Sunday, April 18, 2010

What is Organic?


Organic production is a system that is managed in accordance with the Organic Foods Production Act (OFPA) of 1990 (PDF) and regulations in Title 7, Part 205 of the Code of Federal Regulations to respond to site-specific conditions by integrating cultural, biological, and mechanical practices that foster cycling of resources, promote ecological balance, and conserve biodiversity. The National Organic Program (NOP) develops, implements, and administers national production, handling, and labeling standards.





Accreditation


The USDA, AMS, National Organic Program (NOP) accredits private businesses, organizations, and state agencies to certify producers and handlers of agricultural products according to the NOP regulations.

Community Supported Agriculture


Over the last 20 years, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) has become a popular way for consumers to buy local, seasonal food directly from a farmer. Here are the basics: a farmer offers a certain number of "shares" to the public. Typically the share consists of a box of vegetables, but other farm products may be included. Interested consumers purchase a share (aka a "membership" or a "subscription") and in return receive a box (bag, basket) of seasonal produce each week throughout the farming season


(http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSv1.0/nop)

Friday, April 16, 2010

Food Alternative Cost Comparison

Fast/Processed Foods

Double Cheese Burger at McDonalds $1
Small Fries $1
Soda $1
Total Meal $3

Buy Organic

Oroweat 100% Whole Wheat Sliced Buns 8ct $4.89 [$0.61 per bun]
1 LB O Organics Chicken Breast Boneless Skinless $8.99 [$2.24 per breast]
O Organics Russett Potatoes Prepacked - 3 Lb $2.99 [$1 per lb]
O Organics Organic Sharp Cheddar Cheese - 8 Oz $3.89 [$0.32 per slice]
Glaceau Smartwater - 33.8 Fl. Oz. $1.25
Total Groceries $22.01

Total 1 Chicken Burger $3.17
1 Serving of Fries $1
Water $1.25
Total per Meal $5.42

Buy Conventional

Safeway Potato Hamburger 8ct $2.19 [$0.27per bun]
1.30 LB 80% Lean Ground Beef Market 20% Fat @$2.99lb $3.89 [$0.74 per 1/4lb]
Kraft American Cheese Food Singles - 12 Oz [$4.99 $0.31 per slice]
Idaho Potatoes Prepacked - 5 Lb $2.50 [$0.50 per lb]
20oz Coke $1.79
Total Groceries $15.36

Total 1 Burger $1.32
1 Serving of fries $0.50
Soda $1.79
Total Meal $3.61

Meal Comparison
Fast Food Meal $3
Organic Meal $5.42
Conventional Meal $3.61

Keep in mind this is a dry burger no special sauce
All food prices courtesy Safeway.com

Organic Heirloom Tomatoes $2.50 each
Hot House Tomatoes Large $1.65
Start your own Garden
20lb bag of Soil $1.99
Seeds $2
4-6 weeks of waiting
Knowing whats going into your food priceless
Total $3.99 for as many tomatoes as you can grow


Fast food maybe cheap and convenient but you will pay. You will pay in the destruction of the earth through mass farming and deforestation techniques. You will pay in medical cost from one of may illnesses associated with fast food. There is no convenience laying in a hospital bed.

The Question: "Why is Junk Food So Cheap"

I started my research with one fundamental question:

Why is fast food which is processed cheaper than organic non processed foods?

3 simple reasons:

(1)The government subsidizes most ingredients found in processed foods through the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008
(2) Processed foods are mass produced, so you receive a price break
(3) Lower salary cost due to using pesticides and machinery.

Government Subsidized Crops (Commodity Crops)
Wheat
Corn
Grain sorghum
Barley
Oats
Upland cotton
Long grain rice
Medium grain rice
Soybeans
Other oilseeds

LIMITATIONS REGARDING CERTAIN COMMODITIES.—
(1) GENERAL LIMITATION.—The planting of an agricultural commodity specified in paragraph (3) shall be prohibited on base acres unless the commodity, if planted, is destroyed before harvest.
(2) TREATMENT OF TREES AND OTHER PERENNIALS.—The planting of an agricultural commodity specified in paragraph (3) that is produced on a tree or other perennial plant shall be prohibited on base acres.
(3) COVERED AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES.—
Paragraphs (1) and (2) apply to the following agricultural commodities:
(A) Fruits.
(B) Vegetables (other than mung beans
and pulse crops).
(C) Wild rice.

In 2008 844,00 farms received government subsidies of 10.2 billion dollars. This number sounds great until you realize that this number represents 38% of all U.S. farmers and even more staggering of the 38%, 62% or 523,280 are commercial farmers.

(Commodity crop and limitations information courtesy of Public Law version 6124 of the Farm Bill )

Processed Foods

Additives and processes that effect body
  • Food Coloring – Full of Coal Tar, banned for causing cancer
  • Sweeteners – Artificial sugar w/ no Real Sugar at all
  • Flavorings – Over 2000 different types of flavoring
  • Bleaching – process wheat undergoes to become white flour
  • Antioxidants - antioxidants prevent fatty foods from spoiling when exposed to oxygen
  • Preservatives – Also helps preserve all foods

How Processed Foods Effect The Boy
  1. Obscenity
  • Foods that are processed are more likely to have more calories and less nutrients
  • Fast Food, Restaurants, Frozen Food.
  • Studies show that kids that eat that out in restraints once a week or more gain threaten or more pounds on average
  1. Heart Diseases
  • Processed foods contain trans fatty acids (TFA)
  • Also processed foods are extremely high in salt
  1. Cancer
  • Studies show that people that eat more then average amounts of processed foods have a 67% higher chance to get pancreatic cancer.
  • Even slightly Higher risk for prostate and breast Cancer

Genetic Engineering&The Truth About What You Eat

*-Holding an agricultural business is difficult because of so many regulations to follow in order to keep people from getting sick, however, the FDA/USDA does not require all farmers to make the best choices for their products

*-Large farming "corporations" neglect the animals, treat them incredibly poor by stacking the animals on top of each other to save space. animals eat, drink, sleep and poop all over each other without ever moving.

*-VEAL(baby cow) is one of the most tender meats on the market-to get the tenderness. baby cows are born and destined to be killed at a young age, conventional farmers take the baby cow and put it into a cage that it could barely fit into. As it grows, it cannot support itself on its own legs because there isn’t enough room in the cage, so the meat stays tender. If the baby cow were allowed to stand or even walk around, the muscles would become tense, creating a tougher meat, so in order to assure the best taste, farmers keep the veal packaged up in a cage its entire life.

*-Your average chicken is a lot smaller than what you see at the grocery store.

*-The way the chicken was treated before it got to the grocery store makes the difference. Conventional farmers treated that chicken with chemicals to plump it up in size and are made affordable because the chicken grows at a faster pace

*-There are many chemicals used in farming to make the farmers job easier as well as more profitable. The most prominent chemical used in livestock farming is rbGH/rbSH(recombinant bovine growth hormone/recombinant bovine somatotropin hormone)1.

*-This is an innovative and genetically engineered hormone that is used to increase milk production in cows by atleast 10%-15%. The chemical was manufactured by Monsanto(a corporate criminal), and is injected in cows every other week.

*-When cows produce more milk than they would normally, pus is produced by its body to accommodate its loss. Monsanto’s own study determined that there is a 19% increase in pus/bacteria in the milk and a 79% increase in Mastitis.

Mastitis is a bacterial inflammation located in the udder of cows. Below is an image of what it looks like:

(1)(2)

*-This also leads to a greater amount of IGF-1 hormone

*-The hormone is very controversial because of a study done in 1991 by Rural Vermont which demonstrated the connections in food-human health. The cows treated with rbGH lead to deformation and malnourished cows because of high levels of stress. The cows were more susceptible to illness/disease because of malnourishment, leading to a broader connection to human health because of IGF-1(Insulin Growth Factor-1)

*-IGF-1 is a natural human growth hormone that plays an important role in childhood growth and stimulates muscle growth in adults.

*-We naturally have IGF-1 in our body, but excessive amounts of IGF-1 have been linked to colon and breast cancer.


Image Sources:
1 http://www.mfatv.com/LargePhotos/ca_cow_2.jpg
2 http://www.vetsweb.com/public/image/scaled/udder_vw-284x210.jpg

Thursday, April 15, 2010

BODEGA

CORPORATE INFLUENCE ON FARMING

CORPORATE INFLUENCE ON FARMING

Corporate farming is a term that describes the business of agriculture, specifically, what is seen by some as the practices of would-be megacorporations involved in food production on a very large scale. It is a modern food industry issue, and encompasses not only the farm itself, but also the entire chain of agriculture-related business, including seed supply, agrichemicals, food processing, machinery, storage, transport, distribution, marketing, advertising, and retail sales. The term also includes the influence of these companies on education, research and public policy, through their educational funding and government lobbying efforts. "Corporate farming" is often used synonymously with "agribusiness" (although "agribusiness" quite often is not used in the corporate farming sense), and it is seen as the destroyer of the family farm.

Critics argue that the ultimate goal of corporate farming is to vertically integrate the entire process of food production, up to the point of the distribution and sale of food to consumers. Some corporations are considered to be well on the way to achieving this objective, and have become very large in the process, such as Archer Daniels Midland, Monsanto Company, and the privately held Cargill, with 2004 revenues of $62.9 billion.

"Corporate farming" is a fairly broad term that deals with the general practices and effects of a small number of large, global corporations that dominate the food industry. It does not refer simply to any incorporated agribusiness enterprise, although most agricultural businesses today are in some way economically connected to the dominant food industry players. As such, it may be thought of as a movement, which is at times also referred to as "anti-corporate farming"

Corporate farming has a profound effect on not only the way we eat as human beings, but on the very concept as to how we look at the food. When we used the word farm we would like to think of the classic painting of mom an pop with a pitchfork and happy little cows in the background. Nothing of course could be further from the truth, today’s agribusiness is designed for getting maximum profit for minimal effort. A great deal of the food chain, could be threatened if we continue to mass produce in unsanitary conditions created by these large companies along with all of the bi-products added to our food to save a buck, or the very attitude of the public’s health not being the most important but the financial gains being most important (by-products I mean man made ingredients like hydrogenated oils, high fructose corn syrup, MSG, aspartame, and anything else that you can not pronounce in order to keep the shelf life of the foods).

Environmentally of course when things are streamlined for profit, there is often a great cost. Large machines are needed to harvest and process food the effects of these machines billow the diesel by-products in the air. The destruction to the land and the poor health conditions of animals is leading to our contaminated foods that line our grocery aisles and have aided in the highest medical needs ever known in this country. When we take away important care that once existed on family owned farms we get disease such as: Salmonella, E-coli, Gardia, Campylobacter. Our corporate system has failed. We waste more food than any country yet feel the need to mass-produce without the care or interest for quality. When are we going to care about how we treat our food and bodies?

http://corporatecrime.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/chicken-broiler-03.jpg

-Chicken Farms (Tyson in particular owns and operates many other companies:

Tyson Foods, Inc. (NYSE: TSN) is an American multinational corporation based in Springdale, Arkansas, that operates in the food industry. The company is the world's second largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef, and pork only behind Brazilian JBS S.A., and annually exports the largest percentage of beef out of the United States. With 2005 sales of US$26 billion, Tyson Foods is the second-largest food production company in the Fortune 500, the largest meat producer in the world, and according to Forbes one of the 100 largest companies in the United States.

The company makes a wide variety of animal-based and prepared products at its 123 food processing plants. Tyson Foods has approximately 107,000 employees, who work at more than 300 facilities in the United States and throughout the world. Tyson works with 6,729 contract chicken growers.

Tyson Foods is one of largest U.S. marketers of value-added chicken, beef and pork to retail grocers, broad line food service distributors and national fast food and full service restaurant chains; fresh beef and pork; frozen and fully-cooked chicken, beef and pork products; case-ready beef and pork; supermarket deli chicken products; meat toppings for the pizza industry and retail frozen pizza; club store chicken, beef and pork; ground beef and flour tortillas. It supplies all Yum! Brands chains that use chicken (including KFC and Taco Bell), as well as McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, Wal-Mart, Kroger, Costco, IGA, Beef O'Brady's, small restaurant businesses, and prisons.

*Tyson foods website does not mention the following about their company in fact they mention quite the opposite. Below is the information often left out by Tyson representatives:

-Inside the broiler farms where the chicken are raised Tyson uses 42 by 400 feet (120 m) and holds around 24,000 chickens, giving each chicken 0.7 square feet (0.065 m2) of floor space. Bred to grow quickly occasional broilers become too heavy to walk and thus starve farmer must walk the length of each of his sheds 5 times per day to check for dead birds, which may be cannibalized if left in place. Crowding also keeps the chickens from moving around which also can cause inflamed patches of skin from sitting on the fecal waste on the floor, which is cleaned out only every 18 months. Tyson provides feed as well as feed additives such as antibiotics to promote growth. When more is applied than plants can absorb, it may run off into nearby streams and then rivers, causing nutrient pollution and sometimes putrefaction. Airborne ammonia from spread waste can also be a health issue for neighbors of broiler farms. Tyson attempts to shift liability for environmental damages to the farmers. Tyson has been involved in several lawsuits related to air and water pollution, Tyson continued to illegally dump waste water after the search warrants were executed, prompting an EPA senior trial attorney to remark that: "Having done this work for nearly 20 years, I don't recall any case where violations continued after the execution of two search warrants. That's stunning." In 2001, Tyson was charged with conspiracy to smuggle undocumented workers to work on its production lines. In September 2005, thirteen African American workers at a Tyson Foods poultry plant in Ashland, Alabama, filed a discrimination lawsuit against the company. The lawsuit brought allegations of discrimination over several years, including a "Whites only" sign on a bathroom door and the use of racial slurs and other racist comments. The investigator claims plant employees were also seen throwing around dead birds just for fun. These are just a few of the “fun” facts that come with corporate farming.

Transport Dumping

http://gliving.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/cows-feedlot-01.jpg

-Cattle farms (Beaty Farms to name one major company):

For their milk, the cow is forced into yearly pregnancies. After giving birth she is milked for 10 months but will be artificially inseminated during her third month so that she is milked even when she is pregnant. The demanded of production of milk is more than her body can give. So she starts breaking down body tissue to produce milk. The result is an illness called ketosis.

Most of the day the cow is tied up in a narrow stall usually wallowing in her own excrement. She gets mastitis because the hands that milk her are rough and usually unclean. She gets rumen acidosis from bad food and lameness. To keep the animals at high levels of productivity, dairy farmers keep them constantly pregnant through the use of artificial insemination. Farmers also use an array of drugs, including bovine growth hormone (BGH); prostaglandin, which is used to bring a cow into heat whenever the farmer wants to have her inseminated; antibiotics; and even tranquilizers, in order to influence the productivity and behavior of the cows.

Perhaps the greatest pain suffered by cows in the dairy industry is the repeated loss of their young. Female calves may join the ranks of the milk producers, but the males are generally taken from their mothers within 24 hours of birth and sold at auction either for the notorious veal industry or to beef producers

http://images.businessweek.com/ss/07/08/0810_salatin/image/the-tastiest-beef-c_7dab0fb.jpg

-Agriculture Farming/Seed/GMO (Genetically Modified Foods):

http://www.treehugger.com/monsanto-no-gmo-national-refuge.jpg

There are many companies involved in the research and production of genetically modified foods. GMO food is food that is produced with the concept of being able to mass-produce and grow anything anytime without environment affecting outcome. The problem with this is that it does not have proven safety for consumers in the long run in terms of health and nutritional needs. A company in particular named “Monsanto” a seed company that makes billions by regulating what farmers and can and can not grow. They have sued and ended many farmers careers due to farmers deciding they did not care to use their GMO seeds to grow corn and so Monsanto shut them down permently. They make hybrid seeds that are questionable in the long run of our food chain. Many stories have come into fruition about Monsanto and farmers here in America as well as Africa/India (where they have started cotton crops) committing suicide due to the high-pressure the company places on the farmer.Poisoned by Monsanto GMO Food

Seeds of DestructionTerminator Seeds
Genuity
Food Inc. DocumentaryThe World According to MonsantoThe Future of Food
Seeds of DeceptionSweet Misery A Poisoned WorldSeeds of Destruction



-THE REVOLVING DOOR

The success of efforts to restore public trust in government will hinge on reducing the disproportionate degree to which private corporations are able to influence the formulation of public policy. To this point, debate about breaking the grip of “special interests” on government has focused on the corrosive influence of money on politics, leading to legislation to reform electoral campaign finance. Yet important as campaign contributions have been in increasing corporate influence, there is another key mechanism by which companies promote their own interests at the expense of the common good: the “revolving door” movement of individuals back and forth between the private and public sectors. The

revolving door takes three forms:

• The Industry-to-Government “Reverse” Revolving Door, through which the appointment of corporate executives and business lobbyists to key posts in federal agencies establishes a pro-business bias in policy formulation and regulatory enforcement.

• The Government-to-Industry Revolving Door, through which public officials move to lucrative private sector roles from which they may use their experience to compromise government procurement, regulatory policy and the public interest.

• The Government-to-Lobbyist Revolving Door, through which former lawmakers and executive-branch officials use their inside connections to advance the interests of corporate clients.

All three forms of revolving door industry access have become so common that it is often hard to determine where government ends and the private sector begins.

What can we do as consumers:

Be aware of where your food comes from.

whenever possible try to buy from local farms.

Not only will you be able to speak with the actual persons who grew your food, you'll be putting your hard earned money back into the local economy.

This is not to say that local farmers aren't in it to make money, but atleast you will have some clue as to where your money is going. Remember, you are the comsumer and you vote with your dollars when you purchase products that are damaging the enviroment.

Contact your local representative and let them know that you will not stand for the revolving door policy in Washington. Stop scratching there backs and start scratching the consumers'.