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America's Eating Disorder

By Krista Walton, LA CityBeat. Posted May 30, 2006.


The author of 'The Omnivore's Dilemma' discusses how we demonize food, eat too much corn, and read too much 'grocery lit.'

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"The omnivore's dilemma," a phrase coined 30 years ago by research psychologist Paul Rozin, is the basic quandary we all face: As omnivores, what should humans eat when we could, hypothetically, eat anything? In Michael Pollan's recently released book, The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, the author delves into America's twisted nutritional zeitgeist and discovers that we need to retrace our culinary steps. Then he does the legwork for us by investigating the origins of four separate meals, from a drive-thru McDonald's dinner to one for which he himself has -- not kidding -- hunted and foraged.

In the process, Pollan offers some insight into how it now seems reasonable to eat fast food several times a week, or cut out entire food groups while attempting to lose weight, or, for a frightening number of people, simply not eat. Pollan, author of "The Botany of Desire" and Knight Professor of Journalism at UC Berkeley, presents his findings with a crispness and clarity of thought. Transporting food worldwide, for instance, burns fossil fuels and is, in turn, bad for the environment. Consuming too much or too little of anything will not leave you nourished. And eating, by the way, is supposed to be fun.

Krista Walton: In "The Omnivore's Dilemma," you talk about how eating is, in many cultures, a positive act and part of building a community. In America, food is often considered the enemy.

Michael Pollan: Yes, I think we've demonized food. We think about food in terms of evil nutrients and good nutrients, and lose track of the fact that it's a lot more than nutrition. It's a way you build community, it is part of culture, and it helps define culture. To think what it means to be French in the absence of French food, or to be Italian in the absence of Italian food, you'd be missing a big part of [the culture].

The food culture in America was never very strong, but it's been eroded under the pressure of the processed-food industry. They're very interested in changing the food culture, because the food culture gets in the way of eating too much; the food culture tells you don't snack between meals; the food culture tells you eat at a table with other people, not in your car, where [the food industry] is very interested in getting us to eat as much as possible on as many occasions as possible during the day.

KW: You give special attention to the prevalence of corn in the American diet. Is there a critique involved in this?

MP: Yes, I think it's a dangerous way to eat. A civilization that feeds itself from one crop is going to be less healthy long-term than one that feeds itself from a dozen crops. Of course, we don't only eat corn, but corn and soybeans together are the raw material for most of the fast food and supermarket food that we eat. We're omnivores, and we need to eat about 50 different nutrients to be healthy -- you don't get those from eating mostly corn. We have people today who eat a heavy fast-food diet and who are overweight and undernourished. That's a new thing in the history of the world, to be overfed and undernourished at the same time, and a lot of that is because we're eating this mono-cultural diet.

KW: You also discuss how oil-dependent our diet is. If you think about it, it makes perfect sense, but ....

MP: But we don't think about it very often! And that was one of the big surprises to me, as well -- just how much of our fossil fuel consumption is devoted to feeding ourselves. Twenty percent! More than we use on personal transportation! The way we grow the food involves petroleum in the form of synthetic fertilizer and pesticides, the way we process it, and then the way we ship it all around the world. It's a very strong argument for local food, and for eating real whole foods -- not the whole food in Whole Foods, which isn't so whole. [By eating local] we could make a serious dent in all that fossil fuel we're using.

KW: What do you mean when you say "Whole Foods isn't so whole"? How have the principles of organic food been altered?

MP: Whole Foods does a lot of important work, and they are part of the solution. However, the kind of pastoral imagery that's on display in that store, everything from the pictures of local farmers over the produce bins to the copious amounts of literature telling you exactly how the steer you're about to eat spent its final days in sagebrush-filled pastures -- I mean, the prose is wonderful. I call it "grocery lit."

When you actually go visit some of those animals, though, you realize that organic food has become industrialized. We now have organic factory farms, organic feed lots, and those are words that I never expected to put next to one another. This isn't the original idea that motivated organic; it was a much more holistic idea that took into account things like energy and the welfare of animals. I'm afraid that that's fallen by the wayside. The government has established a very narrow definition of what organic food is, a definition that doesn't embrace the welfare of animals in any significant way and doesn't think about energy.

KW: What about low-income households that can't necessarily afford to buy organic or local?

MP: There is certainly an issue of affordability. The way that the rules are set up in America, to eat healthfully costs more than to eat poorly. If you have a dollar to spend at the grocery store, you'll get a lot more energy on the processed-food aisle than in the whole-foods aisle. We've set up a system where it's rational to eat badly. Eating in this manner is not a function of nature, and it's not a function of the free market.

That is -- make no mistake -- a function of our agricultural policy, which subsidizes those unhealthy calories, subsidizes high-fructose corn syrup, and does not subsidize the growing of carrots or broccoli. I think if we want to make healthy food accessible, we have to change the rules of the game. And that means we have to look at the farm bill, because that's where those rules are enshrined.

KW: What would you like to see change in the country's food policies?

MP: Well, I'm not a policy-maker; I'm a journalist. I would say that we need a farm policy that aligns our public-health goals with our land-use goals. In other words, we should not have a situation where one hand of the government is saying, "We have an epidemic of obesity and diabetes," while another hand of the government is making high-fructose corn syrup so cheaply that it makes sense to put soda in 32-ounce cups. All these things are connected, and that's the lesson of ecology.

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View:
How Did This Happen?
Posted by: ChristopherLL on May 30, 2006 3:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How, in a generation or two, did we lose the knowledge and availability of venues to know and practice what is elementary to the body, eating foods that are good for it and being physically active. I agree with the article that the what is basic for the needs of a healthy body has become a mystery and we are offered venues such as supermarkets and fast food restaraunts with a paucity of choices. Also easily accessible venues for phsyical activity as in parks, sidewalks, playgrounds are scant. It seems that this society has now created a population of automatons who only eat what is put in front of them and watch other people engage in physical activity, paying alot of money for both.

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» RE: How Did This Happen? Posted by: Perry
Pollan - the best writing on food and ethics
Posted by: boygranddakar on May 30, 2006 4:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Pollan does the most complete and nuanced considerations of food and ethics that I've seen on AlterNet or anywhere else. He considers the whole picture: food culture, economics and class, cultivation, land use, and transportation. Environmentalists and foodies should read his work widely. This brief interview doesn't do justice to his ideas.

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Daily meals at the luncheon
Posted by: oldsmobile on May 30, 2006 6:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some countries have the tradition of luncheons, where every day students, pupils or workers get a full course meal that varies from day to day.

Interestingly, these are often socialist countries, ex-socialist countries or countries with strong social democratic roots.

This model of eating, having one hefty, yet varying and healthy meal at lunchtime, consisting of meat, vegetable, a starchy side, salad and bread is the conrnerstone of many healthy diets.

I suppose, simply the fact that in America, there rarely even is a lunch hour, this model of eating never had a chance.

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» RE: Daily meals at the luncheon Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: Daily meals at the luncheon Posted by: Longdream
» I agree with LOngdream Posted by: christininrome
more from Pollan in Mother Jones
Posted by: JayHarris on May 30, 2006 6:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The current Mother Jones cover story is an excerpt from Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma" -- a profile of the self-described "radical, Christian, libertarian, environmentalist farmer" Joel Saletin. It's up on the Mother Jones site (http://www.motherjones.com) but the link directly to the story seems to be too long for posting here. You can find it under "Read the Current Issue" in the left column of the Mother Jones home page.

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Another interview with Pollan in The Sun
Posted by: astraea on May 30, 2006 7:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just fyi, The Sun magazine is carrying a longer interview with Michael Pollan in this month's issue
www.thesunmagazine.org/365_Pollan.pdf

Pollan really does have a handle on food issues. My response to the issue of how we eat is to think about how wonderful it
is to sit down with family & friends and enjoy colorful, healthy,
slow-cooked meals and conversation... that's a luxury everyone
should be able to afford.

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Need a Fat Food Tax
Posted by: gjones on May 30, 2006 7:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What we need to do to help alleviate the imbalance of fast, fatty, cheap foods with healthy, organic foods is to create a "Fat Food Tax". I have sent my proposal to Sen. Barbara Boxer with only a form letter reply. I have sent several letters to the editors of local (Bay Area) newspapers, again with no reply and no print space. I have been outraged for years that it is cheaper and easier to eat unhealthy foods than it is to eat healthily. A big fat tax on McD's and the rest, could not only help in dissuading people from relying on them for their meals, but could also go to hospital emergency rooms to help pay for the ever increasing problems associated with this country's poor eating habits.

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» RE: Need a Fat Food Tax Posted by: Perry
Food and consumers in a “civilized” society
Posted by: Betsy L. Angert on May 30, 2006 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dear Krista Walton . . .

I agree with the premise that as omnivore's we can eat anything; however, as consumers in a “civilized” society we are left with few opportunities for careful choice. I very much agree with author Michael Pollan, the culture for food has changed.

People no longer sit and enjoy food and family. The rush to fill their mouths, their stomachs, and the void that modern life leaves. Connections to cuisine and community are lacking.

High fructose corn syrup fills our shelves, and our shelves are overflowing with fake food. The grocery store is stocked with packaged and preserved additives. When in a supermarket, look for the section that offers fresh food. Notice how small it is in contrast to the areas that display frozen, boxed, or bottled wares.

As a former anorexic, bulimic, fat person, and thin, I have learned much about food. One of my discoveries was that if I choose to only eat “real” food, I have a greater awareness for my physiological needs. I wonder what the chemicals do to the brain. Actually, I have written of this in FAST FOOD IS NOT FAST ©. An article within that treatise “Food on the Brain” is fascinating.

I have also penned prose on other topics Pollan discusses, among these are . . .
FARMING IS FALLING, EFFECTING OUR FOOD AND FAMILIES ©
WEIGHT. BALANCING FAT WITH FEELINGS, HABITS WITH HEALTH ©
CHILDHOOD OBESITY. ADULT ON-SET DIABETES. OSTEOPOROSIS. SODA ©

I invite you and your readers to review these and share stories. May you indulge in the information and enjoy!

I thank journalist Michael Pollen for his research and thoughts and I thank you for this interview. Well-done!

May your life be full and fulfilling. May [spiritual, emotional, intellectual, and conjointly physical] abundance be yours . . . Betsy
Be-Think

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Land grant colleges have a lot to do with our diet
Posted by: sausage on May 30, 2006 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now the original land grant colleges, founded during the Civil War, are all state universities. However, over they years these institutions have received, and yet receive, vast endowments, grants, and oodles and oodles of money from big ag-business to promote the corporate farming model.

In the name of increased harvet yeild, efficiency and lower prices for the "consumer," American farming has dangerously placed all its eggs, as it were, in one basket--modern monocrop agriculture. Monocrop farming evolved over the twentith century due in large part to the marriage of land grant ag-schools and big ag-business.

The food produced by ag-business model farming is killing us, but it is cheap, and at heart, all Americans are really cheapskates.

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pollan's responsibility
Posted by: kerikeifer on May 30, 2006 11:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i've read pollan's work widely and have attended several lectures that he has given in his current circuit. it is a pleasure to read his work and listen to him speak. it's true that he is not a policy-maker, but a journalist who has clearly defined the problems with our american food system. but he is in the position to really make people listen and understand...and i'd like to see and hear more prescriptions for change from him. i'm not sure he was ready for the response he got to this book...but he has brought to light a huge issue...now we just need some clearly-communicated and easily-accesible plans for change!

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A Lot More Than Nutrition?
Posted by: outtolunch on May 30, 2006 12:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pollan is out of touch. Food should first and foremost be about nutrition. Building a community is nice, but there are ways to achieve that without using food. If anything, our society incorporates food into too much of our social customs. We forget why humans need food and instead eat for all the wrong reasons. We eat because we're out with friends or coworkers, we eat cause we're at a game or movie, we eat cause we're bored or stressed out, we even eat because certain holidays call for it. We are a culture that is overfed and undernourished and people like Pollan gloss over that. Maybe demonizing food isn't such a bad thing. If more people looked at their food in terms of how safe it is and how nutritious it is, maybe we wouldn't be such an unhealthy people.

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Utter Nonsense
Posted by: Kneel on May 30, 2006 4:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Food should first and foremost be about color. How many foods do we have that are so yellow?

I say it's time we turned our critical eye to red food, which is often disgusting. Like tomatoes. People use them to make ratatoue, which is hard to spell, and they go all rotten and other people throw them at vaudevilians. They're probably responsible for starting wars or something. And that's just one red food. Red foods are vastly overrated, expensive, and don't go nearly so well with the summer sundresses they stain.

Plus, we do we give such an easy pass to green foods? Like, how hard is that? What isn't green, at some point? (Even me, say, the night of the last election.) Green. Oh, you're greeeeeen. I'm soooooo impressed. Just 'cause green foods have a strong lobby group, but this is, after all, the category that includes brussel sprouts not to mention cilantro and those gawd-awful foul maggoty, bougery things called capers.

We need to support our Foods of Rare Colours, with the exception, of course, of blue foods. What's blue, after all, besides rancid yuppie doritoes, blueberries, and boo-berry?

(We could make the case for light purple, but that encompasses so very few foods. What, ater all, is light purple? Not much besides that Pac-Man eggplant.)

So for my money, it's yellow. Stop slamming yellow foods and give them a chance. If we did with out corn, we'd have to eat marigolds and butter cups to get our RDA of yellow. It's time to stand up for good old, all-American yellow.

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Pumped Full of Poison!!!!
Posted by: williameon on May 31, 2006 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The food supply is being pumped full of poison:
Heavy metals, Carcinogens, High fructose corn syrup, Hydrogenated oils, over refined white flour and genetic mutants.
The government and Industry are making the American people sick and afraid.
Terrorize, Torture and Intimidate.
These are the tools they use to destroy the will of the people.
The Government and Industry act in unison.
They are in collusion.
Halliburton and Dick the Heartless ruin/run Washington!
At the turn of the century a Fat Lady was a rarity.
Seen at a Carnival Freak Show!
Now they can be seen at any supermarket!
Pushing a cart full of poison.
Look in it!
See what to avoid.
Boxes full of poison.
The American People are over worked, ignorant and sick.
Three jobs, in debt, and no health care.
Is this what life is all about?
The American Dream?
Wishing for Armageddon?
So you can go the Heaven?
And
Get away from it!
BU__! SH__!
It is a corporate nightmare inflicted on the American people.
You get to drink more Mercury and Arsenic in your water
While they drink Perrier!
More
BU__! SH__!
The American people are so dumbed down.
That they don’t even know it.
All they are given is the guilt.
That they are fat.
Never the tools to use to become healthy, happy human beings.
Never given the chance
To grow up healthy and prosper.
READ THE LABEL!!
LESS IS MORE!!!
The longer the label
The worse it is for you!
Fresh Fruits, Fish, Meats and Vegetables: have no labels!
They have no ingredients!
Only names!
Buy fresh fruits, nuts, legumes, meats, fish and vegetables!
Cook them sparingly!
Use Extra Virgin Olive Oil!
The hunger you feel is!
The Fat laden poison in your body crying out in pain.
MORE! MORE! MORE!
MORE POISON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Who will pay for this crime?
The poison pushing Fast/Faux Food Conglomerates.
Or
The American PEOPLE?
With their lives and dreams?

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