PureCountry
Well-known member
Cal these articles your sharing are just as - if not more - biased than the claims made about "FOOD, Inc". To say that this is an attack on farmers and ranchers is absolutely ludicrous. The film tries to support farmers and ranchers from start to finish. It portrays a an Ag. Industry that has allowed a few corporations to control all farmers and ranchers, converting them into a culture of slaves who work the land to make products that fit the system. It advocates people buying from farmers, farmers being more aware of what they grow and where it goes -HOW CAN THAT BE A BAD THING?????
And this whole argument that "American farmers and ranchers are able to produce enough food to feed not only the population of the U.S. - and do so at the lowest cost of any developed nation - but they are also able to export food to many other nations which are unable to feed their growing populations." Let's not forget one of the main points of the film, that I feel should be the focus : the QUALITY of that food!! We overproduce some products on this continent and it allows for that surplus to become a globally traded commodity. However, does it make for healthier societies? Why is Type II Diabetes, heart disease, cancer and many other things on the rise so much in the last few decades? Why are the rates of obesity in youth going through the roof? Is it to be blamed on video games and a lack of physical activity? Or is it just possible that it could have some correlation to glucose/fructose and other corn-based products that are EVERYWHERE in our food chain? Obviously we'd say it's a combination, but these articles you've posted seem to dismiss that aspect of the film.
It sounds like something I would expect from an old boy's ranchers club. As soon as someone - like Oprah or anyone else - makes a comment about beef or anything else - look out 'cause the gloves are comin' off!! Well, let's take a real hard friggin look at what's being done here. No one in the film criticizes farmers and rancher on how they produce beef. They criticize huge corporations for finishing cattle on high corn/barley rations. They criticize huge corporations for the manner in which they process food with anything from methyl bromide to ammonia - including beef - because they can't find any other way to ensure that it's safe. They criticize huge corporations for the lack of respect shown immigrant workers.
WHERE IN THE FILM DOES IT MAKE BEEF FARMERS AND RANCHERS LOOK LIKE THE BAD GUYS? I think it points the finger right where it should - corporate control freaks, the USDA and alot of bureacrats who are getting rich off of the backs of the everyday working American and Canadian farmer, rancher, and taxpayer.
WHY WOULDN"T WE WANT THAT TYPE OF SYSTEM TO CHANGE?
And this whole argument that "American farmers and ranchers are able to produce enough food to feed not only the population of the U.S. - and do so at the lowest cost of any developed nation - but they are also able to export food to many other nations which are unable to feed their growing populations." Let's not forget one of the main points of the film, that I feel should be the focus : the QUALITY of that food!! We overproduce some products on this continent and it allows for that surplus to become a globally traded commodity. However, does it make for healthier societies? Why is Type II Diabetes, heart disease, cancer and many other things on the rise so much in the last few decades? Why are the rates of obesity in youth going through the roof? Is it to be blamed on video games and a lack of physical activity? Or is it just possible that it could have some correlation to glucose/fructose and other corn-based products that are EVERYWHERE in our food chain? Obviously we'd say it's a combination, but these articles you've posted seem to dismiss that aspect of the film.
It sounds like something I would expect from an old boy's ranchers club. As soon as someone - like Oprah or anyone else - makes a comment about beef or anything else - look out 'cause the gloves are comin' off!! Well, let's take a real hard friggin look at what's being done here. No one in the film criticizes farmers and rancher on how they produce beef. They criticize huge corporations for finishing cattle on high corn/barley rations. They criticize huge corporations for the manner in which they process food with anything from methyl bromide to ammonia - including beef - because they can't find any other way to ensure that it's safe. They criticize huge corporations for the lack of respect shown immigrant workers.
WHERE IN THE FILM DOES IT MAKE BEEF FARMERS AND RANCHERS LOOK LIKE THE BAD GUYS? I think it points the finger right where it should - corporate control freaks, the USDA and alot of bureacrats who are getting rich off of the backs of the everyday working American and Canadian farmer, rancher, and taxpayer.
WHY WOULDN"T WE WANT THAT TYPE OF SYSTEM TO CHANGE?