COMMENTS: 48
Corporate Agribusiness Is Behind Our Deadly Food Supply
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In the United States today, 80 percent of beef is slaughtered by four companies, 75 percent of pre-cut salad mixes are processed by two companies and 30 percent of milk is processed by just one company. Most of our fresh produce comes from the same region of California where the contaminated spinach and now green onions were grown. During off seasons, up to 70 percent of the produce sold in the United States comes from other countries.
Globalization has meant that, with the click of a button, we can connect with people and places halfway across the country or the world. But rather than just exchanging ideas and cultures, we've increasingly come to depend on the rest of the world for our consumption of goods, services, energy -- and food. With the speed of clicking a button, an E. coli outbreak in California or China can threaten our entire food supply and risk a widespread pandemic.
Gone are the days of family farms, which would produce sustainable, healthy food that also fed the local economy. Today, a staggering 330 farmers abandon farming each week. In the 1930s, there were over seven million family farms in our country. Today, roughly two million remain.
In their place, large, corporate-run farms have driven down the price of food, thanks largely to massive subsidies from the federal government but also "economies of scale." Yet cutting costs comes at a price. When you buy an apple at your local farmer's market from a farmer's in your region, there's no packaging involved and the only energy the farmer spent to get you that apple was a few miles worth of gas.
When you buy an apple grown all the way across the country -- or on the other side of the globe -- that apple is wrapped in paper and cardboard and shipped over boats and planes and then trucks to your store, a considerably greater cost to the environment.
The money you spend on the apple, after the grocery store takes its cut, goes into the mega-profits of some distant agribusiness, a considerable cost to your local economy.
But also, aggregating farming means aggregating risk. In the case of the E. coli contaminated spinach outbreak this past September, the spinach was grown at massive, industrial farms in southern California and shipped around the United States.
The E. coli came from an industrial cattle ranch nearby. Tightly packed cows were over fed with unhealthy grain and produced E. coli in their feces. The contaminated feces washed downstream into the water supply, infecting the spinach fields.
There is much talk right now about "energy independence" -- the idea that the United States should rely on sustainable, renewable energy sources rather military conflict and political instability in the pursuit of oil. Food must be no different. Given the recent E. coli scares, we can no longer ignore the warning signs. Long-distance food of corporate agribusiness threatens our environment, our economy and our health. If we're feeling insecure, it's no wonder. We are what we eat.
There's a movement afoot to restore the health and safety of our food supply and support the livelihood and culture of small, family farmers. "The Meatrix", an incredibly clever animated spoof that exposes the dangers of factory farming, was viewed online by over 4.2 million people in the first three months it was released.
And just this past October, hundreds of thousands of people from over 150 continents convened in Turin, Italy, at a gathering for the international Slow Food organization, which calls for food that is good, clean and fair.
On it's website, the organization Local Harvest lists almost 10,000 farmers' markets, cooperative grocery stores, restaurants and more that provide locally-grown, organic produce to consumers. From Pulaski, Tennessee, to Moline, Illinois, there are already opportunities in big cities and small towns across the entire country to buy safe and nutritious food right from our own backyards. As demand for local produce grows, these markets will grow too.
Those of us who can afford to buy local, organic food grown sustainably by family farmers should do so. From jams and breads to apples and nuts, if we lead with our taste buds and our wallets we will over time help bring down the cost of locally grown food by eliminating the unfair competition of subsidized, artificially cheap agribusiness.
We will also solve the food crisis worldwide, where U.S. agribusiness has similarly trampled family farms and local food production from Mexico to India. Our reward will be a better world -- and food on our table that is nutritious, delicious and safe to eat.
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Posted by: rsaxto on Dec 18, 2006 2:17 AM
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Posted by: djnoll on Dec 18, 2006 3:54 AM
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» The spinach wasn't organic
Posted by: AdamG
» RE: The spinach wasn't organic
Posted by: djnoll
» Collateral Damage OF GREED
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Daniel Shays on Dec 18, 2006 5:03 AM
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Posted by: mdruss42 on Dec 18, 2006 5:51 AM
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Posted by: Bobsays on Dec 18, 2006 6:14 AM
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My gran worked as a cleaner yet she bought and paid for a house. I have prestige jobs, yet I am only just about able to afford a mortgage in my 'world class' city. The third worldification of buying power and the economy has taken living standards down. And time-poor people cut corners and factory farming is happy to help. My cousin is a millionaire who made her money peddling high fat, high sodium ready meals to lazy workers. Welcome to the modern world.
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» grandmother might of been poor, but smart
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: grandmother might of been poor, but smart
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
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Posted by: michaeltwatson on Dec 18, 2006 6:15 AM
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» Control Over US Always Takes Its Toll
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Sunfell on Dec 18, 2006 6:29 AM
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I have friends who have 'shares' in cattle that are naturally grown and fed, and we have a community farm association where people can subscribe to get baskets of fresh grown local produce every week or so.
And there is nothing wrong with growing your own veggies- even in containers. Just make sure to get good compost.
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Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Dec 18, 2006 7:17 AM
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» RE: Ag-Business Killing America
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: Ag-Business Killing America
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Dec 18, 2006 7:21 AM
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1. Oil prices are leading to cuts in pesticide use, which in turn allows insects to spread more germs. Also, R&D in pesticides has decreased because the costs are becoming so prohibitive. More and more insects are becoming immune to existing pesticides every year.
2. Global warming has led to more resilient insect populations. Especially, but not limited to, seasonal insect populations.
3. General competition leads to cost cutting. Sanitation must have been on the chopping block.
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» RE: 3 obvious reasons... - A solution to the first and even the second solution does exist.
Posted by: maxpayne
» My Obvious
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: My Obvious
Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: crusty
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: shoosta
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Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 18, 2006 8:01 AM
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P.S.: A former DEA member revealed to me the DEA's plans to give Big Agri/Phrma MORE EXEMPTIONS to allow the free-flow of MORE FOOD/DRUG POISONING and yes, she resigned in protest. At this rate, I'd prefer to join civil libertarians in calling for abolishing the DEA and/or HS or at leasting pushing for a MAJOR REFORM.
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Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Dec 18, 2006 9:03 AM
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Now there are just over 100,000 processing facilities and we manage 5,000 inspections. Good odds that a company can run a facility for close to 20 years and never get inspected.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Try this math
Posted by: yellow
» NO YOU Try this math
Posted by: Krain61
» That was incredible!
Posted by: ABetterFuture
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Posted by: ABetterFuture on Dec 18, 2006 9:40 AM
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Contaminated feces? As opposed to Gaia's own rosey-smelling poo-petals?
The author should have stuck with making the case for buying from local farms based on personal preference, a distaste for over-involvement of government in commerce, and the questionable soundness of predicating our food supply on dirt cheap energy in perpetuity. Those are very strong points, and they can made in a quite compelling manner.
Attempting to attribute the recent infections by entero-pathogenic strains of E. coli to farming tactics employed to cheaply feed 300M Americans lends the author's argument less credibility, not more. Make the case for local farms based on their own merits, not by throwing...well, "contaminated feces" at large scale commerce, hoping something will stick. This E. coli "the-sky-is-falling" fluff piece was chock full of the same stuff it attempts to lament.
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» RE: Not all bullsh*t comes from the back end of bovines.
Posted by: Tricia
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Posted by: cstriker on Dec 18, 2006 10:44 AM
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Good luck with your article.
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» RE: Note to Author
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Krain61 on Dec 18, 2006 1:01 PM
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People who have springs and do not put chorine in there water and eat the stuff they raise they rarely get sick..I know I'm one of them.If you eat organic meat for one whole month and then eat a micky d's burger you would get sick to your stomach.So if you have kids and don't take them out to eat that crap they won't get sick as often.If your lucky to have your own milk cow you would help them and yourself even more.. If you bought natural and then was able to avoid doctors then one would off set the other..I havn't been to a doctor in almost 20 years except to have surgery on my knee and shoulder but nothing else..So it's your choice.I deliver Hazmat loads and have delivered stuff to the places that make the food you eat..The one load had 5 placards on it and one of them was poison{skull and cross bones} Cambells soup was the place.
Mmm Mmm Good! We as Americans are afraid to say and do the right thing..They say by having mega farms will reduce the price you pay..Why do local Dairy Farmers still get almost the same price that got almost 25 or 30 years ago but were paying how freakin much for milk and dairy poducts.Sounds like a deal? Not!
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Posted by: sasquuatch55 on Dec 18, 2006 1:10 PM
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» RE: We will be screwed
Posted by: sasquuatch55
» We will be screwed if we don't change things soon.
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: bob t on Dec 18, 2006 2:17 PM
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Food Security+Agribusiness+NAFTA Superhighway+ Republican Party=Terrorism+WWIII=Bush Family/Neocons= 'A NEW World Order'.
Thats certainly not my choice, is it yours? I doubt it, just ask yourself if that scenario doesn't sound and fell quite ominous to you and your family. Read On...
I would never buy food or anything else from Pulaski, Tenn becuse it would be contaminated, not by e.coli, but by Tennessee racism and republican racism.
But beyond that, the solution is very simple and that is our gov't, but not now, but maybe someday when it is once again our gov't must stop all subsidies to agribusiness. I want my farm subsidy tax dollars to go only to small and medium family farms, nothing else. That won't be supported by agribusiness or their corrupt republican friends who care nothing about America or our security but only their own wealth. Family farms totally contribute to our american independance and by the same token to our countries security.
Other examples of corporate greed that lessens our countries security are the oil companies, the BIG BUSINESSES that suck up all the funds of the Small Business Administration (SBA) and Micro$oft is number one on that list and the Nafta Superhighway which will be huge in destroying our security while stealing jobs from america's truckdrivers(giving them to mexican truck drivers and who do you trust more american or mexican truck drivers; and stealing jobs from american stevedores who work on our docks, once again who do you trust more to protect our ports and their security). And yet just look at what the Bushies and their Republican corportocracy are doing as they work toward the NAFTA Superhighway goal. This will draw down our countries security to zero and is very highly likely to cause terrorists(just exactly who are the terrorists now) to achieve their goals, once more throwing our country into death and chaos. And so I am led to ask why would they do this? To me the answer is very obvious, it will lead to Repub desire for 'A NEW World Order' by causing the Republicans to take control of America and then to start another world war. And remember our congress knew nothing about all of this until approx 2-3months ago. So how is that for whats left of our democracy. OK, our Republic, but you all know what I mean.
Fight for democracy
PRAY FOR PEACE
Bob DAmico
Cleve, Oh
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:22 PM
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by Peter Bahouth
Last January, while sitting in a restaurant in Toronto, I ordered a salad. The salad came with a tomato on it. I found myself wondering, "Where did this tomato come from?" So I tracked it.
This tomato's story begins on land acquired by the US-based Jolly Green Giant Company in partnership with the Mexican Development Corporation. The land was previously an ejido - land used by farmers for publicly owned cooperative farms.
The tomato seed, a hybrid developed from an original Mexican strain, is now patented and owned by Calgene, Inc., which purchased the research from the University of California at Davis. The University developed the hybrid with a research grant paid for by U.S. tax dollars.
The land was fumigated with methyl bromide, an ozone-depleter 120 times more potent than Chloroflourocarbon-111 (CFC-111). It was also treated with pesticides developed, manufactured and distributed by the Monsanto corporation, one of the US' largest polluters. Production waste was shipped to the world's largest hazardous waste landfill in Emelle, Alabama - a predominantly poor African-American community.
The Mexican farm workers were given no protection from the pesticides: no gloves, masks or safety instructions. They make approximately $2.50 a day and have no access to health care.
Once harvested, the tomato was placed was placed with others on a plastic tray covered in plastic wrap, then placed in a cardboard box. The plastic is manufactured with chlorine produced by the Formosa company of Point Comfort, Texas. Workers and citizens of Point Comfort face a potentially significant risk of cancer and immune-suppression disease due to exposure to dioxin, a byproduct of chlorine production.
The cardboard comes from British Columbia's 300-year-old trees, which are processed in Great Lake-region pulp mills, where residents are warned against eating dioxin-contaminated fish. The cardboard is then shipped by the United Trucking Company to Latin American farms.
The boxed tomatoes, reddened by ether (a tasteless gas with no nutritional value), are sent via refrigerated trucks throughout North America. Both trucks and distribution centers are equipped with CFC cooling equipment made by DuPont of Wilmington, Deleware. Once the tomato arrived at its destination in Toronto, the plastic packaging was thrown away, picked up, shipped back into the U.S. and burned in incinerators in Detroit Michigan.
Throughout the process, fossil fuels drive the tomato's trip. The oil that fuels the trucks (and warms the climate) is drilled from the Gulf of Comache, Mexico, extracted by Chevron and processed by Pemex, the Mexican national oil company. The fuel that makes the tomato's trip possible is then shipped via tanker (dodging 3800 existing oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico to refineries in the U.S. Gulf coast that are uniquely responsible for the death of the region's environment and economy. the fuel is then distributed to the plastic makers, pesticide pushers, packaging barons and motor-vehicle owners that make this killer tomato's 3,000-mile attack possible.
If we look at the true economics of an everyday item like a 50-cent tomato - including the social costs of this type of production - you can see what is really driving this type of economic system. You realize that having your own garden and growing your own tomatoes can be a very subversive and radical act.
And it makes the fruit taste that much sweeter.
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:27 PM
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“The chronic crisis of low farm prices and high production costs during the 1980’s forced off the land 24% of the rural population in the USA. Nebraska lost one third of its rural population. Since 1945 the United States has eliminated 4 million farmers. Land loss among blacks in the South continues at a rate of two and one half times greater than the national average. At one time there were 926,000 African American farmers. All of our black farmers may be gone by the year 2000…
…If we continue to allow this elite group of economic giants to dominate the farm and food sector, we are poised to dump two billion of the 3.1 billion people who still live in the rural areas of the world into the cities. There unemployment and other social, political and environmental problems await them. The forces rapidly pushing the world towards industrialization of agriculture are the same forces dominating U.S. farm and food production.”
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:34 PM
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Find out more at this URL: http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/pubs/csa/csa.shtml
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Posted by: dikaiosyne on Dec 18, 2006 3:46 PM
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» fuck you, dikheadaiosyne
Posted by: AdamG
» RE: bottom line thats moronic
Posted by: sasquuatch55
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Posted by: Jarmadi on Dec 20, 2006 3:09 PM
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Feral hogs can plague large corporate farms, and also the smallest of family farm operations. Trapping seems to be the best way to limit populations of these hogs. Last fall we set one hog trap of about 8 ft diameter on the edge of one wheat field, and in one month caught 30 hogs that averaged about 110 lb each, but doubtless did not even dent the local population.
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Posted by: Netanya3 on Dec 21, 2006 6:00 AM
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Posted by: Netanya3 on Dec 21, 2006 6:01 AM
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Posted by: rsaxto on Dec 18, 2006 2:17 AM
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Posted by: djnoll on Dec 18, 2006 3:54 AM
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» The spinach wasn't organic
Posted by: AdamG
» RE: The spinach wasn't organic
Posted by: djnoll
» Collateral Damage OF GREED
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Daniel Shays on Dec 18, 2006 5:03 AM
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Posted by: mdruss42 on Dec 18, 2006 5:51 AM
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Posted by: Bobsays on Dec 18, 2006 6:14 AM
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My gran worked as a cleaner yet she bought and paid for a house. I have prestige jobs, yet I am only just about able to afford a mortgage in my 'world class' city. The third worldification of buying power and the economy has taken living standards down. And time-poor people cut corners and factory farming is happy to help. My cousin is a millionaire who made her money peddling high fat, high sodium ready meals to lazy workers. Welcome to the modern world.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» grandmother might of been poor, but smart
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: grandmother might of been poor, but smart
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
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Posted by: michaeltwatson on Dec 18, 2006 6:15 AM
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» Control Over US Always Takes Its Toll
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Sunfell on Dec 18, 2006 6:29 AM
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I have friends who have 'shares' in cattle that are naturally grown and fed, and we have a community farm association where people can subscribe to get baskets of fresh grown local produce every week or so.
And there is nothing wrong with growing your own veggies- even in containers. Just make sure to get good compost.
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Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Dec 18, 2006 7:17 AM
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» RE: Ag-Business Killing America
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: Ag-Business Killing America
Posted by: Krain61
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Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Dec 18, 2006 7:21 AM
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1. Oil prices are leading to cuts in pesticide use, which in turn allows insects to spread more germs. Also, R&D in pesticides has decreased because the costs are becoming so prohibitive. More and more insects are becoming immune to existing pesticides every year.
2. Global warming has led to more resilient insect populations. Especially, but not limited to, seasonal insect populations.
3. General competition leads to cost cutting. Sanitation must have been on the chopping block.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: 3 obvious reasons... - A solution to the first and even the second solution does exist.
Posted by: maxpayne
» My Obvious
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: My Obvious
Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: crusty
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: 3 obvious reasons...
Posted by: shoosta
Comments are closed-
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 18, 2006 8:01 AM
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P.S.: A former DEA member revealed to me the DEA's plans to give Big Agri/Phrma MORE EXEMPTIONS to allow the free-flow of MORE FOOD/DRUG POISONING and yes, she resigned in protest. At this rate, I'd prefer to join civil libertarians in calling for abolishing the DEA and/or HS or at leasting pushing for a MAJOR REFORM.
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Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Dec 18, 2006 9:03 AM
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Now there are just over 100,000 processing facilities and we manage 5,000 inspections. Good odds that a company can run a facility for close to 20 years and never get inspected.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Try this math
Posted by: yellow
» NO YOU Try this math
Posted by: Krain61
» That was incredible!
Posted by: ABetterFuture
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Dec 18, 2006 9:40 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Contaminated feces? As opposed to Gaia's own rosey-smelling poo-petals?
The author should have stuck with making the case for buying from local farms based on personal preference, a distaste for over-involvement of government in commerce, and the questionable soundness of predicating our food supply on dirt cheap energy in perpetuity. Those are very strong points, and they can made in a quite compelling manner.
Attempting to attribute the recent infections by entero-pathogenic strains of E. coli to farming tactics employed to cheaply feed 300M Americans lends the author's argument less credibility, not more. Make the case for local farms based on their own merits, not by throwing...well, "contaminated feces" at large scale commerce, hoping something will stick. This E. coli "the-sky-is-falling" fluff piece was chock full of the same stuff it attempts to lament.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Not all bullsh*t comes from the back end of bovines.
Posted by: Tricia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: cstriker on Dec 18, 2006 10:44 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good luck with your article.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Note to Author
Posted by: Krain61
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Krain61 on Dec 18, 2006 1:01 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People who have springs and do not put chorine in there water and eat the stuff they raise they rarely get sick..I know I'm one of them.If you eat organic meat for one whole month and then eat a micky d's burger you would get sick to your stomach.So if you have kids and don't take them out to eat that crap they won't get sick as often.If your lucky to have your own milk cow you would help them and yourself even more.. If you bought natural and then was able to avoid doctors then one would off set the other..I havn't been to a doctor in almost 20 years except to have surgery on my knee and shoulder but nothing else..So it's your choice.I deliver Hazmat loads and have delivered stuff to the places that make the food you eat..The one load had 5 placards on it and one of them was poison{skull and cross bones} Cambells soup was the place.
Mmm Mmm Good! We as Americans are afraid to say and do the right thing..They say by having mega farms will reduce the price you pay..Why do local Dairy Farmers still get almost the same price that got almost 25 or 30 years ago but were paying how freakin much for milk and dairy poducts.Sounds like a deal? Not!
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Posted by: sasquuatch55 on Dec 18, 2006 1:10 PM
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» RE: We will be screwed
Posted by: sasquuatch55
» We will be screwed if we don't change things soon.
Posted by: Krain61
Comments are closed-
Posted by: bob t on Dec 18, 2006 2:17 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Food Security+Agribusiness+NAFTA Superhighway+ Republican Party=Terrorism+WWIII=Bush Family/Neocons= 'A NEW World Order'.
Thats certainly not my choice, is it yours? I doubt it, just ask yourself if that scenario doesn't sound and fell quite ominous to you and your family. Read On...
I would never buy food or anything else from Pulaski, Tenn becuse it would be contaminated, not by e.coli, but by Tennessee racism and republican racism.
But beyond that, the solution is very simple and that is our gov't, but not now, but maybe someday when it is once again our gov't must stop all subsidies to agribusiness. I want my farm subsidy tax dollars to go only to small and medium family farms, nothing else. That won't be supported by agribusiness or their corrupt republican friends who care nothing about America or our security but only their own wealth. Family farms totally contribute to our american independance and by the same token to our countries security.
Other examples of corporate greed that lessens our countries security are the oil companies, the BIG BUSINESSES that suck up all the funds of the Small Business Administration (SBA) and Micro$oft is number one on that list and the Nafta Superhighway which will be huge in destroying our security while stealing jobs from america's truckdrivers(giving them to mexican truck drivers and who do you trust more american or mexican truck drivers; and stealing jobs from american stevedores who work on our docks, once again who do you trust more to protect our ports and their security). And yet just look at what the Bushies and their Republican corportocracy are doing as they work toward the NAFTA Superhighway goal. This will draw down our countries security to zero and is very highly likely to cause terrorists(just exactly who are the terrorists now) to achieve their goals, once more throwing our country into death and chaos. And so I am led to ask why would they do this? To me the answer is very obvious, it will lead to Repub desire for 'A NEW World Order' by causing the Republicans to take control of America and then to start another world war. And remember our congress knew nothing about all of this until approx 2-3months ago. So how is that for whats left of our democracy. OK, our Republic, but you all know what I mean.
Fight for democracy
PRAY FOR PEACE
Bob DAmico
Cleve, Oh
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:22 PM
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by Peter Bahouth
Last January, while sitting in a restaurant in Toronto, I ordered a salad. The salad came with a tomato on it. I found myself wondering, "Where did this tomato come from?" So I tracked it.
This tomato's story begins on land acquired by the US-based Jolly Green Giant Company in partnership with the Mexican Development Corporation. The land was previously an ejido - land used by farmers for publicly owned cooperative farms.
The tomato seed, a hybrid developed from an original Mexican strain, is now patented and owned by Calgene, Inc., which purchased the research from the University of California at Davis. The University developed the hybrid with a research grant paid for by U.S. tax dollars.
The land was fumigated with methyl bromide, an ozone-depleter 120 times more potent than Chloroflourocarbon-111 (CFC-111). It was also treated with pesticides developed, manufactured and distributed by the Monsanto corporation, one of the US' largest polluters. Production waste was shipped to the world's largest hazardous waste landfill in Emelle, Alabama - a predominantly poor African-American community.
The Mexican farm workers were given no protection from the pesticides: no gloves, masks or safety instructions. They make approximately $2.50 a day and have no access to health care.
Once harvested, the tomato was placed was placed with others on a plastic tray covered in plastic wrap, then placed in a cardboard box. The plastic is manufactured with chlorine produced by the Formosa company of Point Comfort, Texas. Workers and citizens of Point Comfort face a potentially significant risk of cancer and immune-suppression disease due to exposure to dioxin, a byproduct of chlorine production.
The cardboard comes from British Columbia's 300-year-old trees, which are processed in Great Lake-region pulp mills, where residents are warned against eating dioxin-contaminated fish. The cardboard is then shipped by the United Trucking Company to Latin American farms.
The boxed tomatoes, reddened by ether (a tasteless gas with no nutritional value), are sent via refrigerated trucks throughout North America. Both trucks and distribution centers are equipped with CFC cooling equipment made by DuPont of Wilmington, Deleware. Once the tomato arrived at its destination in Toronto, the plastic packaging was thrown away, picked up, shipped back into the U.S. and burned in incinerators in Detroit Michigan.
Throughout the process, fossil fuels drive the tomato's trip. The oil that fuels the trucks (and warms the climate) is drilled from the Gulf of Comache, Mexico, extracted by Chevron and processed by Pemex, the Mexican national oil company. The fuel that makes the tomato's trip possible is then shipped via tanker (dodging 3800 existing oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico to refineries in the U.S. Gulf coast that are uniquely responsible for the death of the region's environment and economy. the fuel is then distributed to the plastic makers, pesticide pushers, packaging barons and motor-vehicle owners that make this killer tomato's 3,000-mile attack possible.
If we look at the true economics of an everyday item like a 50-cent tomato - including the social costs of this type of production - you can see what is really driving this type of economic system. You realize that having your own garden and growing your own tomatoes can be a very subversive and radical act.
And it makes the fruit taste that much sweeter.
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:27 PM
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“The chronic crisis of low farm prices and high production costs during the 1980’s forced off the land 24% of the rural population in the USA. Nebraska lost one third of its rural population. Since 1945 the United States has eliminated 4 million farmers. Land loss among blacks in the South continues at a rate of two and one half times greater than the national average. At one time there were 926,000 African American farmers. All of our black farmers may be gone by the year 2000…
…If we continue to allow this elite group of economic giants to dominate the farm and food sector, we are poised to dump two billion of the 3.1 billion people who still live in the rural areas of the world into the cities. There unemployment and other social, political and environmental problems await them. The forces rapidly pushing the world towards industrialization of agriculture are the same forces dominating U.S. farm and food production.”
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Posted by: lrrysgl on Dec 18, 2006 3:34 PM
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Find out more at this URL: http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/pubs/csa/csa.shtml
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Posted by: dikaiosyne on Dec 18, 2006 3:46 PM
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» fuck you, dikheadaiosyne
Posted by: AdamG
» RE: bottom line thats moronic
Posted by: sasquuatch55
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Posted by: Jarmadi on Dec 20, 2006 3:09 PM
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Feral hogs can plague large corporate farms, and also the smallest of family farm operations. Trapping seems to be the best way to limit populations of these hogs. Last fall we set one hog trap of about 8 ft diameter on the edge of one wheat field, and in one month caught 30 hogs that averaged about 110 lb each, but doubtless did not even dent the local population.
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Posted by: Netanya3 on Dec 21, 2006 6:00 AM
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Posted by: Netanya3 on Dec 21, 2006 6:01 AM
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