Why is our food quality so bad? Blame the consumer, not the system. The American food system is simply supplying what the American consumer is demanding. If you don’t want it or like it, don’t buy it. There are always alternatives – maybe not as cheap or convenient, but they are there…be aggravated enough to search. ~Safdy
Today, everything seems to feed off corn and soy: fish farms, animal feed, and packaged food for humans. That is because corn and soy crops are efficient and cheap to produce. Corn and soy are efficient transformers of sunlight, water, and chemical fertilizer into macronutrients (carbohydrate, fat, and protein).
Since the US government subsidizes corn and soy, farmer’s are encouraged to grow it, and our food supply is deluged with it. Even the animals raised for meat consume an abundance of these crops. More than half of our sweeteners come from corn. The Standard American Diet (SAD) predominately consists of just 4 processed ingredients – corn, soybeans, rice, and wheat. Yet, humans are meant to consume compounds and elements from a variety of plant species.
Thousands of plant varieties have declined in the last century as industrial agriculture has focused its attention on this handful of high-yielding varieties best suited for mechanical harvesting and processing. Even the majority of animals raised for meat are a single variety that can bulk up quickly under crowded conditions. The plants and animals have been manipulated to allow for mass production in the shortest amount of time.
Eating fast food directly contributes to this problem. If you think it is barbaric to cram animals into an enclosed factory farm, so they are denied their right to move about freely and graze on a pasture, then don’t eat commercially processed meat! If you think the Irish potato famine demonstrates the perils of growing a single type of monocrop, then avoid the fast food french fry! The Russet Burbank potato is planted by the millions across miles of farmland in rural America – not because it offers you excellent nutrition – but because it supplies a spud that stands extra-tall inside the french fry cup of fast food retailers. All it takes is a single virus, a more capable pest, a tiny bacterium to eradicate an entire crop. The investors that fund companies like MCD, BKC, and YUM would not be pleased.
Who Cares? I like how my fast food tastes!
We have become so disassociated with what we are eating that we no longer consider its consequences. We don’t think of the suffering involved when we chew into a burger or chicken nugget. We don’t think about Combined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO) because they are shrouded from view. We don’t think of the environmental costs of growing vast landscapes of genetically modified monocrops (drenched in pesticide and herbicides) to support the cruel practices of CAFO. And the medications are given to CAFO animals so their body can metabolize these crops. Or, the absurd inefficiency of growing a grain to feed an animal in order to feed a human. We fail to notice the impacts it has created for our health. We overlook a system that tampers with our taste buds so we crave the foods that will ill us later. We are all connected to the earth. How we eat determines, to a considerable extent, how the world is used or abused.
What can you do?
To eat responsibly is to understand and enact accordingly. Read the food ingredients on any packaged foods you intend to eat. Again, if you don’t know what an ingredient is, where it came from, or how it was grown, derived and/or processed, look it up or ask the manufacturer. Trust that neither the food industry nor the government is looking out for your best interests—the multi-billion-dollar food industry profits at the expense of your health and the environment. The ecological issues we face today, depleting water supplies, air pollution, soil erosion, deforestation, and global warming – are linked to conventional food production and animal factory farming practices. The outdoor adventurer must take this into serious consideration. Or any one of us who desires or expects a world filled with abundant clean water and air.
Your choice of food impacts much more than your own health. It impacts the health of our environment too. How you use this information determines how the Earth is used.
May you consume wisely,
Outdoor Herbivore
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