Articles tagged with: industrial food
Although this topic is far from new, there have been startling developments in the debate regarding genetically modified food (GMOs, a.k.a. genetically engineered or GE), specifically with the recent ratification of GE alfalfa seeds produced by Monsanto. Here are some links to help our readers follow the story so that you can make a more informed decision on the matter.
Apparently, even certified organic eggs can come from hens living in inhumane, factory conditions—making their eggs both a nutritionally and ethically inferior product. So, if you can’t even trust certified organic eggs anymore, how do you know what kind of eggs are safe, nutritious and humane?
It’s time to retire the shopping cart, a symbol of an era when abundance, convenience and economy were the height of achievement. A shopping cart is the device that should come to symbolize everything that was wrong about the 20th Century approach to food in America.
The latest yuppie craze could do more than just cut emissions—it might also help feed the poor.
An inspiring call from Lucinda Clark to the community to support family farms. These brave men and women are on the front lines of the profood movement, taking the risks so that we can build a sustainable food system.
Living back in the mainstream reminds me of the Goliath–size reality of our food system. The majority of Americans today has never been to a farm or have any idea where their food comes from. I am living inside one of Michael Pollan books, the bleak food landscape.
I’m not in Kansas anymore, No longer in the Bay Area where most farms are within 200 miles, where there are farmers’ markets everyday of the week, and where there is a general culture of “Buy Local” and “Eat Healthy”.
This chicken knows a thing or two about how America produces its food.
…It occurred to me that in a deep recession with looming environmental problems that seriously threaten our continued comfort on this planet, “voting with our dollars” is simply not enough. Not that anyone ever said it was. In order to truly transform our food system from a water and gas-guzzling industrial monoculture that benefits only agribusiness executives into a more sustainable and humane polyculture, it is necessary to leverage the full range and force of private and public activity.


