Food Inc.
Food, Inc.: How the Industrial Food is Making us Sicker, Fatter and Poorer -- and What You Can do About It (Karl Weber [editor])
Quotation
"When you think of the California economy, you think of high-tech industries like Silicon Valley, you think of Hollywood. You don't think of poor, desperate migrants picking fruits and vegetables with their bare hands" (p. 4).
This is interesting because people often associate places with a few eye-catching things, ignoring many other sides of those places. It reminds me of how Korea is associated with high-tech industry, Hyundai and Samsung, but people do not think of Korean art, music, history, or its ordinary people much.
"Factory farms strive to increase the number of animals they raise every year. To do so, however, they use some practices that present health concerns for consumers" (p. 22).
This is an interesting point because industries today try to outdo their competitors by increasing the level of production at all costs. In reality, consumer health must be protected even at the cost of slow production, but what happens is that consumer health is compromised for the sake of greater production. That is totally wrong.
3. ". . . companies try to convince us that they can do a better job of policing themselves than the government can. I don't think any company should have the right to decide what is safe and not safe without some government oversight, especially when they have billions of dollars at stake" (p. 39).
I find it interesting how companies want to avoid oversight, claiming that they police themselves although they always put their profits ahead of consumer health. Companies investigating themselves for unethical behavior is the same like criminals investigating themselves for crime. Why would they find fault with their own activities that they rely upon to make money?
4. "In short, organics is about more than food. It's about survival" (p. 59).
This is an interesting observation because we normally think of food when we say "organics" but it is more than that. Getting rid of organics for the sake of money may lead to a catastrophe.
5. "The difference between traditional and modern techniques for modifying the genetics of living things lies not merely in the complexity of the science involved but in the economics of social and corporate control implied by the new methods" (p. 69).
I found this quotation interesting because, as the author explains further, moving from traditional farming to industrial farming is not only about science. Economics and politics of corporate control are part of this shift. New farming techniques can be easily manipulated so that a few companies can enrich themselves at the expense of consumer health.
(pages 71-140)
1. "Contrary to biotech industry propaganda, recent studies have found that U.S. farmers growing GE [genetically modified food] crops are using just as many toxic pesticides and herbicides as conventional farmers and in some cases are using more" (p. 84).
This is interesting because large companies often tell one thing but do completely the opposite. And they manage to do so by hiding their activities through propaganda.
2. "The grain required to fill a 25-gallon SUV gas tank with ethanol would feed one person for a full year.' And yet the United States is providing huge subsidies to a program that feeds cars, not people" (p. 93).
This is an interesting quote because it suggests that the government is easily sacrificing the needs of people for the sake of business interests. The quote refers to the business of corn ethanol program that is designed to feed automobiles, not people -- but at the expense of people.
3. "In 1965, eight billion livestock animals were alive on the planet at any given moment; ten billion were slaughtered every year. Today, thanks in part to CAFOs that spur faster growth and shorter lifespan, twenty billion livestock animals are alive at any moment, while nearly fifty-five billion are slaughtered annually" (p. 112).
This is an interesting observation. While the world population since...
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