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What Michael Pollan Hasn't Told You About Food

By Onnesha Roychoudhuri, AlterNet. Posted May 15, 2008.


As both obesity and hunger are on the rise, a new book shows why we shouldn't feel guilty about our food choices but angry with a corrupt food system.

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TV dinners were launched at a time when only a small percentage of Americans actually owned TVs. Thus, the meals, writes Raj Patel, "were what people ate while they dreamed of affording one." In the American dream, we imagine a bucolic Midwest, a place of bounty, yet the reality is that the breadbasket of America is rife with poverty and a declining life expectancy. The idyllic vision of quaint American farmland doesn't work like that "except in fiction," says Patel, and there is perhaps no greater fiction than the comforting hand of the free market -- particularly as it pertains to food.

Patel's new book Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System makes visible the people behind the abstraction and reveals a global food system that, with our complicity, continues to alienate farmers and consumers alike, all while fattening the pocketbooks of a few middlemen.

To read Patel is to understand the logic behind the sweets company, Nestle, acquiring the weight loss magnate Jenny Craig or why Wal-Mart is free to raise prices in areas where they have already killed off the competition. In the language of markets, these problems are not "self-correcting." Only the profound failure of the prevailing metaphor of the Invisible Hand hampers us from seeing what Patel has spent years of research making visible. In an interview with AlterNet, Patel explains how "the way we choose food today comes from distinctly abnormal roots," how these roots connect us to farmers and consumers around the world, and why we should get angry, not feel guilty.

Onnesha Roychoudhuri: Of the origins of the supermarket, you say: "Shoppers' freedom of choice was born in a cage. What we have come to believe in as 'unfettered freedom to consume' was always intended to be guided by chicken wire." Can you explain?

Raj Patel: The original supermarket was a cost-saving invention born around 1917, the same time as the U.S. was experiencing food riots. Retailers needed to be able to find a cheaper way of selling the same food to a public that demanded low prices because their incomes weren't increasing and the price of food was going through the roof.

There's a route through the supermarket that looks like an elementary rat in maze experiment where you enter one end of the supermarket and follow a path that takes you through everything that there is to offer. Saunders insisted that the store clerks not be allowed to talk to anyone. Their job was solely to make sure that things were filled high on the shelves. Instead, it was consumers who would do the assessment of goods and pile them into a cart or a basket and then pay for them at the end of this long maze. In other words, it was a very constrained and funneled environment.

OR: Can you point out some more of the ways in which the supermarket experience is such a constrained environment?

RP: The resemblance to rats in cages in laboratories is more than cosmetic. The way that we shop today in supermarkets is profoundly manipulated. Everything about it is the result of millions of dollars in investments and experiments. Everything about it: the lighting, the positioning of things, the reason that the milk is always at the back, all of these are ways in which we're manipulated. The profound irony is that we go into supermarkets and we are made to believe that we choose freely, but the moment we step through the doors of the supermarket, we have been made for our food. We are being crafted in that environment into people who will impulse purchase, will accept a range of fruits and vegetables that is very narrow, will think that when we pick between Coke and Pepsi, that that's real choice.

OR: Explain for whom the free market works and what "free market" means in the context of food.

RP: Free markets in food and certainly global markets in food are a very new thing. They are barely 200 years old and their origins have everything to do with colonialism. The world's first free market in grain was the market in wheat in the 1880s. This market was forged in imperialism and conquest, particularly by the British over the grain baskets of South Asia.

The social safety nets that existed in India under feudal society had been knocked away by the British. If people couldn't afford food, they didn't get to eat, and if they couldn't buy food, they starved. As a result of the imposition of markets in food, 13 million people across the world died in the 19th century. They died in the golden age of liberal capitalism. Those are the origins of markets in food.


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Onnesha Roychoudhuri is a San Francisco-based writer and editor. She has written for AlterNet, The American Prospect, Salon, Mother Jones, Truthdig, In These Times, Huffington Post and Women's eNews.

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View:
We Know What You Want!
Posted by: Sushi on May 15, 2008 4:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Read the book "We Know What You Want - How They Change Your Mind." It's cheap, it's concise and easy bathroom reading. Tells you everything you want to know about how we are manipulated everywhere we go about everything we "choose".

Sushi
"Beer is now cheaper than gas. Drink - don't drive!"

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Stuffed and Starved
Posted by: bbauerly on May 15, 2008 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a great intro book to critical political economy of food. Patel is able to show how the political and social structures of our society shape our food decisions and how it is not simply a matter of making the right choices. See also anything by Philip McMichael and Harriet Friedman.

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» Making the Right Choices Posted by: Cathyc
Multinational corporations only grow profits; not food for a starving planet
Posted by: Jefferson's Guardian on May 15, 2008 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When will the proponents of free enterprise and the "market place" finally come to the realization that it really doesn't exist? The only "invisible hand" is the one stroking their inflatable egos and mean-spirited concepts of "healthy competition". The capitalism as espoused by Adam Smith doesn't exist, except in a very small microcosm of small entrepreneurs in industries and fields untouched (so far) by multinational corporate influence.

As the author very aptly describes, our choices are mostly nonexistent. This doesn't only apply to the things we eat, but in so many other realms also.

Corporate capitalism will one day be looked upon as being as ancient and cruel to humankind as torture, although for some governments both are, and will continue to be, acceptable.


"Everybody counts or nobody counts." -- Hieronymus "Harry" Bosch

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A rational solution
Posted by: Last Chance on May 15, 2008 5:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps the only decisive answer to this dilemma is to buy a small parcel of land, perhaps 10 acres, and grow your own food according to organic permaculture standards; and while you're at it you may as well build a small house and live there with your family. Then perhaps your friends might want to do the same on land nearby. That way you could establish a small self-reliant community free from the horrors of mainstream commercialism? Is there time, or is it too late? If Saving the Earth

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» RE: A rational solution Posted by: tommy_slothrop
» RE: A rational solution Posted by: sadenshi
» A Nice Fantasy Posted by: Artkansas
» I volunteer Posted by: Artkansas
» Volunteer to spread the word Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Volunteer to spread the word Posted by: Last Chance
» Come join us! Posted by: Bytesmiths
Otto .
Posted by: otto on May 15, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article! TAkes me back to Vance Packard's "Hidden Persuaders" in the 50's. That's all I can say for now, because I'm still digesting a lot of what was said.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Bad Interview
Posted by: Gravitas on May 15, 2008 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While the book raises some interesting points, it was a bad interview. In the first place, obesity is NOT on the rise! The rates have leveled off in the last few years. Almost every assertion about obesity in MSM comes from BARFMA (bigdiet/pharma) and I am sooooo sick of them getting a free pass. We rightly challenge what big food has to say, but big diet gets uncritically accepted.

Furthermore obesity never has and never will be only about food! Dieting itself makes people fatter. (And as a sociologist who has researched the stigma of fat for over 2 decades, he oversimplifies the reasons for dieting in the country. It goes much much deeper than the food industry. It is at the heart of our morality!) Furthermore, pollution and environmental estrogens have been associated with weight gain! We need to seriously explore that. It is messing up folks metabolisms no matter what they eat. But they are getting the blame, and ALL the corporations are getting the profit!

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» RE: Bad "Facts" Posted by: jimidee
» RE: Bad "Facts" Posted by: Cooltruth
» Who gets bariatric surgery? Posted by: BlueTigress
Dig Up Your Lawn
Posted by: bjandresen on May 15, 2008 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All across America there are lawns wasting water and gathering pesticides. Dig them up. Plant some food! A friend of mine has tomatoes and squash producing abundantly in her dining room. They look great! Food, unlike gas, is something we can do something about.

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» RE: Dig Up Your Lawn Posted by: eek
even a small opt-out has amazing rewards
Posted by: Suzon on May 15, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A month ago I became a keeper of four point-of-lay hybrid hens. They are easy to care for, give excellent eggs for mere chicken feed and provide heat for the compost heap.

Not only can I bake a cake knowing that the eggs came from chickens who are living a good life but I can have a delicious omlet for supper knowing that (aside from a bit of butter) no air or road miles were involved.

It has even unexpectedly enhanced our urban neighborhood of terraced houses. People feel good about this tiny enterprise in our midst. Adults remember their parents or grandparents keeping chickens and children are enchanted to see these storybook characters scratching about for real ("hentertainment" fascinates precisely because it isn't scripted--yesterday I saw a hen "fly" sideways).

Most large scale human activity is harmful, unnecessary and motivated by fear. If everyone could be assured of having their basic needs met (shelter, fuel, water, sanitation, medical care and communication), we would see agribusiness, big Pharma, banking, insurance, crime, poverty and war for the frauds that they are.

It is possible to reclaim what has been stolen from us. Why should a few psychopaths decide what the world should be like?

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The real food problem
Posted by: jeffrey7 on May 15, 2008 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Besides the fact that the foods we buy are grossly unhealthy we need to look at what's the biggest troublewith our foods. It's the chemicals used to fertilize,de-bug and de-grass the land used. It's in the amount of genetic tinkering that's done on food. One biggie in the gene/food market is making fooods pest resistant. It was bad enough the food has to be washed very well before using to get pesticides off them,now we have to endure bug poison in every cell of the plant. Something that can't be washed off nor boiled away.
.. In my county, the kind of herbicide used has a cancer rating of 10 to the 400th power above the safe cancer levels for these chemicals. Acrolien is it's name and it's in most herbicides sold be Shell Oil in very deadly quantities.
The so-called 'ranches' used for poultry,pigs and cattle are greatly unhealthful to the animales and use up far too much water and feed than do the people who live in and around such 'ranches'.
With all the tinkering with the food crops, the re-feeding of animal parts back to the very animals we choose to eat,creating tremendious problems with sickened animals for food. We have to ask ourselves is the FDA really looking out for us,the consumer,the People or do they serve the financial speculators that only care about making money and not the tyranny of unhealthy food production?
Screw them all, learn to grow your own foods....and LIVE.
Jeffrey7 for Prez '08

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» RE: The real food problem Posted by: Cathyblj
After the revolution...?!
Posted by: 2dogarage on May 15, 2008 8:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What an optimist!

And "bourgeois circle-jerk of olive oil and red wine enthusiasts"--rich! I'd read anything Patel writes.

I remember when that guy brought a lawsuit against McDonald's for causing his obesity and everyone scoffed that it was his own fault. I agreed with him, billions of dollars are being raked in by these fast food merchants of death and disease by falsely marketing their products as food when it actually isn't. They should be sued for massive fraud at the very least, never mind the fallout of rising health care costs and the exploitation of the poor laborers who process this crap as well as the exploitation of animals raised in cruel conditions in massive numbers to feed the starving obese in America.

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» hmmmmm..... Posted by: 2dogarage
» RE: After the revolution...?! Posted by: badkitty
» RE: After the revolution...?! Posted by: iatsebean
Noone HAS to eat crap
Posted by: iatsebean on May 15, 2008 8:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I agree that the food industry is a disgusting example of profit over people, I wholeheartedly disagree that we can't make certain choices that can make us healthier. The assertion that it's either McD's or BK with no time for a healthy meal is dead wrong. It's very much like the i don't have time to exercise excuse. If you make the time to learn to cook just a little you will end up saving both time and money. We need to CHOOSE to make eating healthily a bigger priority than keeping up with the the latest trends.
We're like the frog in the water that is brought slowly to a boil. Yes the food industry and 'the man' are much to blame for us boiling to death - but we need to jump out!
I'm just an average blue collar family - husband works fulltime, I work parttime, both of us raising two toddlers. Yes, time is at a premium. However, rather than turning on having to catch the latest episode we make the time to prepare and enjoy meals as a family. We prioritize our budget to spend more of it on good food. We don't have the latest gadgets, we use only one car, we brown bag at work, we shop thrift stores for clothing and furniture. But we eat well. I shop local farmers markets and make vegetable gardening and preserving part of the family activities.
It's partly about priorities and I don't think that absolving the public of responsibility for this situation and blaming the big bad corps is entirely right. We could almost all make the choice to live more simply and healthily.

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» RE: Noone HAS to eat crap Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: Noone HAS to eat crap Posted by: iatsebean
» Time for TV, Not for Dinner? Posted by: Bouldercreeker
age 65, vegan 9 years, starting to grow own vegetables in city yard in Santa Fe
Posted by: rmforall on May 15, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My new breakfast-- organic sprouted grain toast with mustard and beans.

I've been reviewing aspartame toxicity research for 9 years:

two aspartame (methanol, formaldehyde, formic acid) toxicity research studies by Resia Pretorius, U. Pretoria, South Africa, debate with JD Fernstrom: Murray 2008.04.04 2008.05.13
http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2008_04_01_archive.htm
Friday, April 4, 2008
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1536

"Of course, everyone chooses, as a natural priority, to enjoy
peace, joy, and love by helping to find, quickly share, and positively
act upon evidence about healthy and safe food, drink, and
environment."

Rich Murray, MA Room For All rmforall@comcast.net
505-501-2298 1943 Otowi Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505

http://RMForAll.blogspot.com new primary archive

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/messages
group with 125 members, 1,539 posts in a public archive

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartame/messages
group with 1,096 members, 22,620 posts in a public archive

methanol impurity in alcohol drinks [ and aspartame ] is turned
into neurotoxic formic acid, prevented by folic acid, re Fetal Alcohol
Syndrome, BM Kapur, DC Lehotay, PL Carlen at U. Toronto,
Alc Clin Exp Res 2007 Dec. plain text: detailed biochemistry,
CL Nie et al. 2007.07.18: Rich Murray 2008.02.24
http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2008_02_01_archive.htm
Sunday, February 24, 2008
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1524

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My Rant
Posted by: eboy on May 15, 2008 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article and subject. Goals figure out how to help increase the number of small farms and farmers. The internet could potentiallly help farmers solve their market access problems.
Which is how they get beaten out of a living.
Farmers markets are great but not good enough.

Grow as much as you can. Small farms are losing in this market place. C.S.A.'s can work if you can't grow your own. Conider working shares. Home delivery etc. Test the quality for yourself. Crap rots, quality dehydrates, and tastes better (higher brix). Share harvest with local food banks. Support seed banks and fight the corporate play for control of seeds. Which is the LAST, and final straw.

Source quality foods and herbs,(without side-effects)share and teach your friends what great food tastes like versus g.m.o. rock tomatoes. Learn about cleansing your body (colon, liver, bladder, arteries, candida and yeast) as a normal part of healthy living.

Source grass fed beef, lamb and chicken. Re-establish the necessary omega 3:6 ratio and
increase consumption of c.l.a. (conjugated linoleic acid) Anti-atherosclerosis and anti-cancer (#1 and #2 killers)! Sprout seeds for your salad.

Learn that we have been conditioned to choose poor quality. For example quality eggs should be orangey coloured, not pasty yellow. Chicken finished on corn will have a yellow colour under the skin versus pasty grey.
Hamburger from grass fed beef shouldn't shrink much when cooked.

Any doctor who doesn't advocate eating quality food isn't worthy of such a title. As is any 'farmer' who doesn't care about soil quality.

A man name Thomas Pawlick wrote a book called 'The End of Food' he talks about monopsony -the term used to describe the economic structure that controls the food supply.

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» Biodynamics--the next frontier Posted by: 2dogarage
» RE: My Rant Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
» RE: My Rant Posted by: yale
Don't worry. As petroleum supplies run further lower and get more expensive, so too will junk food.
Posted by: GrantBurkeVT on May 15, 2008 11:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What wasn't told was the fact that let alone transportation, it takes 10 calories of petroleum burning to manufacture 1 calorie of junk food. Keeping junk food artificially "low" in price has finally been losing ground for the past few years and it is only a matter of time before healthy food actually gets a fair chance to compete in the currently RIGGED market dubbed "free".

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rn
Posted by: mnatra on May 15, 2008 12:07 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article, but stop using the word irony it has been over used since the Vietnam era and is way over used and has no impact. a good synonym is the word; deception or criminal

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and the book is even better....
Posted by: DaBear on May 15, 2008 12:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But the very best way to enjoy his book, would be to hear him reading it. I seriously hope he does and audio-book version because his voice, his inflection, his emphasis, his dry wit, his irrascible humor is so infectious. Truthtelling in rare form. I heard him on Democracy Now! and he was fantastic. The interview here is just the tip of the iceberg but I'm glad he got in his digs just the same in print.

Why is pleasure, or healthy food, reserved for the rich (owning class)? People "choose" poorly because they don't have time or money for real choices... the food system, all of it. Classic stuff working people have known about for years but no one ever listens to us. Mebbe they'll listen to Raj instead.

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When the economy gets bad enough . . .
Posted by: billwald on May 15, 2008 3:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the economy gets bad enough people will tear up their front lawns, plane veggies, and force their lazy kids to pull weeds.

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Food distribution, the poor and life's simple pleasures..
Posted by: socrates2 on May 15, 2008 4:51 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Besides elementary macro-economics and currency-printing policies, food production is definitely an issue that must be addressed in our republic.
Immortal and amoral Ag Biz and "middlemen" corporations that thrive on profits fatten and kill us and profit all around. Obviously, leisurely, pleasureable mealtimes and the art of conversation have gone the way of the Model T.
And, yet, with those pleasures gone, corporations have found a way to profit.
I ask myself why is it that the the sole "pleasures" left to the typical non-jet set individual are alcohol and sex?
Is it because corporations make outrageous profits on booze and, with sex, more babies/consumers are introduced into the equation! Thus, more corporate consumers to replace the dying ones?
Could that also be the reason for the prohibition on drugs that provide a "high?" Corporations can't control a lot of those "weeds" that grow anywhere on the planet...
Jefferson's dream of a vast land covered by small farmers had become a quaint idea in the Twenty-first century.
Kudos for writing this expose.

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» jefferson's dream Posted by: e rice
Kristallnacht Amerika
Posted by: Cathyc on May 15, 2008 4:57 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wikipedia:-

Kristallnacht, also known as Reichskristallnacht, Reichspogromnacht, Crystal Night and the Night of Broken Glass, was a pogrom that occurred throughout Nazi Germany on November 9–November 10, 1938.

On November 7, 1938 a young German Jew, by the name of Herschel Grynszpan, enraged by his family's expulsion from Germany, walked into the German Embassy in Paris and fired five shots at a junior diplomat. Two days later, the diplomat was dead and Germany was in the grip of skillfully orchestrated anti-Jewish violence. In the early hours of 10 November, an orgy of co-ordinated destruction broke out in cities, towns and villages throughout the Third Reich. A total of 100 Jews were killed in the incident.[1] The consequences of this violence were disastrous for the Jews of the Third Reich.

Kristallnacht saw the destruction in a single night of more than a thousand Synagogues, the ransacking of tens of thousands of Jewish businesses and homes, and more than 200,000 Jewish people were rounded up and taken to concentration camps. It marked the beginning of the systematic eradication of a people who could trace their ancestry in Germany to Roman times, and served as a prelude for the Holocaust that was to follow.

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» RE: Kristallnacht Amerika Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
RIP OUT THE LAWN
Posted by: edgeofnowhere on May 20, 2008 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Read James Kunstler THE LONG EMERGENCY which lays out a reasonably plausible scenario for our near future as the cheap oil era comes to a close. We will be concentrating on local food production and community. Get a head start and grow some food -- just get started with a few things and see what satisfaction it is to enjoy something you produced yourself. You don't have to eat junk! Get the kids to put down the video games and take up a shovel! You will HAVE to do tis to survive in all probability, so get a head start on it!

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ajavu27
Posted by: ajavu27 on May 29, 2008 7:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i think we have to face the fact that we need to seriously develop local and regional food security and be aware of all the luxury (i.e. unsustainable) foods we eat. for me that comes down to olive oil, coconut milk, and even many of the things we can grow in our region but instead truck in from texas and california. here in ohio, there is a movement to create local food security from community food initiatives, village bakery, della zona, and regional milling from frankferd farms in western PA. a new project here is looking at how a variety of staple crops grow in our region. the project can be viewed on this blog and i encourage folks to read it and post a comment so the USDA knows what people think about this kind of project. because the url is too long for this post, go to http://ncrsare.blogspot.com and scroll down to the article headline--New Staple Crops Coming to Ohio and the Surrounding Area. it's time for us to have grains, seeds, and beans grown closer to home as the real cost of food is upon us as the climate worsens and oil prices rise.
again, post a comment here and on the usda blog site. we want to know what others think about this project and we want the USDA to read your comments. thanks.

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