change in lifestyle.

The interesting thing is, why don’t we have really powerful public interest ad campaigns to inform people about this? I mean, the way the government could save the most money the most easily would be having a public advertising campaign about the dangers of soda. There are a great many children that, simply by getting off soda, avert this whole course.

Goodman: What do you think of taxing soft drinks, that they’re talking about now?

 Pollan: You know, I’m not sure, frankly. I haven’t really thought that through. It’s probably not a bad idea. I think that the cheapness of high-fructose corn syrup and sugars in our economy is part of the problem and that when we started subsidizing—I guess I would attack it on the other side. We should not be making these corn-based products so cheap with our tax dollars. I think we have to change the subsidies. The reason that soda is so cheap is that we subsidize corn in huge amounts, and I think we have to change the incentives down on the farm. I think that’s really where I would put my emphasis.

Goodman: What about large corporations buying up the farmland of poorer countries?

 Pollan: Well, this is going on. There is a growing recognition that the great unrenewable resource is arable soil in this world and that countries like China realize that they will not be able to feed their population on their soil base, because of their numbers, but also because they poison so much of their soil. Their soil is polluted, and they have a serious problem with that. So they are buying up huge swaths of land in Africa.

 This is a political disaster, you know, waiting to happen. I mean, Africans  are going to stand by while their best farmland is being used to feed Chinese? I mean, I don’t see this as a sustainable solution for anybody. But this is what’s happening.

And we should take note and realize that our farmland is so precious, and we should be very careful about developing it, and we should certainly be careful about letting it run off into the Mississippi River because we’re failing to put in cover crops and things like that.

Goodman: [Y]ou wrote a long letter to President Obama, to the “Farmer-in-Chief,” as you put it. What’s the most salient point in it?

Pollan: The most salient point is simply, you are not going to be able to tackle either the healthcare crisis or climate change unless you look at our food system. In the case of climate change, food is responsible for about a third of greenhouse gases, the way we’re growing food, the way we’re processing it and the way we’re eating. And the healthcare crisis, as I’ve talked about. So we need to address it. It’s really the shadow issue over these other two issues.

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!
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Food Security
Posted by: dgiVista.org on May 15, 2009 2:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Climate change, peak oil, peak water, petrochemicals critical in our food production, rising ocean levels, energy crises, soil degredation, the now-obvious bankruptcy of global neoliberal capitalism...all these concerns are significant, but they orbit simple things:

- ensuring we can eat and drink water to survive.

- our bodies' survival is the nexus.

http://PoliticsReSpun.org

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» RE: Food Security Posted by: DaveKnutz
» RE: Food Security Posted by: ungerbn

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Compost & Compost Tea
Posted by: Carol Burns on May 15, 2009 4:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rather than using chemical fertilizers and pesticides, use composted food waste, grass clippings, etc. All it takes is a little time and effort, especially the tea, which can provide protection against fungus, nematodes, and other plant diseases. I believe that the runoff from chemical fertilizers is contributing to the dead zones in our seas and to global warming. Thank you for this illuminating discussion.

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Good old American capitalism
Posted by: NYmediator on May 15, 2009 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the land of the hustle it's profits first, pigs second and people a distant third. May Monsanto and all who work for them rot in Hell as well as the purveyors of these pig camps.

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I disagree
Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line on May 15, 2009 4:45 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With the title... I have never seen seaweed advertised yet it is the most nutrient dense food on the planet....I have nothing else to say

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» I think you better..... Posted by: Cory.Goodman
» RE: I disagree Posted by: countingdaisies
» Not true about seaweed... Posted by: buffeliscious
» Yes, it is. Posted by: countingdaisies
» Nothing wrong with sodium Posted by: truthlover
» That's bullshit! Posted by: countingdaisies
» Sodium IS a nutrient Posted by: Smackback
» RE: I disagree Posted by: ungerbn

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we've had it!!!
Posted by: ellie on May 15, 2009 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
finally figured out a way to cut off the trips to the grocery store as much as possible... no we're not foodies, vegetarians or organic insistent...

seeing that we live in a low light unit without any outdoor dirt to plant in with a balcony in complete shade, we bought a few cheap, efficient fluorescent light fixtures, some heirloom seeds meant for container gardening, a stack of $1 each buckets and a huge bag of organic potting soil, not miracle grow stuff... so far, cukes are flowering and the rest are coming along fast even the carrots... electric bill is about $3.00 higher before we started indoor farming... we intend to keep things going year round here...

shop only small businesses for items we haven't figured out how to do ourselves... like the vietnameese grocery store down the street, these folks have the freshest fruit in the world besides good prices on grains, nice people too!!!

meat, milk, eggs come from a local farmer we trust, go and see the animals, pet a few, visit, fill the chest freezer...

coming into farmers market season and am already a regular for a small farm that started out as a family garden that got out of hand... they let us know by email what they are bringing to market the following saturday and you can email them back with how much of what you want...

not gloating, but after all this infected food stuff, want my family to eat safe food, and so far it's not cost us anymore really then going to krogers which is the only game in town besides walmart which I refuse to set foot in...

did have to go into krogers the other day and had sticker shock!!! at the rate prices are going up, we're going to be $$ ahead in a few months!!! and the quality was crappy to boot...

back to coffee... and water the indoor farm...

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» better be careful Posted by: Cory.Goodman
» RE: better be careful Posted by: ellie
» Wow! Posted by: Bliss Doubt

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hartsmart
Posted by: hartsmart on May 15, 2009 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are we avoiding the root cause of the North American food disaster>
I will put it as simple as calmly as possible.
The pyramid food guides!
Cut red meat--- go massive carbohydrates!
People bought the carbs but kept the meat. The American way. You know the outcome.
Try hartsmartliving.com

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» the food pyramid... Posted by: undrgrndgirl
» RE: hartsmart Posted by: picalillie

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Very informative
Posted by: village1diot on May 15, 2009 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was a great article. I found it very informative.

Thanks!

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Nice
Posted by: GoKanuks on May 15, 2009 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to admit he does have some very valid points!

RT
Who's Watching?

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Dr.Vandana Shiva on Food - 2 mins.
Posted by: seedheads on May 15, 2009 6:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Food is our medicine. We are digging our graves with our teeth. We are witnessing the beginning of the alternative food system, where everyone can participate.

Check out this great little video from Dr.Vandana Shiva on growing your own food.

www.tinyurl.com/growfood

When you finished watching it, come join us at one million gardens and grow more food than you ever dreamed possible.

www.onemilliongardens.com

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» I'm a fan too. Posted by: Bliss Doubt

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Because if you starve to death...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 15, 2009 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Energy, healthcare, agriculture, climate change, global outbreaks like swine flu

...you'll be cured of the common cold, also.

Ditto freezing in the winter time.

These articles. So very informative; so nice that fat nations have such luxuries as to explore the nuance of marketing when dealing with nutrition, rather than whether they are nourished at all.

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Ok, but shut up and give us something better then. This article makes me hungry !
Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS on May 15, 2009 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love my bacon, egg, sausage, and cheese biscuits with pancakes and hashbrowns to go along with some soda or coffee most mornings. If not that, I'll enjoy eating plenty of kids cereals such as Cocoa Puffs, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, Reeses Pieces, and other such cereals. We're all gonna die anyway so who gives a flying ass about food perfection ? Just eat and have fun guzzling around. I'm gonna buy me a kool hummer so I can have loads of food to eat to and from work and lots of cartoons and wacky music to listen to and annoy drivers on the road with. Had fun watching Garfield and Friends and eating a couple of Mcskillet burritous and some soda on my way to work. And I love those cool sausage burritos, steak subs, chicken pastas, etc ... dishes. MORE FOOD AND MORE TAX CUTS !! See, I'm not dying. I'm flyin' high while you sorry birdies are worrying about stupid diets. It's kool to be like Johnny Bravo ! OOOOOOOO !!! LOL !! Now if I can just find a chick to serve me up 24/7 !

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» How's that sugar rush going for you? Posted by: Defenestrator
» Get A Sense of Humor, Kathy-B! Posted by: MJ Fields
» I dunno... Posted by: Defenestrator

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I always feel better after hearing from Michael Pollan.
Posted by: Bliss Doubt on May 15, 2009 6:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the interview, Amy. I enjoyed reading Pollan's take on Vilsack and Merrigan, and on the icon power of Michelle Obama's organic garden. From the first time I heard about that garden, I felt it was a more powerful move than anything, anything at all, that Obama himself has done.

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The American DIE-t, the Banker's Prescription for Profits and Death
Posted by: Alcinor on May 15, 2009 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bear with me on this, I know it starts a little weird.

The International Bankers who control this country and exploit all of us through their ownership and control of the Federal Reserve Bank and therefore of all of our money; finance the production and promotion of the American DIE-t and profit handsomely from the massive health care disaster it produces.

The DIE-t, like all other aspects of the American (bankers’s) Dream, is designed to suck as much money from American citizens as possible.

You can get a very good picture of how the Banker-financed food industry uses science to get us actually addicted to their unhealthy, processed food in a new book, "The End of Overeating" by David Kessler, former Surgeon General of the US.

Not only do the bankers make huge profits by funding the corporations which produce the “edible food-like substances,” (love that characterization!) which inexorably lead to a condition called Metabolic Syndrome later in life, they then switch hats and make another Huge Fortune by treating the diseases they produce!

Remember, all of America's institutions intersect at the bank!

Metabolic Syndrome is a medical term to describe the precursor of most of the chronic diseases we associate with aging and failing health:

• High blood pressure
• Heart Disease
• Type 2 Diabetes
• Cancers

Metabolic Syndrome has been directly tied to the American DIE-t and the resulting illnesses cost a fortune to treat as Michael so aptly points out.

If we include the impact of smoking and alcohol, also funded by the Bankers, treatment for these diseases account for approximately $1.5 Trillion or 3/4 of every health care dollar, according to Michael.

This insidious cycle of diet and disease is music to the Banker's ears since they also finance and therefore control, the nation's health care system.

I hope this gives you an idea of just how huge the problem of the American DIE-t is, who is behind it and an understanding of the effort it will take to change it.

It won't be easy or fast but works like the Defense of Food begins the fight by making people aware of the problem, as most people are not and its magnitude.

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Thank you....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on May 15, 2009 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for this article. As someone that lived overseas for several years, I have to tell you that I loved the farmers markets! I knew who had the best fruit and veggies, life was wonderful! After coming back to the good ole USA, I realized that those stomach pains I started to experience were because of the industrial food that I was buying! It got soooo bad that dairy was no longer my friend, and meat was starting to turn me off too.

What I realized is that old phrase "you are what you eat", is real! As a nation we cannot continue to industrialize our food simply to engorge the pockets of big business! America is the fattest nation, and Americans suffer from more dis-eases than most other nations in the world! We have to reconnect with our food, not just because it is the most sustainable, but because there are more than 3 types of each food (eg.- Granny Smith, Red Delicious, Fuji apples, etc.)that should be available to our pallets! While we may start off paying more, in the end our health, lifestyles, sustainable practices are priceless!

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Organize from the bottom up
Posted by: PaulK on May 15, 2009 7:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bad food kills people. Kids growing up 300 years ago had a 1 in 1800 chance of dealing with cancer in their lifetimes. Today that number is 1 out of 2. Then there's sugar diabetes. Next, it turns out that most learning disabilities are aggravated by bad food. There's lots more diseases too.

From the bottom up:

Make a commitment that you will not kill off your own kids. Say No! You don't raise them just to watch them die.

Nor can you kill your kids' providers (that's you, and your lover if you have one).

If you go to a church, synogogue, mosque or temple, make a commitment that you personally can't kill off your neighbor's kids in a holy place. The neighbors in the next pew can do what they want but you just can't pull that trigger anymore. It's a moral issue for you.

After you've cleaned your own actions up at the church, ask the members of your congregation if they can do the same for your kids. Can they do the holy thing too?

Now, can you put something in writing at your church? Eating chemical soup is an abomination before God because it eventually causes big lumps to grow in you and your kids and everybody in your town, and then they die. Isn't that sort of what the Old Testament dietary laws were all about?

Finally, all of the earth is a Holy place. Go outward. Tell the nation.

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» 300 years ago Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» RE: 300 years ago Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» RE: 300 years ago Posted by: picalillie

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RN
Posted by: mnstra on May 15, 2009 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article. I think you can tie the food crisis in with Chomskys book Failed states.
America is a failed state. It needs to be rehabilitated by a UN force of global proportions to save the many millions from utter
disaster.The disaster is not one fell swoop like
mass starvation, but incremental .Disease, hunger, crime on Wall Street and inner cities heart disease poor nutrition , crumbling infrastructure and so on. If we take the view that we are indeed a de facto failed state, then anything is possible for our rescue.A rescue that is in our own hands, not the government

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don't let Monsanto get a monopoly on seeds
Posted by: sherry on May 15, 2009 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the excellent interview. I read everything Michael Pollan writes and think of him as the Ralph Nader of food.

This spring I constructed a square-foot garden that I hope is deer proof --- I put much thought into the plan and have years of gardening experience behind me. I know I can't grow all my own food but will manage quite a bit in a relatively small space. However, for quite some time I have been concerned about who owns our seeds. At one time Monsanto began developing "suicide seeds," obviously geared toward a seed monopoly and mono-culture, but thanks in large part to European anarchists and farmers who went to great lengths to destroy Monsanto's test crops, they had to quit. I am buying all my seeds from independent businesses, such as Southern Exposure Seed Exchange or High Mowing Seeds. Fine but if we ever have a serious breakdown of transportation in this country, we couldn't even begin growing our own food because we don't have local seed supplies. Okay, we don't have local energy production either or often local water production or . . .
well, you get the idea. I'd really appreciate some good articles about decentralization, especially models rather than simple theory. Meanwhile, thanks for the Goodman-Pollan combination.

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» Begin by seedsaving... Posted by: buffeliscious

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Don' worry; be happy
Posted by: willymack on May 15, 2009 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just make sure your nutrition is from the basic food groups:
The Spam group
The chips group
The Twinkies group, and
The suds group.
Yum!

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» RE: Don' worry; be happy Posted by: Kathy-B

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Life begins at 65........
Posted by: richard0a37 on May 15, 2009 9:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the great things about life is knowing that we have the capacity and capability to enjoy all the years we are alive, and never is this more apparent or more important than when we hit 60.

At age 60, we see age 65 rapidly approaching when we retire from work on a comfortable pension, mortgage paid off, and life can be lived as a permanent holiday in which we are free to do pretty much what we like, and so long as we are fit and healthy, nothing can stop this.

Once upon a time, the mortality rate for men stood at 70 years. Work for 65 years, die 5 years later. However, people live a lot longer now, but while the pension companies minimum liability is only limited to 5 years, they adjust their annual pension payout to just 5% of your pension fund (at least in the UK they do).

Pension companies would like nothing better if all pensioners died inside the first 5 years.

It’s amazing how quickly old age creeps up on you. And one thing I’ve noticed is there are very few fat old people about. All that fast food and poor diets that people fed themselves when they were young makes its impact, so by the time they hit 65, they’re either dead or so weak from carrying that extra person that they have neither the strength nor the physical freedom to enjoy life. It simply becomes one big drudge.

The trouble with life is that few of us die suddenly. With the onset of obesity and poor health once we hit 60, the remainder of our lives can become sheer torture. I’ve known lots of people who, through bad eating, drinking and smoking, pay a heavy price which is the absence of any real enjoyment in the last years of their lives. This can go on for years. Eventually they just wither away and die.

Vintage cars become as such because their owners took care of them. We have to do the same with our bodies.

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» RE: Life begins at 65........ Posted by: MotherLodeBeth

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Asked for a comment about the pork industry...
Posted by: wildbill on May 15, 2009 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...Captain Renault replied, "I am shocked, shocked to find that if Upton Sinclair were alive today, he could still write his 1906 novel The Jungle with few changes."

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its interesting
Posted by: sureshot45 on May 15, 2009 12:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to travel to or live in another country and see what they eat, how the eat, what is at the local grocery store etc. everywhere else (outside of the states) that i have traveled to or lived has a massive massive produce section and just a few aisles of the processed junk.

usually there are separate stores for meat, fish, poultry etc. a local butcher or whatever.

yeah..when you think about it why would you put something in your body when that item literally has a longer shelf life than you do?

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» RE: its interesting Posted by: picalillie

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celery sticks armada
Posted by: bobcoejr on May 15, 2009 6:01 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The poor piggie refrain,, the evil food industry,,the dangers of G.M. seeds.All of these are of real concern.Not a one of you want to address the real issue ...There are 2.5 billion to many mouths to feed
COME ON SWINE FLU DO YOUR YOUR JOB

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Wrong about sugar and HFCS
Posted by: cdmsr on May 16, 2009 6:18 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
High levels of fructose have been shown to lead to leptin resistance. Leptin is a hormone that acts as a circulating appetite control that signals fullness. High fructose corn syrup in the diet causes overeating by suppressing this signalling hormone. Sugar does not. They are NOT biologically the same.

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» RE: Wrong about sugar and HFCS Posted by: rucognizant

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Imagine
Posted by: Noah_Scape on May 19, 2009 2:21 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine a crop in a field where soil nutrients are produced by the soil organisms themselves.

Wow, if only we could engineer something like that... oh wait! - it exists in nature that way, we just have to stop killing the soil organisms off with chemicals and overuse.

But then we would starve because we have to squeeze every little bit of crop from every field every year to keep up with the demand because there is not enough cropland, and THATS why we use chemicals to grow our food.
- or is this just another Monsanto myth?

I see unused fields everywhere, there is millions of acres of unused croplands here in Canada. Organic farming seems to be producing a lot of food. I think it is a myth that we need chemicals just to keep up with demand.

Also, about the farming machinery that burns fossil fuels - much of that machinery could be running on electric power, and every farm could have some wind or solar supply of electricity. Plus, with so many people looking for work maybe some of that machinery could be parked and people could do the work [with subsidies of their wages instead of subsidies for farm fuels]. Our economy can adjust to farming without fossil fuels, it is just a matter of making choices.

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» RE: Imagine Posted by: jrgjniew

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real farmer
Posted by: jrgjniew on May 20, 2009 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am gettin nautious listening to you idiots bashing modern livestock production. Frankly one of the few things Pollen says that is true, is that "the eating meat is bad for you" theory, has now been proven not true(despite alot of aticles in this site that blame meat production for every ill ever conceived). When we all move out of our nice insulated houses and start living in tents and caves, then we can start moving animals back out of their warm and cozy "homes" as well. The same type folks that bitched about the "poor cold cows" being outside 40 yrs ago, are now bitching about them being inside. My pigs are much happier inside than they used to be outside in mud lots, pastures, etc. They thank me for their nice shelter every day when the weather is bad(which is the majority(too hot, too cold, rain, sleet, snow, yada, yada).

Monsanto, is a greedy corp. from a farmers point of view. But don't knowck the technology. It does work, I just think they charge way too much. Pollen acknowledges the Bt technology as a plus. This is where more things are headed. We don't need to use near as many pesticides...particularly insecticides. Don't complain about chemical use, then turn around and bitch about the technology that allows us to limit the use of some.

It amazes me how this blog holds up every liberal author's opinion as truthful, and any industry statement as untruthful. If Pollen is a true "scientist", then by now he knows that the Mexican pigs, from "big ag" have all tested negative for this strain of A/H1N1. They were not the cause. He should acknowledge this. BTW He did also say that you can't get the flu from eating pork. So for those of you that are followers of him.....please enjoy some today!

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» RE: real farmer Posted by: promixr

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real farmer
Posted by: jrgjniew on May 20, 2009 4:06 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
PEW Commission.......It's name is appropriate as their analysis of many things "stinks"..peeeeugh. They started with a preconceived result, and only included the science that supported that. there was a group of scientists that were hired by the PEW Commission to do some environmental analyses on livestock production whose results did not meet PEW's "expectations", so the results were omitted from the final analysis and report that was submitted to congress. This group felt so strongly, they spent their own money to advertise what had happened to the public. If one is a true scientist, then part of that is admitting when you hypothesis is wrong. PEW is unwilling to do that. It is a left-wing political group, veiled in the cloak of their "titles"(PHD, DVM, MD, etc.). BTW, why would Congress take the time to "receive" a report from PEW, any more than any other research group? If PEW is independent, their report is nothing more than lobbying, like any other lobbyist....yet I bet they aren't registered as such. If you are a real scientist you must accept results that often don't fit your original hypothesis...PEW failes to do this.

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» RE: real farmer Posted by: promixr
Alternet Comments:

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Food Security
Posted by: dgiVista.org on May 15, 2009 2:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Climate change, peak oil, peak water, petrochemicals critical in our food production, rising ocean levels, energy crises, soil degredation, the now-obvious bankruptcy of global neoliberal capitalism...all these concerns are significant, but they orbit simple things:

- ensuring we can eat and drink water to survive.

- our bodies' survival is the nexus.

http://PoliticsReSpun.org

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» RE: Food Security Posted by: DaveKnutz
» RE: Food Security Posted by: ungerbn

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Compost & Compost Tea
Posted by: Carol Burns on May 15, 2009 4:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rather than using chemical fertilizers and pesticides, use composted food waste, grass clippings, etc. All it takes is a little time and effort, especially the tea, which can provide protection against fungus, nematodes, and other plant diseases. I believe that the runoff from chemical fertilizers is contributing to the dead zones in our seas and to global warming. Thank you for this illuminating discussion.

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Good old American capitalism
Posted by: NYmediator on May 15, 2009 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the land of the hustle it's profits first, pigs second and people a distant third. May Monsanto and all who work for them rot in Hell as well as the purveyors of these pig camps.

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I disagree
Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line on May 15, 2009 4:45 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With the title... I have never seen seaweed advertised yet it is the most nutrient dense food on the planet....I have nothing else to say

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» I think you better..... Posted by: Cory.Goodman
» RE: I disagree Posted by: countingdaisies
» Not true about seaweed... Posted by: buffeliscious
» Yes, it is. Posted by: countingdaisies
» Nothing wrong with sodium Posted by: truthlover
» That's bullshit! Posted by: countingdaisies
» Sodium IS a nutrient Posted by: Smackback
» RE: I disagree Posted by: ungerbn

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we've had it!!!
Posted by: ellie on May 15, 2009 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
finally figured out a way to cut off the trips to the grocery store as much as possible... no we're not foodies, vegetarians or organic insistent...

seeing that we live in a low light unit without any outdoor dirt to plant in with a balcony in complete shade, we bought a few cheap, efficient fluorescent light fixtures, some heirloom seeds meant for container gardening, a stack of $1 each buckets and a huge bag of organic potting soil, not miracle grow stuff... so far, cukes are flowering and the rest are coming along fast even the carrots... electric bill is about $3.00 higher before we started indoor farming... we intend to keep things going year round here...

shop only small businesses for items we haven't figured out how to do ourselves... like the vietnameese grocery store down the street, these folks have the freshest fruit in the world besides good prices on grains, nice people too!!!

meat, milk, eggs come from a local farmer we trust, go and see the animals, pet a few, visit, fill the chest freezer...

coming into farmers market season and am already a regular for a small farm that started out as a family garden that got out of hand... they let us know by email what they are bringing to market the following saturday and you can email them back with how much of what you want...

not gloating, but after all this infected food stuff, want my family to eat safe food, and so far it's not cost us anymore really then going to krogers which is the only game in town besides walmart which I refuse to set foot in...

did have to go into krogers the other day and had sticker shock!!! at the rate prices are going up, we're going to be $$ ahead in a few months!!! and the quality was crappy to boot...

back to coffee... and water the indoor farm...

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» better be careful Posted by: Cory.Goodman
» RE: better be careful Posted by: ellie
» Wow! Posted by: Bliss Doubt

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hartsmart
Posted by: hartsmart on May 15, 2009 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are we avoiding the root cause of the North American food disaster>
I will put it as simple as calmly as possible.
The pyramid food guides!
Cut red meat--- go massive carbohydrates!
People bought the carbs but kept the meat. The American way. You know the outcome.
Try hartsmartliving.com

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» the food pyramid... Posted by: undrgrndgirl
» RE: hartsmart Posted by: picalillie

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Very informative
Posted by: village1diot on May 15, 2009 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was a great article. I found it very informative.

Thanks!

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Nice
Posted by: GoKanuks on May 15, 2009 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to admit he does have some very valid points!

RT
Who's Watching?

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Dr.Vandana Shiva on Food - 2 mins.
Posted by: seedheads on May 15, 2009 6:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Food is our medicine. We are digging our graves with our teeth. We are witnessing the beginning of the alternative food system, where everyone can participate.

Check out this great little video from Dr.Vandana Shiva on growing your own food.

www.tinyurl.com/growfood

When you finished watching it, come join us at one million gardens and grow more food than you ever dreamed possible.

www.onemilliongardens.com

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» I'm a fan too. Posted by: Bliss Doubt

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Because if you starve to death...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 15, 2009 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Energy, healthcare, agriculture, climate change, global outbreaks like swine flu

...you'll be cured of the common cold, also.

Ditto freezing in the winter time.

These articles. So very informative; so nice that fat nations have such luxuries as to explore the nuance of marketing when dealing with nutrition, rather than whether they are nourished at all.

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Ok, but shut up and give us something better then. This article makes me hungry !
Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS on May 15, 2009 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love my bacon, egg, sausage, and cheese biscuits with pancakes and hashbrowns to go along with some soda or coffee most mornings. If not that, I'll enjoy eating plenty of kids cereals such as Cocoa Puffs, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, Reeses Pieces, and other such cereals. We're all gonna die anyway so who gives a flying ass about food perfection ? Just eat and have fun guzzling around. I'm gonna buy me a kool hummer so I can have loads of food to eat to and from work and lots of cartoons and wacky music to listen to and annoy drivers on the road with. Had fun watching Garfield and Friends and eating a couple of Mcskillet burritous and some soda on my way to work. And I love those cool sausage burritos, steak subs, chicken pastas, etc ... dishes. MORE FOOD AND MORE TAX CUTS !! See, I'm not dying. I'm flyin' high while you sorry birdies are worrying about stupid diets. It's kool to be like Johnny Bravo ! OOOOOOOO !!! LOL !! Now if I can just find a chick to serve me up 24/7 !

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» How's that sugar rush going for you? Posted by: Defenestrator
» Get A Sense of Humor, Kathy-B! Posted by: MJ Fields
» I dunno... Posted by: Defenestrator

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I always feel better after hearing from Michael Pollan.
Posted by: Bliss Doubt on May 15, 2009 6:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the interview, Amy. I enjoyed reading Pollan's take on Vilsack and Merrigan, and on the icon power of Michelle Obama's organic garden. From the first time I heard about that garden, I felt it was a more powerful move than anything, anything at all, that Obama himself has done.

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The American DIE-t, the Banker's Prescription for Profits and Death
Posted by: Alcinor on May 15, 2009 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bear with me on this, I know it starts a little weird.

The International Bankers who control this country and exploit all of us through their ownership and control of the Federal Reserve Bank and therefore of all of our money; finance the production and promotion of the American DIE-t and profit handsomely from the massive health care disaster it produces.

The DIE-t, like all other aspects of the American (bankers’s) Dream, is designed to suck as much money from American citizens as possible.

You can get a very good picture of how the Banker-financed food industry uses science to get us actually addicted to their unhealthy, processed food in a new book, "The End of Overeating" by David Kessler, former Surgeon General of the US.

Not only do the bankers make huge profits by funding the corporations which produce the “edible food-like substances,” (love that characterization!) which inexorably lead to a condition called Metabolic Syndrome later in life, they then switch hats and make another Huge Fortune by treating the diseases they produce!

Remember, all of America's institutions intersect at the bank!

Metabolic Syndrome is a medical term to describe the precursor of most of the chronic diseases we associate with aging and failing health:

• High blood pressure
• Heart Disease
• Type 2 Diabetes
• Cancers

Metabolic Syndrome has been directly tied to the American DIE-t and the resulting illnesses cost a fortune to treat as Michael so aptly points out.

If we include the impact of smoking and alcohol, also funded by the Bankers, treatment for these diseases account for approximately $1.5 Trillion or 3/4 of every health care dollar, according to Michael.

This insidious cycle of diet and disease is music to the Banker's ears since they also finance and therefore control, the nation's health care system.

I hope this gives you an idea of just how huge the problem of the American DIE-t is, who is behind it and an understanding of the effort it will take to change it.

It won't be easy or fast but works like the Defense of Food begins the fight by making people aware of the problem, as most people are not and its magnitude.

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Thank you....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on May 15, 2009 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for this article. As someone that lived overseas for several years, I have to tell you that I loved the farmers markets! I knew who had the best fruit and veggies, life was wonderful! After coming back to the good ole USA, I realized that those stomach pains I started to experience were because of the industrial food that I was buying! It got soooo bad that dairy was no longer my friend, and meat was starting to turn me off too.

What I realized is that old phrase "you are what you eat", is real! As a nation we cannot continue to industrialize our food simply to engorge the pockets of big business! America is the fattest nation, and Americans suffer from more dis-eases than most other nations in the world! We have to reconnect with our food, not just because it is the most sustainable, but because there are more than 3 types of each food (eg.- Granny Smith, Red Delicious, Fuji apples, etc.)that should be available to our pallets! While we may start off paying more, in the end our health, lifestyles, sustainable practices are priceless!

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Organize from the bottom up
Posted by: PaulK on May 15, 2009 7:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bad food kills people. Kids growing up 300 years ago had a 1 in 1800 chance of dealing with cancer in their lifetimes. Today that number is 1 out of 2. Then there's sugar diabetes. Next, it turns out that most learning disabilities are aggravated by bad food. There's lots more diseases too.

From the bottom up:

Make a commitment that you will not kill off your own kids. Say No! You don't raise them just to watch them die.

Nor can you kill your kids' providers (that's you, and your lover if you have one).

If you go to a church, synogogue, mosque or temple, make a commitment that you personally can't kill off your neighbor's kids in a holy place. The neighbors in the next pew can do what they want but you just can't pull that trigger anymore. It's a moral issue for you.

After you've cleaned your own actions up at the church, ask the members of your congregation if they can do the same for your kids. Can they do the holy thing too?

Now, can you put something in writing at your church? Eating chemical soup is an abomination before God because it eventually causes big lumps to grow in you and your kids and everybody in your town, and then they die. Isn't that sort of what the Old Testament dietary laws were all about?

Finally, all of the earth is a Holy place. Go outward. Tell the nation.

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» 300 years ago Posted by: Lloyd Drako
» RE: 300 years ago Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» RE: 300 years ago Posted by: picalillie

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RN
Posted by: mnstra on May 15, 2009 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article. I think you can tie the food crisis in with Chomskys book Failed states.
America is a failed state. It needs to be rehabilitated by a UN force of global proportions to save the many millions from utter
disaster.The disaster is not one fell swoop like
mass starvation, but incremental .Disease, hunger, crime on Wall Street and inner cities heart disease poor nutrition , crumbling infrastructure and so on. If we take the view that we are indeed a de facto failed state, then anything is possible for our rescue.A rescue that is in our own hands, not the government

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don't let Monsanto get a monopoly on seeds
Posted by: sherry on May 15, 2009 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the excellent interview. I read everything Michael Pollan writes and think of him as the Ralph Nader of food.

This spring I constructed a square-foot garden that I hope is deer proof --- I put much thought into the plan and have years of gardening experience behind me. I know I can't grow all my own food but will manage quite a bit in a relatively small space. However, for quite some time I have been concerned about who owns our seeds. At one time Monsanto began developing "suicide seeds," obviously geared toward a seed monopoly and mono-culture, but thanks in large part to European anarchists and farmers who went to great lengths to destroy Monsanto's test crops, they had to quit. I am buying all my seeds from independent businesses, such as Southern Exposure Seed Exchange or High Mowing Seeds. Fine but if we ever have a serious breakdown of transportation in this country, we couldn't even begin growing our own food because we don't have local seed supplies. Okay, we don't have local energy production either or often local water production or . . .
well, you get the idea. I'd really appreciate some good articles about decentralization, especially models rather than simple theory. Meanwhile, thanks for the Goodman-Pollan combination.

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» Begin by seedsaving... Posted by: buffeliscious

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Don' worry; be happy
Posted by: willymack on May 15, 2009 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just make sure your nutrition is from the basic food groups:
The Spam group
The chips group
The Twinkies group, and
The suds group.
Yum!

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» RE: Don' worry; be happy Posted by: Kathy-B

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Life begins at 65........
Posted by: richard0a37 on May 15, 2009 9:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the great things about life is knowing that we have the capacity and capability to enjoy all the years we are alive, and never is this more apparent or more important than when we hit 60.

At age 60, we see age 65 rapidly approaching when we retire from work on a comfortable pension, mortgage paid off, and life can be lived as a permanent holiday in which we are free to do pretty much what we like, and so long as we are fit and healthy, nothing can stop this.

Once upon a time, the mortality rate for men stood at 70 years. Work for 65 years, die 5 years later. However, people live a lot longer now, but while the pension companies minimum liability is only limited to 5 years, they adjust their annual pension payout to just 5% of your pension fund (at least in the UK they do).

Pension companies would like nothing better if all pensioners died inside the first 5 years.

It’s amazing how quickly old age creeps up on you. And one thing I’ve noticed is there are very few fat old people about. All that fast food and poor diets that people fed themselves when they were young makes its impact, so by the time they hit 65, they’re either dead or so weak from carrying that extra person that they have neither the strength nor the physical freedom to enjoy life. It simply becomes one big drudge.

The trouble with life is that few of us die suddenly. With the onset of obesity and poor health once we hit 60, the remainder of our lives can become sheer torture. I’ve known lots of people who, through bad eating, drinking and smoking, pay a heavy price which is the absence of any real enjoyment in the last years of their lives. This can go on for years. Eventually they just wither away and die.

Vintage cars become as such because their owners took care of them. We have to do the same with our bodies.

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» RE: Life begins at 65........ Posted by: MotherLodeBeth

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Asked for a comment about the pork industry...
Posted by: wildbill on May 15, 2009 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...Captain Renault replied, "I am shocked, shocked to find that if Upton Sinclair were alive today, he could still write his 1906 novel The Jungle with few changes."

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its interesting
Posted by: sureshot45 on May 15, 2009 12:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to travel to or live in another country and see what they eat, how the eat, what is at the local grocery store etc. everywhere else (outside of the states) that i have traveled to or lived has a massive massive produce section and just a few aisles of the processed junk.

usually there are separate stores for meat, fish, poultry etc. a local butcher or whatever.

yeah..when you think about it why would you put something in your body when that item literally has a longer shelf life than you do?

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» RE: its interesting Posted by: picalillie

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celery sticks armada
Posted by: bobcoejr on May 15, 2009 6:01 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The poor piggie refrain,, the evil food industry,,the dangers of G.M. seeds.All of these are of real concern.Not a one of you want to address the real issue ...There are 2.5 billion to many mouths to feed
COME ON SWINE FLU DO YOUR YOUR JOB

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Wrong about sugar and HFCS
Posted by: cdmsr on May 16, 2009 6:18 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
High levels of fructose have been shown to lead to leptin resistance. Leptin is a hormone that acts as a circulating appetite control that signals fullness. High fructose corn syrup in the diet causes overeating by suppressing this signalling hormone. Sugar does not. They are NOT biologically the same.

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» RE: Wrong about sugar and HFCS Posted by: rucognizant

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Imagine
Posted by: Noah_Scape on May 19, 2009 2:21 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine a crop in a field where soil nutrients are produced by the soil organisms themselves.

Wow, if only we could engineer something like that... oh wait! - it exists in nature that way, we just have to stop killing the soil organisms off with chemicals and overuse.

But then we would starve because we have to squeeze every little bit of crop from every field every year to keep up with the demand because there is not enough cropland, and THATS why we use chemicals to grow our food.
- or is this just another Monsanto myth?

I see unused fields everywhere, there is millions of acres of unused croplands here in Canada. Organic farming seems to be producing a lot of food. I think it is a myth that we need chemicals just to keep up with demand.

Also, about the farming machinery that burns fossil fuels - much of that machinery could be running on electric power, and every farm could have some wind or solar supply of electricity. Plus, with so many people looking for work maybe some of that machinery could be parked and people could do the work [with subsidies of their wages instead of subsidies for farm fuels]. Our economy can adjust to farming without fossil fuels, it is just a matter of making choices.

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» RE: Imagine Posted by: jrgjniew

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real farmer
Posted by: jrgjniew on May 20, 2009 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am gettin nautious listening to you idiots bashing modern livestock production. Frankly one of the few things Pollen says that is true, is that "the eating meat is bad for you" theory, has now been proven not true(despite alot of aticles in this site that blame meat production for every ill ever conceived). When we all move out of our nice insulated houses and start living in tents and caves, then we can start moving animals back out of their warm and cozy "homes" as well. The same type folks that bitched about the "poor cold cows" being outside 40 yrs ago, are now bitching about them being inside. My pigs are much happier inside than they used to be outside in mud lots, pastures, etc. They thank me for their nice shelter every day when the weather is bad(which is the majority(too hot, too cold, rain, sleet, snow, yada, yada).

Monsanto, is a greedy corp. from a farmers point of view. But don't knowck the technology. It does work, I just think they charge way too much. Pollen acknowledges the Bt technology as a plus. This is where more things are headed. We don't need to use near as many pesticides...particularly insecticides. Don't complain about chemical use, then turn around and bitch about the technology that allows us to limit the use of some.

It amazes me how this blog holds up every liberal author's opinion as truthful, and any industry statement as untruthful. If Pollen is a true "scientist", then by now he knows that the Mexican pigs, from "big ag" have all tested negative for this strain of A/H1N1. They were not the cause. He should acknowledge this. BTW He did also say that you can't get the flu from eating pork. So for those of you that are followers of him.....please enjoy some today!

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» RE: real farmer Posted by: promixr

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real farmer
Posted by: jrgjniew on May 20, 2009 4:06 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
PEW Commission.......It's name is appropriate as their analysis of many things "stinks"..peeeeugh. They started with a preconceived result, and only included the science that supported that. there was a group of scientists that were hired by the PEW Commission to do some environmental analyses on livestock production whose results did not meet PEW's "expectations", so the results were omitted from the final analysis and report that was submitted to congress. This group felt so strongly, they spent their own money to advertise what had happened to the public. If one is a true scientist, then part of that is admitting when you hypothesis is wrong. PEW is unwilling to do that. It is a left-wing political group, veiled in the cloak of their "titles"(PHD, DVM, MD, etc.). BTW, why would Congress take the time to "receive" a report from PEW, any more than any other research group? If PEW is independent, their report is nothing more than lobbying, like any other lobbyist....yet I bet they aren't registered as such. If you are a real scientist you must accept results that often don't fit your original hypothesis...PEW failes to do this.

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» RE: real farmer Posted by: promixr
 
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