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Industrial vs. Organic
"Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Billy" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: [...] They do not want to go out and separately negotiate orders of corn of this magnitude from 100 separate small farmers who can each only supply a ton of corn. You didn't read the chapter. Chem ferts kill top soil. The less top soil, the more chem ferts, and more pollution of ground water and fishing areas. Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does. It is called "privatize the profits and socialize the costs". The price of the box is only part of the price. You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know. At one time we didn't. People would just use the resources until they were all gone, then move to a new place. What? When the Earth's population was only a few million? Surely you are not defending this practice in the current timeframe? I never was. Then what exactly did you mean when you said, "You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know." Billy's statement was: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does...." This is a false statement for a number of reasons. First, as I pointed out, the land and water isn't always remediated. Someone might dig out a gravel quarry on their property then just abandon it when they are done and let nature reclaim it. Remediation only occurs when someone decides that they -want- to do it. There's tons of stories of polluters who never remediated, some legally, some illegally. And some who wern't originally designated polluters, and now are. Another reason this is false is that the taxpayer doesen't always pay for remediation, private industry does quite a lot. Google up brownfield properties. Property values in certain areas are now so high that it is cheaper in many cases to buy polluted properties for a song, clean them up, then build on them, rather than buying and building on unpolluted properties. But the most important reason this is a false statement is that it makes an implicit assumption. The CORRECT way for Billy to write this would have been: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water if the public demands that the land and water be remediated? A lot of times, the tax payer does..." THAT would have been logically correct and internally consistent because it removes the FALSE assumption that the land and water -always- get remediated. But, then it would have destroyed Billy's rant. Because it would have made it obvious that when the public wants something fixed, many times the public has to pay for it to be fixed. In other words it gets rid of this emotional straw man of the big, ugly, polluting agribusiness and replaces it with reality, which is much greyer and not black and white. I recognized Billy's rant style a mile off. Take a complex issue, strip out all of the complexity until it is so simple that it's black and white, then frame it like the other guy is an absolute demon. That is why Billy refused to engage in debate with me. He knew that I saw through this and was busy introducing reality into his rant and he knew if I did that would kill it, so he ran away so he could live to rant another day. However, nowadays people are valuing clean water and clean land more than they used to. So now there is a cost for those things that we didn't have before, which is now being factored in. That is why you have to file environmental impact statements nowadays when you want to build a factory. They didn't require environmental impact statements when those large farms were created years ago. So the real question is, are we going to apply current laws retroactively? No, I don't think that is the real question at all. Environmental laws have been on the books for decades. Nowadays? The Clean Water Act goes back to at least the 1960s, no? That's nearly 50 years FCOL. Since when has it been legal to pollute and contaminate your neighbor's property with a stinking mountain of pig or cow shit (pardon my French) like those created by factory "farms"? You should ask Billy. No, I am responding to what *you* said, not Billy. He is the one that is asserting that such behavior is legal. You appear to be making a ridiculous inference but it's up to Billy to counter that, not me. He will not because his goal is to make an illogical, emotional argument and he doesen't want it dissected. Here is Billy's argument in a nutshell: Big agribusinesses are bad because they game the system to get everyone else to pay for their operations cost. Therefore we need to tell everyone this so they realize how bad big agribusinesses are and maybe rise up on their haunches and ban big agribusinesses. Of course, Billy isn't interested in admitting that big agribusinesses exist because we, the consumers, WANT them to exist. We buy products that only they produce. He would much rather live in his fantasy world that big agribusinesses exist because somehow they figured out an angle to game the system and drive the small farmers out of business. This is the same logic that, for example, Michael Moore used in his film Roger and Me about the devastation of Flint, Mich. Now, I love Michael Moore films. And some of his, like Farenheight 911, are right on target. The bad guys in -that- film have, with the benefit of history, turned out to be even worse than he portrayed them in that film. BUT, with Roger and Me, the point of the film is that it was Roger Smith's fault that the auto plants at Flint closed. But in reality, Roger was merely reacting to losses that GM had begun experiencing. Yes, those specific plants were profitable when they were closed - Roger Smith was a terrible CEO for his time, and GM is still in trouble because of his legacy - but if it had been a different CEO then other plants would have been closed and the same sob story would have happened. If GM had not experienced losses in 1981 then Smith would not have reacted and the plants at Flint would not have been touched. And, WHY did GM experience a loss? Because people were not buying as many of it's cars, and were buying more foreign imports. But, wait a minute. Who where those people buying foreign imports? Yes, that's right - US customers. Some of these even living in Flint, itself. Roger and Me is a film about American outsourcing of manufacturing and how it destroys America, just like Billy's rant is about big agribusinesses destroying American small farmers. Both the film and the rant cast the bad guys as the corporations. But both ignore the true facts - which are that the American consumer is causing the outsourcing as well as the emergence of the big agribusinesses, mainly by their insistence on buying the cheapest thing possible and ignoring everything else, like product quality, manufacture location, etc. I think you are wrong about that. I do not think that applying current laws retroactively is the real issue here. Factory farms are relatively new. They came way after most of the environmental laws. OK, then if your insistence is that factory farming came after the environmental laws, then how does that square with your claim that it's illegal to pollute with big mountains of cow shit like those created by the factory farms? So I don't understand how retroactivity came into the picture or even how that relates to the main thrust of the quoted article which is that bigger is not necessarily best in terms of farm size. Retroactivity is central to this. Not necessairly legal retroactivity, although that is some of it - despite your assertion that the factory farming came after laws like the clean water act (which I doubt but it doesen't matter) - but retroactivity in terms of changing societal values Despite the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1977, the fact of the matter is that the -majority- of people in US society haven't been that interested in the environment until around the last 10 years. Seriously!!! I was born in 1966 and I've seen this firsthand. What spurred the Clean Water act wasn't medical issues like germs in the water. What spurred it was the VISIBLE pollution like foaming rivers, lakes that caught on fire, etc. Things that were obvious to everyone. But once that was cleaned up, it was same old, same old. What is different now is that people are beginning to see THEMSELVES as polluters. Thus we have laws now (or will real soon) making it illegal to throw lead in the trash (tv sets carry about 5 pounds of lead in their picture tubes) and people are told not to flush meds down the toilet, etc. And people are starting to spend MORE MONEY on products like organic foods that don't use pesticides, etc. And so now, people are starting to realize that THEIR OWN CHOICES are creating factory farming and those proverbial mountains of shit you were talking about. Billy is still stuck back in the 70's - asserting that the corporations themselves are what is driving factory farming when the reality is that the consumers have always driven it by their product selections. It's not all consumers, of course, but some. We don't need tired old rants like Billy's. We need rants that actually put people up to a mirror and say: "Hey, you! YOUR buying of cheerios is causing factory farming which is causing mountains of pig shit that are polluting YOUR water!!" If not, then how are you going to justify taking current environmental requirements for creating a large farm and apply it to large farms that were created years ago? What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? How is this even relevant? What are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago? I'm just trying to understand what you mean here. Keep in mind that the average size farm in the 1950s was around 200 acres. It has only been in the last 10 years that ranting against agribusinesses has become fashionable due to environmental concerns. Now, farm subsidies, that's a different matter - people have been complaining about farmers being propped up by the government since the 70's. But before the advent of the large agribusinesses, nobody was ranting against large farms because, as you pointed out, they didn't exist. Wait just a minute; you are sidestepping again with more balderdash. Once more, you failed to explain yourself. Can you not answer a direct question? To reiterate, What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? I don't recall ever having heard of such a thing! Your saying here that there are no environmental requirements for creating a large farm. Then earlier your asserting large farms are breaking the clean water act? That sounds pretty strange to me. To reiterate, what are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago and, for that matter, how large? Billy's problem is that he sees that large agribusinesses are bad, which so far is true. However he is unwilling to grasp the simple fact that it is not the agribusinesses fault that they are bad. It is the CONSUMER'S fault. I am not here to discuss Billy. Defend your other assertions. As my assertions are in a response to Billy, your discussing Billy's rant, whether you like it or not. Every time someone walks into the supermarket and picks up a box of Frosted Flakes for their kids, instead of getting the bulk sugar corn flakes from the bulk food bin which cost half of Frosted Flakes, they are contributing to the problem. Yes, I can agree with you here that overly processed foods are huge part of the more general American food industry problem. When they have to add something to a food-like product to make it "more nutritious", that is the first really bad sign. I can honestly say that I never, ever fed my children any cereal coated with sugar. What did you feed them? My opinion is that most so-called convenience foods are a contrivance of marketers to make more money by marketing to children or by refining valuable nutrients out of real food. Why sell a quart of real apple juice when you can sell a quart of only 10% apple juice and 90% water + HFCS for an even higher price and still call it "apple juice"? Actually, they sell both the real apple juice and the 10% stuff in the grocery store, and the real stuff is more expensive - unless your buying the individually packaged juice boxes, in which case your buying convenience in packaging. I'd presume that if they put 100% real apple juice in the individually packaged juice boxes it would be even higher priced than the 10% stuff. If people didn't buy all of the processed food they do, then the large food manufacturers like General Mills wouldn't be setting up large production runs of Frosted Flakes and demanding 100 tons of corn at a time. (or whatever it is) There would be no need for the agribusineses and they wouldn't exist. Billy needs to be ranting and railing against the dumb consumers not the agribusinesses. Let me defend the consumer. How "dumb" are consumers who buy boxes of incredibly sugared cereals that have the American Heart Association logo on them, Ted? How dumb are consumers who, for decades, have based their meals on the "USDA" dictated food pyramid, therefore consuming a diet vastly overloaded with carbohydrates and starches? How dumb are consumers who buy a box of anything that our government allows to say "0 transfats" when it actually has significant amounts of the same? I could go on and on. My point is that you can't put this all on the consumer's back. Our own government and agencies that are supposed to be working for us have allowed industry to defraud the public at an ever-increasing rate. If people spent the same amount of energy researching the food they purchase as they spend researching a new car, they wouldn' t be buying these scam foods. Dollar for dollar they spend MORE money on the food they eat than the new car. The difference is that they pay for the food in bits and pieces and the car in one lump sum. It's why practically all states opt to get tax money through a sales tax than a higher property and income tax. It IS the consumer. The comsumer has the money. The problem is that too many dumb consumers out there think they are paying less when they pay me $10 a day for a whole year than if they pay me $3,500.00 once a year. These are the same people who are having homes foreclosed because they got ARMs instead of traditional 30-year fixed mortgages. Food choices tend to remain stable. When a person buys a brand and likes it, they typically won't buy a different brand. With a little effort when they are in their early 20's they can figure out which food brands are the good ones and they will be buying them the rest of their lives. Ted |
#2
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Industrial vs. Organic
In article ,
"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Billy" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: [...] They do not want to go out and separately negotiate orders of corn of this magnitude from 100 separate small farmers who can each only supply a ton of corn. You didn't read the chapter. Chem ferts kill top soil. The less top soil, the more chem ferts, and more pollution of ground water and fishing areas. Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does. It is called "privatize the profits and socialize the costs". The price of the box is only part of the price. You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know. At one time we didn't. People would just use the resources until they were all gone, then move to a new place. What? When the Earth's population was only a few million? Surely you are not defending this practice in the current timeframe? I never was. Then what exactly did you mean when you said, "You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know." Billy's statement was: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does...." This is a false statement for a number of reasons. First, as I pointed out, the land and water isn't always remediated. Someone might dig out a gravel quarry on their property then just abandon it when they are done and let nature reclaim it. Remediation only occurs when someone decides that they -want- to do it. There's tons of stories of polluters who never remediated, some legally, some illegally. And some who wern't originally designated polluters, and now are. Another reason this is false is that the taxpayer doesen't always pay for remediation, private industry does quite a lot. Google up brownfield properties. Property values in certain areas are now so high that it is cheaper in many cases to buy polluted properties for a song, clean them up, then build on them, rather than buying and building on unpolluted properties. But the most important reason this is a false statement is that it makes an implicit assumption. The CORRECT way for Billy to write this would have been: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water if the public demands that the land and water be remediated? A lot of times, the tax payer does..." THAT would have been logically correct and internally consistent because it removes the FALSE assumption that the land and water -always- get remediated. But, then it would have destroyed Billy's rant. Because it would have made it obvious that when the public wants something fixed, many times the public has to pay for it to be fixed. In other words it gets rid of this emotional straw man of the big, ugly, polluting agribusiness and replaces it with reality, which is much greyer and not black and white. I recognized Billy's rant style a mile off. Take a complex issue, strip out all of the complexity until it is so simple that it's black and white, then frame it like the other guy is an absolute demon. That is why Billy refused to engage in debate with me. He knew that I saw through this and was busy introducing reality into his rant and he knew if I did that would kill it, so he ran away so he could live to rant another day. However, nowadays people are valuing clean water and clean land more than they used to. So now there is a cost for those things that we didn't have before, which is now being factored in. That is why you have to file environmental impact statements nowadays when you want to build a factory. They didn't require environmental impact statements when those large farms were created years ago. So the real question is, are we going to apply current laws retroactively? No, I don't think that is the real question at all. Environmental laws have been on the books for decades. Nowadays? The Clean Water Act goes back to at least the 1960s, no? That's nearly 50 years FCOL. Since when has it been legal to pollute and contaminate your neighbor's property with a stinking mountain of pig or cow shit (pardon my French) like those created by factory "farms"? You should ask Billy. No, I am responding to what *you* said, not Billy. He is the one that is asserting that such behavior is legal. You appear to be making a ridiculous inference but it's up to Billy to counter that, not me. He will not because his goal is to make an illogical, emotional argument and he doesen't want it dissected. Here is Billy's argument in a nutshell: Big agribusinesses are bad because they game the system to get everyone else to pay for their operations cost. Therefore we need to tell everyone this so they realize how bad big agribusinesses are and maybe rise up on their haunches and ban big agribusinesses. Of course, Billy isn't interested in admitting that big agribusinesses exist because we, the consumers, WANT them to exist. We buy products that only they produce. He would much rather live in his fantasy world that big agribusinesses exist because somehow they figured out an angle to game the system and drive the small farmers out of business. This is the same logic that, for example, Michael Moore used in his film Roger and Me about the devastation of Flint, Mich. Now, I love Michael Moore films. And some of his, like Farenheight 911, are right on target. The bad guys in -that- film have, with the benefit of history, turned out to be even worse than he portrayed them in that film. BUT, with Roger and Me, the point of the film is that it was Roger Smith's fault that the auto plants at Flint closed. But in reality, Roger was merely reacting to losses that GM had begun experiencing. Yes, those specific plants were profitable when they were closed - Roger Smith was a terrible CEO for his time, and GM is still in trouble because of his legacy - but if it had been a different CEO then other plants would have been closed and the same sob story would have happened. If GM had not experienced losses in 1981 then Smith would not have reacted and the plants at Flint would not have been touched. And, WHY did GM experience a loss? Because people were not buying as many of it's cars, and were buying more foreign imports. But, wait a minute. Who where those people buying foreign imports? Yes, that's right - US customers. Some of these even living in Flint, itself. Roger and Me is a film about American outsourcing of manufacturing and how it destroys America, just like Billy's rant is about big agribusinesses destroying American small farmers. Both the film and the rant cast the bad guys as the corporations. But both ignore the true facts - which are that the American consumer is causing the outsourcing as well as the emergence of the big agribusinesses, mainly by their insistence on buying the cheapest thing possible and ignoring everything else, like product quality, manufacture location, etc. I think you are wrong about that. I do not think that applying current laws retroactively is the real issue here. Factory farms are relatively new. They came way after most of the environmental laws. OK, then if your insistence is that factory farming came after the environmental laws, then how does that square with your claim that it's illegal to pollute with big mountains of cow shit like those created by the factory farms? So I don't understand how retroactivity came into the picture or even how that relates to the main thrust of the quoted article which is that bigger is not necessarily best in terms of farm size. Retroactivity is central to this. Not necessairly legal retroactivity, although that is some of it - despite your assertion that the factory farming came after laws like the clean water act (which I doubt but it doesen't matter) - but retroactivity in terms of changing societal values Despite the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1977, the fact of the matter is that the -majority- of people in US society haven't been that interested in the environment until around the last 10 years. Seriously!!! I was born in 1966 and I've seen this firsthand. What spurred the Clean Water act wasn't medical issues like germs in the water. What spurred it was the VISIBLE pollution like foaming rivers, lakes that caught on fire, etc. Things that were obvious to everyone. But once that was cleaned up, it was same old, same old. What is different now is that people are beginning to see THEMSELVES as polluters. Thus we have laws now (or will real soon) making it illegal to throw lead in the trash (tv sets carry about 5 pounds of lead in their picture tubes) and people are told not to flush meds down the toilet, etc. And people are starting to spend MORE MONEY on products like organic foods that don't use pesticides, etc. And so now, people are starting to realize that THEIR OWN CHOICES are creating factory farming and those proverbial mountains of shit you were talking about. Billy is still stuck back in the 70's - asserting that the corporations themselves are what is driving factory farming when the reality is that the consumers have always driven it by their product selections. It's not all consumers, of course, but some. We don't need tired old rants like Billy's. We need rants that actually put people up to a mirror and say: "Hey, you! YOUR buying of cheerios is causing factory farming which is causing mountains of pig shit that are polluting YOUR water!!" If not, then how are you going to justify taking current environmental requirements for creating a large farm and apply it to large farms that were created years ago? What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? How is this even relevant? What are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago? I'm just trying to understand what you mean here. Keep in mind that the average size farm in the 1950s was around 200 acres. It has only been in the last 10 years that ranting against agribusinesses has become fashionable due to environmental concerns. Now, farm subsidies, that's a different matter - people have been complaining about farmers being propped up by the government since the 70's. But before the advent of the large agribusinesses, nobody was ranting against large farms because, as you pointed out, they didn't exist. Wait just a minute; you are sidestepping again with more balderdash. Once more, you failed to explain yourself. Can you not answer a direct question? To reiterate, What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? I don't recall ever having heard of such a thing! Your saying here that there are no environmental requirements for creating a large farm. Then earlier your asserting large farms are breaking the clean water act? That sounds pretty strange to me. To reiterate, what are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago and, for that matter, how large? Billy's problem is that he sees that large agribusinesses are bad, which so far is true. However he is unwilling to grasp the simple fact that it is not the agribusinesses fault that they are bad. It is the CONSUMER'S fault. I am not here to discuss Billy. Defend your other assertions. As my assertions are in a response to Billy, your discussing Billy's rant, whether you like it or not. Every time someone walks into the supermarket and picks up a box of Frosted Flakes for their kids, instead of getting the bulk sugar corn flakes from the bulk food bin which cost half of Frosted Flakes, they are contributing to the problem. Yes, I can agree with you here that overly processed foods are huge part of the more general American food industry problem. When they have to add something to a food-like product to make it "more nutritious", that is the first really bad sign. I can honestly say that I never, ever fed my children any cereal coated with sugar. What did you feed them? My opinion is that most so-called convenience foods are a contrivance of marketers to make more money by marketing to children or by refining valuable nutrients out of real food. Why sell a quart of real apple juice when you can sell a quart of only 10% apple juice and 90% water + HFCS for an even higher price and still call it "apple juice"? Actually, they sell both the real apple juice and the 10% stuff in the grocery store, and the real stuff is more expensive - unless your buying the individually packaged juice boxes, in which case your buying convenience in packaging. I'd presume that if they put 100% real apple juice in the individually packaged juice boxes it would be even higher priced than the 10% stuff. If people didn't buy all of the processed food they do, then the large food manufacturers like General Mills wouldn't be setting up large production runs of Frosted Flakes and demanding 100 tons of corn at a time. (or whatever it is) There would be no need for the agribusineses and they wouldn't exist. Billy needs to be ranting and railing against the dumb consumers not the agribusinesses. Let me defend the consumer. How "dumb" are consumers who buy boxes of incredibly sugared cereals that have the American Heart Association logo on them, Ted? How dumb are consumers who, for decades, have based their meals on the "USDA" dictated food pyramid, therefore consuming a diet vastly overloaded with carbohydrates and starches? How dumb are consumers who buy a box of anything that our government allows to say "0 transfats" when it actually has significant amounts of the same? I could go on and on. My point is that you can't put this all on the consumer's back. Our own government and agencies that are supposed to be working for us have allowed industry to defraud the public at an ever-increasing rate. If people spent the same amount of energy researching the food they purchase as they spend researching a new car, they wouldn' t be buying these scam foods. Dollar for dollar they spend MORE money on the food they eat than the new car. The difference is that they pay for the food in bits and pieces and the car in one lump sum. It's why practically all states opt to get tax money through a sales tax than a higher property and income tax. It IS the consumer. The comsumer has the money. The problem is that too many dumb consumers out there think they are paying less when they pay me $10 a day for a whole year than if they pay me $3,500.00 once a year. These are the same people who are having homes foreclosed because they got ARMs instead of traditional 30-year fixed mortgages. Food choices tend to remain stable. When a person buys a brand and likes it, they typically won't buy a different brand. With a little effort when they are in their early 20's they can figure out which food brands are the good ones and they will be buying them the rest of their lives. Ted Bozo boy, the debate here is organic vs. industrial. $32 billion in advertising vs. $100 million in consumer education. Healthy foods vs. medical bills. Environmentalism vs. commercialism. Honesty vs. deceit. Good vs. bad. Me vs. you. -- Billy Bush and Pelosi Behind Bars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTf...ef=patrick.net http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1016232.html |
#3
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Industrial vs. Organic
sometime in the recent past Ted Mittelstaedt posted this:
"Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Billy" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: [...] They do not want to go out and separately negotiate orders of corn of this magnitude from 100 separate small farmers who can each only supply a ton of corn. You didn't read the chapter. Chem ferts kill top soil. The less top soil, the more chem ferts, and more pollution of ground water and fishing areas. Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does. It is called "privatize the profits and socialize the costs". The price of the box is only part of the price. You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know. At one time we didn't. People would just use the resources until they were all gone, then move to a new place. What? When the Earth's population was only a few million? Surely you are not defending this practice in the current timeframe? I never was. Then what exactly did you mean when you said, "You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know." Billy's statement was: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water? The tax payer does...." This is a false statement for a number of reasons. First, as I pointed out, the land and water isn't always remediated. Someone might dig out a gravel quarry on their property then just abandon it when they are done and let nature reclaim it. Remediation only occurs when someone decides that they -want- to do it. There's tons of stories of polluters who never remediated, some legally, some illegally. And some who wern't originally designated polluters, and now are. Another reason this is false is that the taxpayer doesen't always pay for remediation, private industry does quite a lot. Google up brownfield properties. Property values in certain areas are now so high that it is cheaper in many cases to buy polluted properties for a song, clean them up, then build on them, rather than buying and building on unpolluted properties. But the most important reason this is a false statement is that it makes an implicit assumption. The CORRECT way for Billy to write this would have been: "...Who pays to remediate the land and the water if the public demands that the land and water be remediated? A lot of times, the tax payer does..." THAT would have been logically correct and internally consistent because it removes the FALSE assumption that the land and water -always- get remediated. But, then it would have destroyed Billy's rant. Because it would have made it obvious that when the public wants something fixed, many times the public has to pay for it to be fixed. In other words it gets rid of this emotional straw man of the big, ugly, polluting agribusiness and replaces it with reality, which is much greyer and not black and white. I recognized Billy's rant style a mile off. Take a complex issue, strip out all of the complexity until it is so simple that it's black and white, then frame it like the other guy is an absolute demon. That is why Billy refused to engage in debate with me. He knew that I saw through this and was busy introducing reality into his rant and he knew if I did that would kill it, so he ran away so he could live to rant another day. However, nowadays people are valuing clean water and clean land more than they used to. So now there is a cost for those things that we didn't have before, which is now being factored in. That is why you have to file environmental impact statements nowadays when you want to build a factory. They didn't require environmental impact statements when those large farms were created years ago. So the real question is, are we going to apply current laws retroactively? No, I don't think that is the real question at all. Environmental laws have been on the books for decades. Nowadays? The Clean Water Act goes back to at least the 1960s, no? That's nearly 50 years FCOL. Since when has it been legal to pollute and contaminate your neighbor's property with a stinking mountain of pig or cow shit (pardon my French) like those created by factory "farms"? You should ask Billy. No, I am responding to what *you* said, not Billy. He is the one that is asserting that such behavior is legal. You appear to be making a ridiculous inference but it's up to Billy to counter that, not me. He will not because his goal is to make an illogical, emotional argument and he doesen't want it dissected. Here is Billy's argument in a nutshell: Big agribusinesses are bad because they game the system to get everyone else to pay for their operations cost. Therefore we need to tell everyone this so they realize how bad big agribusinesses are and maybe rise up on their haunches and ban big agribusinesses. Of course, Billy isn't interested in admitting that big agribusinesses exist because we, the consumers, WANT them to exist. We buy products that only they produce. He would much rather live in his fantasy world that big agribusinesses exist because somehow they figured out an angle to game the system and drive the small farmers out of business. This is the same logic that, for example, Michael Moore used in his film Roger and Me about the devastation of Flint, Mich. Now, I love Michael Moore films. And some of his, like Farenheight 911, are right on target. The bad guys in -that- film have, with the benefit of history, turned out to be even worse than he portrayed them in that film. BUT, with Roger and Me, the point of the film is that it was Roger Smith's fault that the auto plants at Flint closed. But in reality, Roger was merely reacting to losses that GM had begun experiencing. Yes, those specific plants were profitable when they were closed - Roger Smith was a terrible CEO for his time, and GM is still in trouble because of his legacy - but if it had been a different CEO then other plants would have been closed and the same sob story would have happened. If GM had not experienced losses in 1981 then Smith would not have reacted and the plants at Flint would not have been touched. And, WHY did GM experience a loss? Because people were not buying as many of it's cars, and were buying more foreign imports. But, wait a minute. Who where those people buying foreign imports? Yes, that's right - US customers. Some of these even living in Flint, itself. Roger and Me is a film about American outsourcing of manufacturing and how it destroys America, just like Billy's rant is about big agribusinesses destroying American small farmers. Both the film and the rant cast the bad guys as the corporations. But both ignore the true facts - which are that the American consumer is causing the outsourcing as well as the emergence of the big agribusinesses, mainly by their insistence on buying the cheapest thing possible and ignoring everything else, like product quality, manufacture location, etc. I think you are wrong about that. I do not think that applying current laws retroactively is the real issue here. Factory farms are relatively new. They came way after most of the environmental laws. OK, then if your insistence is that factory farming came after the environmental laws, then how does that square with your claim that it's illegal to pollute with big mountains of cow shit like those created by the factory farms? So I don't understand how retroactivity came into the picture or even how that relates to the main thrust of the quoted article which is that bigger is not necessarily best in terms of farm size. Retroactivity is central to this. Not necessairly legal retroactivity, although that is some of it - despite your assertion that the factory farming came after laws like the clean water act (which I doubt but it doesen't matter) - but retroactivity in terms of changing societal values Despite the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1977, the fact of the matter is that the -majority- of people in US society haven't been that interested in the environment until around the last 10 years. Seriously!!! I was born in 1966 and I've seen this firsthand. What spurred the Clean Water act wasn't medical issues like germs in the water. What spurred it was the VISIBLE pollution like foaming rivers, lakes that caught on fire, etc. Things that were obvious to everyone. But once that was cleaned up, it was same old, same old. What is different now is that people are beginning to see THEMSELVES as polluters. Thus we have laws now (or will real soon) making it illegal to throw lead in the trash (tv sets carry about 5 pounds of lead in their picture tubes) and people are told not to flush meds down the toilet, etc. And people are starting to spend MORE MONEY on products like organic foods that don't use pesticides, etc. And so now, people are starting to realize that THEIR OWN CHOICES are creating factory farming and those proverbial mountains of shit you were talking about. Billy is still stuck back in the 70's - asserting that the corporations themselves are what is driving factory farming when the reality is that the consumers have always driven it by their product selections. It's not all consumers, of course, but some. We don't need tired old rants like Billy's. We need rants that actually put people up to a mirror and say: "Hey, you! YOUR buying of cheerios is causing factory farming which is causing mountains of pig shit that are polluting YOUR water!!" If not, then how are you going to justify taking current environmental requirements for creating a large farm and apply it to large farms that were created years ago? What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? How is this even relevant? What are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago? I'm just trying to understand what you mean here. Keep in mind that the average size farm in the 1950s was around 200 acres. It has only been in the last 10 years that ranting against agribusinesses has become fashionable due to environmental concerns. Now, farm subsidies, that's a different matter - people have been complaining about farmers being propped up by the government since the 70's. But before the advent of the large agribusinesses, nobody was ranting against large farms because, as you pointed out, they didn't exist. Wait just a minute; you are sidestepping again with more balderdash. Once more, you failed to explain yourself. Can you not answer a direct question? To reiterate, What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? I don't recall ever having heard of such a thing! Your saying here that there are no environmental requirements for creating a large farm. Then earlier your asserting large farms are breaking the clean water act? That sounds pretty strange to me. To reiterate, what are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago and, for that matter, how large? Billy's problem is that he sees that large agribusinesses are bad, which so far is true. However he is unwilling to grasp the simple fact that it is not the agribusinesses fault that they are bad. It is the CONSUMER'S fault. I am not here to discuss Billy. Defend your other assertions. As my assertions are in a response to Billy, your discussing Billy's rant, whether you like it or not. Every time someone walks into the supermarket and picks up a box of Frosted Flakes for their kids, instead of getting the bulk sugar corn flakes from the bulk food bin which cost half of Frosted Flakes, they are contributing to the problem. Yes, I can agree with you here that overly processed foods are huge part of the more general American food industry problem. When they have to add something to a food-like product to make it "more nutritious", that is the first really bad sign. I can honestly say that I never, ever fed my children any cereal coated with sugar. What did you feed them? My opinion is that most so-called convenience foods are a contrivance of marketers to make more money by marketing to children or by refining valuable nutrients out of real food. Why sell a quart of real apple juice when you can sell a quart of only 10% apple juice and 90% water + HFCS for an even higher price and still call it "apple juice"? Actually, they sell both the real apple juice and the 10% stuff in the grocery store, and the real stuff is more expensive - unless your buying the individually packaged juice boxes, in which case your buying convenience in packaging. I'd presume that if they put 100% real apple juice in the individually packaged juice boxes it would be even higher priced than the 10% stuff. If people didn't buy all of the processed food they do, then the large food manufacturers like General Mills wouldn't be setting up large production runs of Frosted Flakes and demanding 100 tons of corn at a time. (or whatever it is) There would be no need for the agribusineses and they wouldn't exist. Billy needs to be ranting and railing against the dumb consumers not the agribusinesses. Let me defend the consumer. How "dumb" are consumers who buy boxes of incredibly sugared cereals that have the American Heart Association logo on them, Ted? How dumb are consumers who, for decades, have based their meals on the "USDA" dictated food pyramid, therefore consuming a diet vastly overloaded with carbohydrates and starches? How dumb are consumers who buy a box of anything that our government allows to say "0 transfats" when it actually has significant amounts of the same? I could go on and on. My point is that you can't put this all on the consumer's back. Our own government and agencies that are supposed to be working for us have allowed industry to defraud the public at an ever-increasing rate. If people spent the same amount of energy researching the food they purchase as they spend researching a new car, they wouldn' t be buying these scam foods. Dollar for dollar they spend MORE money on the food they eat than the new car. The difference is that they pay for the food in bits and pieces and the car in one lump sum. It's why practically all states opt to get tax money through a sales tax than a higher property and income tax. It IS the consumer. The comsumer has the money. The problem is that too many dumb consumers out there think they are paying less when they pay me $10 a day for a whole year than if they pay me $3,500.00 once a year. These are the same people who are having homes foreclosed because they got ARMs instead of traditional 30-year fixed mortgages. Food choices tend to remain stable. When a person buys a brand and likes it, they typically won't buy a different brand. With a little effort when they are in their early 20's they can figure out which food brands are the good ones and they will be buying them the rest of their lives. Ted Seriously major yawn. IS IT OVER YET? Christ Ted, you have a lot of time on your hands. I recognize your style too. Throw everything you know at something until you figure you have buried it, and in fact you have. Just so you know, I only scrolled down once and then I saw the volumes you typed and my eyes glazed over ... need more rest ... yawn, pages of Mittelstaedt to go ... yawn... never gonna make it ... arrhhgg . -- Wilson N44º39" W67º12" |
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Industrial vs. Organic
In article ,
"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , "Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: [...] Then what exactly did you mean when you said, "You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know." Billy's statement was: No, I wanted to know what *you* meant--- whether you were advocating not remediating ruined lands and waterways (which is what it sounded like), whether you stating that as a legal position, or whatever. snip long rant about Billy ...So the real question is, are we going to apply current laws retroactively? No, I don't think that is the real question at all. Environmental laws have been on the books for decades. Nowadays? The Clean Water Act goes back to at least the 1960s, no? That's nearly 50 years FCOL. Since when has it been legal to pollute and contaminate your neighbor's property with a stinking mountain of pig or cow shit (pardon my French) like those created by factory "farms"? You should ask Billy. No, I am responding to what *you* said, not Billy. He is the one that is asserting that such behavior is legal. You appear to be making a ridiculous inference but it's up to Billy to counter that, not me. He will not because his goal is to make an illogical, emotional argument and he doesen't want it dissected. No reasonable person would draw such a ridiculous conclusion. What you have fashioned here is another strawman of convenience in an attempt to give your own position credibility. Pardon me for pointing this out but this is really a very bad habit you would benefit from breaking. Here is Billy's argument in a nutshell: I have eyes and have read what Billy has written, Ted. I certainly don't need you to interpret for me. snip additional immaterial rant about Billy, Michael Moore, etc This is the same logic... No. Not logic. I think you are wrong about that. I do not think that applying current laws retroactively is the real issue here. Factory farms are relatively new. They came way after most of the environmental laws. OK, then if your insistence is that factory farming came after the environmental laws,... It has nothing to do with "insistence", as you call it. It's a fact. If you can disprove it, then do so. Otherwise, I stand by my position that applying laws retroactively is not the issue here. You've yet to show, even remotely, that the application of laws retroactively with regard to factory farm environmental issues is even a fact, let alone a problem. ...then how does that square with your claim that it's illegal to pollute with big mountains of cow shit like those created by the factory farms? Once again, I need to point out that you really have a problem with misquoting other people, Ted. I never really stated that explicitly. Had *I* done so, I'd have been far more specific and discrete. I did, however, mention mountains of cow and pig shit in a pejorative sense. Now as to your question (such that it is), let me see if I can shed some light on at least part of it. First of all, given US laws, the word "pollute" does have some legal meaning. Recognize that while it is possible to have a mountain of pig shit that doesn't pollute, use of the word "pollute" in your question does imply illegality. Furthermore, I'd point out that this illegality is not conferred strictly by your general description but, rather, by statutory prohibitions against the act as under laws and their codified regulations. This is an important distinction. What I mean is that either it is legal to pollute or illegal depending on the findings facts in a given case, such findings determined by a qualified court of law. In light of the fact that (1) you have yet to prove that retroactive legal determinations are even an issue and, (2) you have not given a single factual (or even hypthetical) example, your question makes no sense whatsoever. So I don't understand how retroactivity came into the picture or even how that relates to the main thrust of the quoted article which is that bigger is not necessarily best in terms of farm size. Retroactivity is central to this. Not necessairly legal retroactivity, although that is some of it - despite your assertion that the factory farming came after laws like the clean water act (which I doubt but it doesen't matter) - but retroactivity in terms of changing societal values Then prove it. Any of your claims. You talk a lot but prove nothing. Where are your facts? Despite the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1977, the fact of the matter is that the -majority- of people in US society haven't been that interested in the environment until around the last 10 years. Maybe a fact.... maybe not. You play fast and loose with your claims of fact when you've given not the slightest bit of data to support your claims. [...] What is different now is that people are beginning to see THEMSELVES as polluters. People have seen themselves as polluters before now--- like when they stopped emptying their chamber pots in rivers and streams. So I do not agree that this is as much a difference as you assert. But I agree that there is a building awareness. Off the top of my head, I suspect one major difference is a new awareness of far more substances that pollute and actually how that affects us directly. ...Thus we have laws now (or will real soon) making it illegal to throw lead in the trash (tv sets carry about 5 pounds of lead in their picture tubes) and people are told not to flush meds down the toilet, etc. And people are starting to spend MORE MONEY on products like organic foods that don't use pesticides, etc. And so now, people are starting to realize that THEIR OWN CHOICES are creating factory farming and those proverbial mountains of shit you were talking about. Yes, I agree that there is increased awareness that personal choices have consequences. snip more ranting about Billy If not, then how are you going to justify taking current environmental requirements for creating a large farm and apply it to large farms that were created years ago? What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? How is this even relevant? What are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago? I'm just trying to understand what you mean here. Keep in mind that the average size farm in the 1950s was around 200 acres. It has only been in the last 10 years that ranting against agribusinesses has become fashionable due to environmental concerns. Now, farm subsidies, that's a different matter - people have been complaining about farmers being propped up by the government since the 70's. But before the advent of the large agribusinesses, nobody was ranting against large farms because, as you pointed out, they didn't exist. Wait just a minute; you are sidestepping again with more balderdash. Once more, you failed to explain yourself. Can you not answer a direct question? To reiterate, What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? I don't recall ever having heard of such a thing! Your saying here that there are no environmental requirements for creating a large farm. NO. I said no such thing! *You* said there were such requirements and I've asked you repeatedly what requirements you're talking about. And you still have not explained. What in the heck are you talking about? Since you refuse to explain, one can only assume you cannot. Then earlier your asserting large farms are breaking the clean water act? Where did I say that? Pardon me, but when are you going to stop pulling these statements out of your backside? Stop attributing to me things I never actually said. It only makes you look foolish. That sounds pretty strange to me. To reiterate, what are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago and, for that matter, how large? As my assertions are in a response to Billy, your discussing Billy's rant, whether you like it or not. Nonsense. Every time someone walks into the supermarket and picks up a box of Frosted Flakes for their kids, instead of getting the bulk sugar corn flakes from the bulk food bin which cost half of Frosted Flakes, they are contributing to the problem. Yes, I can agree with you here that overly processed foods are huge part of the more general American food industry problem. When they have to add something to a food-like product to make it "more nutritious", that is the first really bad sign. I can honestly say that I never, ever fed my children any cereal coated with sugar. What did you feed them? Real, unprocessed or minimally processed food. My opinion is that most so-called convenience foods are a contrivance of marketers to make more money by marketing to children or by refining valuable nutrients out of real food. Why sell a quart of real apple juice when you can sell a quart of only 10% apple juice and 90% water + HFCS for an even higher price and still call it "apple juice"? Actually, they sell both the real apple juice and the 10% stuff in the grocery store, and the real stuff is more expensive - unless your buying the individually packaged juice boxes, in which case your buying convenience in packaging. I'd presume that if they put 100% real apple juice in the individually packaged juice boxes it would be even higher priced than the 10% stuff. I merely used that as an example to illustrate both the folly of processed foods as well as the ease with which companies actually convince people that such crap is better for them than real food. Juice is simply another processed food lacking in many nutrients, enzymes and other substances found in the real food it attempts to emulate--- fruit. My family eats fruit but rarely juice. If people didn't buy all of the processed food they do, then the large food manufacturers like General Mills wouldn't be setting up large production runs of Frosted Flakes and demanding 100 tons of corn at a time. (or whatever it is) There would be no need for the agribusineses and they wouldn't exist. Billy needs to be ranting and railing against the dumb consumers not the agribusinesses. Let me defend the consumer. How "dumb" are consumers who buy boxes of incredibly sugared cereals that have the American Heart Association logo on them, Ted? How dumb are consumers who, for decades, have based their meals on the "USDA" dictated food pyramid, therefore consuming a diet vastly overloaded with carbohydrates and starches? How dumb are consumers who buy a box of anything that our government allows to say "0 transfats" when it actually has significant amounts of the same? I could go on and on. My point is that you can't put this all on the consumer's back. Our own government and agencies that are supposed to be working for us have allowed industry to defraud the public at an ever-increasing rate. If people spent the same amount of energy researching the food they purchase as they spend researching a new car, they wouldn' t be buying these scam foods. Dollar for dollar they spend MORE money on the food they eat than the new car. The difference is that they pay for the food in bits and pieces and the car in one lump sum. I agree. It IS the consumer. I've already stated my position on this. You have not convinced me that consumers are solely responsible. ...The comsumer has the money. The problem is that too many dumb consumers out there think they are paying less when they pay me $10 a day for a whole year than if they pay me $3,500.00 once a year.... [...] Isabella -- "I will show you fear in a handful of dust" -T.S. Eliot |
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Industrial vs. Organic
On Sep 17, 1:23*am, Isabella Woodhouse wrote:
In article , *"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , *"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: "Isabella Woodhouse" wrote in message ... In article , *"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote: [...] Then what exactly did you mean when you said, "You don't actually have to remediate the land and water, you know." Billy's statement was: No, I wanted to know what *you* meant--- whether you were advocating not remediating ruined lands and waterways (which is what it sounded like), whether you stating that as a legal position, or whatever. snip long rant about Billy ...So the real question is, are we going to apply current laws retroactively? No, I don't think that is the real question at all. * Environmental laws have been on the books for decades. * Nowadays? *The Clean Water Act goes back to at least the 1960s, no? *That's nearly 50 years FCOL. *Since when has it been legal to pollute and contaminate your neighbor's property with a stinking mountain of pig or cow shit (pardon my French) like those created by factory "farms"? You should ask Billy. No, I am responding to what *you* said, not Billy. He is the one that is asserting that such behavior is legal. You appear to be making a ridiculous inference but it's up to Billy to counter that, not me. He will not because his goal is to make an illogical, emotional argument and he doesen't want it dissected. No reasonable person would draw such a ridiculous conclusion. *What you have fashioned here is another strawman of convenience in an attempt to give your own position credibility. *Pardon me for pointing this out but this is really a very bad habit you would benefit from breaking. Here is Billy's argument in a nutshell: I have eyes and have read what Billy has written, Ted. *I certainly don't need you to interpret for me. snip additional immaterial rant about Billy, Michael Moore, etc This is the same logic... No. *Not logic. I think you are wrong about that. *I do not think that applying current laws retroactively is the real issue here. *Factory farms are relatively new. *They came way after most of the environmental laws. OK, then if your insistence is that factory farming came after the environmental laws,... It has nothing to do with "insistence", as you call it. *It's a fact. * If you can disprove it, then do so. *Otherwise, I stand by my position that applying laws retroactively is not the issue here. *You've yet to show, even remotely, that the application of laws retroactively with regard to factory farm environmental issues is even a fact, let alone a problem. ...then how does that square with your claim that it's illegal to pollute with big mountains of cow shit like those created by the factory farms? Once again, I need to point out that you really have a problem with misquoting other people, Ted. *I never really stated that explicitly. * Had *I* done so, I'd have been far more specific and discrete. *I did, however, mention mountains of cow and pig shit in a pejorative sense. * Now as to your question (such that it is), let me see if I can shed some light on at least part of it. *First of all, given US laws, the word "pollute" does have some legal meaning. *Recognize that while it is possible to have a mountain of pig shit that doesn't pollute, use of the word "pollute" in your question does imply illegality. *Furthermore, I'd point out that this illegality is not conferred strictly by your general description but, rather, by statutory prohibitions against the act as under laws and their codified regulations. *This is an important distinction. What I mean is that either it is legal to pollute or illegal depending on the findings facts in a given case, such findings determined by a qualified court of law. *In light of the fact that (1) you have yet to prove that retroactive legal determinations are even an issue and, (2) you have not given a single factual (or even hypthetical) example, your question makes no sense whatsoever. * So I don't understand how retroactivity came into the picture or even how that relates to the main thrust of the quoted article which is that bigger is not necessarily best in terms of farm size. Retroactivity is central to this. *Not necessairly legal retroactivity, although that is some of it - despite your assertion that the factory farming came after laws like the clean water act (which I doubt but it doesen't matter) - but retroactivity in terms of changing societal values Then prove it. *Any of your claims. *You talk a lot but prove nothing.. * Where are your facts? * Despite the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1977, the fact of the matter is that the -majority- of people in US society haven't been that interested in the environment until around the last 10 years. * Maybe a fact.... maybe not. *You play fast and loose with your claims of fact when you've given not the slightest bit of data to support your claims. [...] What is different now is that people are beginning to see THEMSELVES as polluters. * People have seen themselves as polluters before now--- like when they stopped emptying their chamber pots in rivers and streams. *So I do not agree that this is as much a difference as you assert. *But I agree that there is a building awareness. *Off the top of my head, I suspect one major difference is a new awareness of far more substances that pollute and actually how that affects us directly. ...Thus we have laws now (or will real soon) making it illegal to throw lead in the trash (tv sets carry about 5 pounds of lead in their picture tubes) and people are told not to flush meds down the toilet, etc. *And people are starting to spend MORE MONEY on products like organic foods that don't use pesticides, etc. And so now, people are starting to realize that THEIR OWN CHOICES are creating factory farming and those proverbial mountains of shit you were talking about. Yes, I agree that there is increased awareness that personal choices have consequences. snip more ranting about Billy If not, then how are you going to justify taking current environmental requirements for creating a large farm and apply it to large farms that were created years ago? What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? *How is this even relevant? *What are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? *How many years ago? I'm just trying to understand what you mean here. Keep in mind that the average size farm in the 1950s was around 200 acres. It has only been in the last 10 years that ranting against agribusinesses has become fashionable due to environmental concerns. *Now, farm subsidies, that's a different matter - people have been complaining about farmers being propped up by the government since the 70's. *But before the advent of the large agribusinesses, nobody was ranting against large farms because, as you pointed out, they didn't exist. Wait just a minute; you are sidestepping again with more balderdash. Once more, you failed to explain yourself. *Can you not answer a direct question? *To reiterate, *What "environmental requirements for creating a large farm" are you talking about? *I don't recall ever having heard of such a thing! Your saying here that there are no environmental requirements for creating a large farm. NO. *I said no such thing! **You* said there were such requirements and I've asked you repeatedly what requirements you're talking about. *And you still have not explained. *What in the heck are you talking about? * Since you refuse to explain, one can only assume you cannot. Then earlier your asserting large farms are breaking the clean water act? Where did I say that? *Pardon me, but when are you going to stop pulling these statements out of your backside? *Stop attributing to me things I never actually said. *It only makes you look foolish. That sounds pretty strange to me. *To reiterate, what are you talking about when you refer to "large farms" created years ago? How many years ago and, for that matter, how large? As my assertions are in a response to Billy, your discussing Billy's rant, whether you like it or not. Nonsense. * Every time someone walks into the supermarket and picks up a box of Frosted Flakes for their kids, instead of getting the bulk sugar corn flakes from the bulk food bin which cost half of Frosted Flakes, they are contributing to the problem. Yes, I can agree with you here that overly processed foods are huge part of the more general American food industry problem. *When they have to add something to a food-like product to make it "more nutritious", that is the first really bad sign. *I can honestly say that I never, ever fed my children any cereal coated with sugar. What did you feed them? Real, unprocessed or minimally processed food. My opinion is that most so-called convenience foods are a contrivance of marketers to make more money by marketing to children or by refining valuable nutrients out of real food. *Why sell a quart of real apple juice ... read more » A black helicopter just flew over my place with an ADM logo on it. I think it was headed towards Billy's place. cheers oz |
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