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this story came out last month..but..thought it was time to pass it out again...

http://www.alternet.org/story/20556/

 

Thanksgiving's Hidden Costs

 

By Christopher D. Cook, AlterNet. Posted November 23, 2004.

 

 

The bountiful feast on our holiday tables conceals the growing corporate

stranglehold on our food system – and what it's doing to our bodies and the

planet. Story Tools

 

 

Picture yourself in the supermarket, loading up your cart on a last-minute

Thanksgiving shopping spree. You're exhausted – you just want to get home, and

your senses are pummeled by the brightly packaged bounty all around you. You are

at once awakened and overwhelmed. What will you pick from this vast garden?

 

It's an astounding global selection that appears – at first glance – to be

fairly affordable (assuming you've got a little money). Shiny, freshly waxed

fruits and vegetables beckon from overflowing bins, hardly a bruise or

nonconforming shape in sight. Broccoli, oranges, bananas, asparagus, melons and

pineapples are piled high in the middle of winter. Crops hailing from Mexico,

Guatemala, Honduras, Chile, Argentina, every productive corner of America and

elsewhere, display the terrific powers of industrial agriculture, seemingly

boundless international trade, and rapid long distance transport of perishable

foods.

 

A few quick swivels of the shopping cart reveal long fluorescent boulevards of

packages and cans, each promising to save you time and enliven your taste buds.

There are pre-cut and flavored fruits and vegetables (produce with " value

added " ), fully prepared kids' lunches, multi-colored chips, soups and stews,

frozen dinners, a whole kingdom of precision-flavored cereals, sauces and

powdered meals. Just add water and plug in the microwave. It's a bachelor's (or

working parent's) paradise.

 

In today's American supermarket, there are no seasons, no limits. The world's

harvests and manufactured meals are at your fingertips. The supermarket appears

to symbolize the best of democratic capitalism, offering consumer choice and a

largess born of amazing productivity. But how does all this food actually get

here? Is it really as cheap and convenient as it seems?

 

In fact, this veneer of epicurean egalitarianism conceals a less glamorous set

of realities. Our most basic necessity has become a force behind a staggering

array of social, economic and environmental epidemics – pesticide-laminated

harvests, labor abuse, treacherous science, and, at the reins, a few

increasingly monopolistic corporations controlling nearly every aspect of human

sustenance. The way we make, market and eat food today creates rampant illness,

hunger, poverty, community disintegration and ecological decay – and even

threatens our future food supply. Consider for a moment the other side of the

ledger:

 

 

The way this extraordinary bounty is made puts our future at risk – eroding

topsoil and water supplies, poisoning the ground and polluting rivers and

streams with roughly one billion gallons of pesticide and another billion tons

of toxic manure runoff from huge animal factory farms.

 

 

That meat and chicken in your cart is filled with growth hormones and

pesticides, nothing likely to kill anyone, but enough to pose possible long-term

health risks. What can – and does – kill is all the bacteria in the meat, a

plague exacerbated by the way animals are " farmed " and processed in enormous

warehouses and lightning-speed assembly lines. More than 5,000 people die each

year from foodborne illnesses, and hundreds of thousands more require hospital

care.

 

 

Thanks in part to all that meat and dairy, and the proliferation of fat and

sugar in processed foods, nearly one third of Americans are obese, and close to

two-thirds are overweight.

 

 

Those meat factories, by virtue of their intense speed and volume, maim and

cripple tens of thousands of workers each year – many of them immigrants

shipped up from Mexico and Central America, discarded and replaced every few

months. Our meat supply, and much of our fruit and vegetable harvests, depend on

this steady flow of cheap, highly exploited, disposable labor.

 

 

The system that produces and transports this superabundance runs on oil and

diesel. The average food item on your supermarket shelf has traveled at least

1,500 miles, and all that long-distance transport requires millions of gallons

of diesel fuel. On today's industrial farm, giant tractors and combines spew

diesel fumes and kick up dust pollution, while huge single-crop harvests are

coaxed by 15 million tons of petroleum-based fertilizers each year. Experts such

as Cornell University's Dr. David Pimentel have found that U.S. agriculture –

largely through its reliance on petrochemical-based fertilizers and pesticides

– uses some 400 gallons of fossil fuel a year to feed every American. That's

more than 100 billion gallons of oil and oil equivalents used in the United

States each year just to manufacture food.

 

 

The bulk of the food in your shopping cart – especially the meat, dairy and

packaged products – is owned by a handful of exceedingly powerful corporations

that exercise increasing control over what we eat, how it is made, how much it

costs, and who produces and profits from it. Just five corporations now control

42 percent of all grocery sales in America.

 

 

Due to this intensifying corporate takeover, nearly 20,000 farmers go under each

year (one every half an hour), the victims of market centralization by food

corporations and supermarkets. When these farms disappear, the social and

economic fabric of rural communities is shattered; whole generations of highly

skilled producers of food are lost.

 

These are just some of the immense costs we never see on our supermarket

receipts. But we pay them nonetheless, in the form of taxes and public spending:

in excess of $10 billion a year in public health costs to treat food-related

illnesses, not to mention high cholesterol and heart disease; environmental

expenses for monitoring and cleaning up factory farm runoff spills that have

discharged millions of tons of animal manure into rivers and streams; workers'

compensation costs and public medical bills for injured farmworkers and meat

factory employees, who typically have no insurance; unemployment and welfare

payments to foreclosed farmers, and often many of the surrounding businesses

that rely on those farmers.

 

The Bad Miracle

 

How is it that the most essential ingredient in human life – trumped only by

oxygen and water in our hierarchy of necessities – has become a force of such

destructive magnitude? Since the 1950s we have heard the feverish boasts of

agribusiness: giant new machines raking in phenomenally massive harvests; the

miraculous ever-increasing productivity of the American farm; breadbasket and

" supermarket to the world. " No one can deny that the modern industrial

super-farm produces unprecedented bounty.

 

But most of the costs and casualties of Big Food are far-removed from

supermarket shelves. " The present land economy rests on a foundation of general

ignorance, " argues writer-farmer Wendell Berry. " Most of us don't know how we

live and at what costs, either ecologically or human ... For how long can we

maintain an industrial superstition that we can beat the world by destroying the

world's capacity to produce food? "

 

Our ignorance is nurtured by – and at the same time strengthens – the

growing corporate stranglehold on our food system. In recent years, leading

firms like Tyson Foods, Safeway, ADM and Cargill have gobbled up competitors and

consolidated their near-monopoly control over the entire food chain. In just

three years, between 1997 and 2000, the top five food retailers in America

(Kroger, Albertson's, Wal-Mart, Safeway and Ahold USA) nearly doubled their

market share – growing from 24 percent of all retail food sales, to an amazing

42 percent. The top four beef producers occupy an almost unprecedented 80

percent of the U.S. meat market.

 

Each time the Justice Department approves another merger or takeover, both

farmers and consumers lose power over what we grow and eat, how it is grown, how

much it costs.

 

Our Bodies, Our Money

 

The very way we eat affects the future of food. Our buying and dining choices

today affect our food options tomorrow. It's not simply a matter of

big-farm-versus-small-farm, or pesticides against organics, natural versus

genetically engineered. The food we eat is the product of a whole system that is

in the process of destroying itself – poisoning our air and water, turning

topsoil into useless dust, and putting farmers out to pasture. If we are to have

a truly healthy cornucopia that sustains society, the entire system of making,

distributing and marketing food must be sustainable.

 

What's needed is a whole new way of thinking about food – one that encompasses

health, affordability, accessibility, ecological sustainability, and an

economics that enables farmers to keep growing food.

 

There are paths to a better way: muscular antitrust measures to break up

corporate control over food; subsidy reform that shifts payments (currently

$15-20 billion a year) from large-scale agribusiness to ecologically sustainable

diversified farms; aggressive regulation (and enforcement) of the meat

industry's shoddy food safety practices and mistreatment of its workers; a

serious reduction in the 500,000 tons of toxic pesticides dumped on our food

each year; and major public investment in community food security projects that

link together small local producers and consumers to supply healthy, affordable,

sustainably produced food (the USDA ladled out just $4.6 million for such

efforts last year).

 

There are many other promising trends afloat – movements to expand farmers'

markets, serve organic foods in schools, and to encourage institutions like

schools and hospitals to purchase local organic food whenever possible.

 

Lacking major change in our food system, we all suffer. Some quickly, from

tainted meat and foreclosed farms, others gradually, from pesticide sprayings

and fat-laden, carcinogenic diets. The only winners are short-term: large-scale

subsidized farmers and agribusiness executives and shareholders. But even they

have to eat.

 

Christopher D. Cook is the author of Diet for a Dead Planet: How the Food

Industry Is Killing Us (New Press, November), from which this piece was adapted.

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What can I do about all that?

 

Well, I eat only fruits and veggies and let everything and everybody

else " freeze in the dark. "

 

Ron

 

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote:

> this story came out last month..but..thought it was time to pass

it out again...

> http://www.alternet.org/story/20556/

>

> Thanksgiving's Hidden Costs

>

> By Christopher D. Cook, AlterNet. Posted November 23, 2004.

>

>

> The bountiful feast on our holiday tables conceals the growing

corporate stranglehold on our food system †" and what it's doing to

our bodies and the planet. Story Tools

>

>

> Picture yourself in the supermarket, loading up your cart on a

last-minute Thanksgiving shopping spree. You're exhausted †" you

just want to get home, and your senses are pummeled by the brightly

packaged bounty all around you. You are at once awakened and

overwhelmed. What will you pick from this vast garden?

>

> It's an astounding global selection that appears †" at first

glance †" to be fairly affordable (assuming you've got a little

money). Shiny, freshly waxed fruits and vegetables beckon from

overflowing bins, hardly a bruise or nonconforming shape in sight.

Broccoli, oranges, bananas, asparagus, melons and pineapples are

piled high in the middle of winter. Crops hailing from Mexico,

Guatemala, Honduras, Chile, Argentina, every productive corner of

America and elsewhere, display the terrific powers of industrial

agriculture, seemingly boundless international trade, and rapid long

distance transport of perishable foods.

>

> A few quick swivels of the shopping cart reveal long fluorescent

boulevards of packages and cans, each promising to save you time and

enliven your taste buds. There are pre-cut and flavored fruits and

vegetables (produce with " value added " ), fully prepared kids'

lunches, multi-colored chips, soups and stews, frozen dinners, a

whole kingdom of precision-flavored cereals, sauces and powdered

meals. Just add water and plug in the microwave. It's a bachelor's

(or working parent's) paradise.

>

> In today's American supermarket, there are no seasons, no limits.

The world's harvests and manufactured meals are at your fingertips.

The supermarket appears to symbolize the best of democratic

capitalism, offering consumer choice and a largess born of amazing

productivity. But how does all this food actually get here? Is it

really as cheap and convenient as it seems?

>

> In fact, this veneer of epicurean egalitarianism conceals a less

glamorous set of realities. Our most basic necessity has become a

force behind a staggering array of social, economic and

environmental epidemics †" pesticide-laminated harvests, labor

abuse, treacherous science, and, at the reins, a few increasingly

monopolistic corporations controlling nearly every aspect of human

sustenance. The way we make, market and eat food today creates

rampant illness, hunger, poverty, community disintegration and

ecological decay †" and even threatens our future food supply.

Consider for a moment the other side of the ledger:

>

>

> The way this extraordinary bounty is made puts our future at risk

†" eroding topsoil and water supplies, poisoning the ground and

polluting rivers and streams with roughly one billion gallons of

pesticide and another billion tons of toxic manure runoff from huge

animal factory farms.

>

>

> That meat and chicken in your cart is filled with growth hormones

and pesticides, nothing likely to kill anyone, but enough to pose

possible long-term health risks. What can †" and does †" kill is

all the bacteria in the meat, a plague exacerbated by the way

animals are " farmed " and processed in enormous warehouses and

lightning-speed assembly lines. More than 5,000 people die each year

from foodborne illnesses, and hundreds of thousands more require

hospital care.

>

>

> Thanks in part to all that meat and dairy, and the proliferation

of fat and sugar in processed foods, nearly one third of Americans

are obese, and close to two-thirds are overweight.

>

>

> Those meat factories, by virtue of their intense speed and volume,

maim and cripple tens of thousands of workers each year †" many of

them immigrants shipped up from Mexico and Central America,

discarded and replaced every few months. Our meat supply, and much

of our fruit and vegetable harvests, depend on this steady flow of

cheap, highly exploited, disposable labor.

>

>

> The system that produces and transports this superabundance runs

on oil and diesel. The average food item on your supermarket shelf

has traveled at least 1,500 miles, and all that long-distance

transport requires millions of gallons of diesel fuel. On today's

industrial farm, giant tractors and combines spew diesel fumes and

kick up dust pollution, while huge single-crop harvests are coaxed

by 15 million tons of petroleum-based fertilizers each year. Experts

such as Cornell University's Dr. David Pimentel have found that U.S.

agriculture †" largely through its reliance on petrochemical-based

fertilizers and pesticides †" uses some 400 gallons of fossil fuel

a year to feed every American. That's more than 100 billion gallons

of oil and oil equivalents used in the United States each year just

to manufacture food.

>

>

> The bulk of the food in your shopping cart †" especially the

meat, dairy and packaged products †" is owned by a handful of

exceedingly powerful corporations that exercise increasing control

over what we eat, how it is made, how much it costs, and who

produces and profits from it. Just five corporations now control 42

percent of all grocery sales in America.

>

>

> Due to this intensifying corporate takeover, nearly 20,000 farmers

go under each year (one every half an hour), the victims of market

centralization by food corporations and supermarkets. When these

farms disappear, the social and economic fabric of rural communities

is shattered; whole generations of highly skilled producers of food

are lost.

>

> These are just some of the immense costs we never see on our

supermarket receipts. But we pay them nonetheless, in the form of

taxes and public spending: in excess of $10 billion a year in public

health costs to treat food-related illnesses, not to mention high

cholesterol and heart disease; environmental expenses for monitoring

and cleaning up factory farm runoff spills that have discharged

millions of tons of animal manure into rivers and streams; workers'

compensation costs and public medical bills for injured farmworkers

and meat factory employees, who typically have no insurance;

unemployment and welfare payments to foreclosed farmers, and often

many of the surrounding businesses that rely on those farmers.

>

> The Bad Miracle

>

> How is it that the most essential ingredient in human life †"

trumped only by oxygen and water in our hierarchy of necessities †"

has become a force of such destructive magnitude? Since the 1950s we

have heard the feverish boasts of agribusiness: giant new machines

raking in phenomenally massive harvests; the miraculous ever-

increasing productivity of the American farm; breadbasket

and " supermarket to the world. " No one can deny that the modern

industrial super-farm produces unprecedented bounty.

>

> But most of the costs and casualties of Big Food are far-removed

from supermarket shelves. " The present land economy rests on a

foundation of general ignorance, " argues writer-farmer Wendell

Berry. " Most of us don't know how we live and at what costs, either

ecologically or human ... For how long can we maintain an industrial

superstition that we can beat the world by destroying the world's

capacity to produce food? "

>

> Our ignorance is nurtured by †" and at the same time strengthens

†" the growing corporate stranglehold on our food system. In recent

years, leading firms like Tyson Foods, Safeway, ADM and Cargill have

gobbled up competitors and consolidated their near-monopoly control

over the entire food chain. In just three years, between 1997 and

2000, the top five food retailers in America (Kroger, Albertson's,

Wal-Mart, Safeway and Ahold USA) nearly doubled their market share

†" growing from 24 percent of all retail food sales, to an amazing

42 percent. The top four beef producers occupy an almost

unprecedented 80 percent of the U.S. meat market.

>

> Each time the Justice Department approves another merger or

takeover, both farmers and consumers lose power over what we grow

and eat, how it is grown, how much it costs.

>

> Our Bodies, Our Money

>

> The very way we eat affects the future of food. Our buying and

dining choices today affect our food options tomorrow. It's not

simply a matter of big-farm-versus-small-farm, or pesticides against

organics, natural versus genetically engineered. The food we eat is

the product of a whole system that is in the process of destroying

itself †" poisoning our air and water, turning topsoil into useless

dust, and putting farmers out to pasture. If we are to have a truly

healthy cornucopia that sustains society, the entire system of

making, distributing and marketing food must be sustainable.

>

> What's needed is a whole new way of thinking about food †" one

that encompasses health, affordability, accessibility, ecological

sustainability, and an economics that enables farmers to keep

growing food.

>

> There are paths to a better way: muscular antitrust measures to

break up corporate control over food; subsidy reform that shifts

payments (currently $15-20 billion a year) from large-scale

agribusiness to ecologically sustainable diversified farms;

aggressive regulation (and enforcement) of the meat industry's

shoddy food safety practices and mistreatment of its workers; a

serious reduction in the 500,000 tons of toxic pesticides dumped on

our food each year; and major public investment in community food

security projects that link together small local producers and

consumers to supply healthy, affordable, sustainably produced food

(the USDA ladled out just $4.6 million for such efforts last year).

>

> There are many other promising trends afloat †" movements to

expand farmers' markets, serve organic foods in schools, and to

encourage institutions like schools and hospitals to purchase local

organic food whenever possible.

>

> Lacking major change in our food system, we all suffer. Some

quickly, from tainted meat and foreclosed farms, others gradually,

from pesticide sprayings and fat-laden, carcinogenic diets. The only

winners are short-term: large-scale subsidized farmers and

agribusiness executives and shareholders. But even they have to eat.

>

> Christopher D. Cook is the author of Diet for a Dead Planet: How

the Food Industry Is Killing Us (New Press, November), from which

this piece was adapted.

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