Food, Inc really opened my eyes to how it's not only foods that's being processed and genetically enhanced it's also the ingredients used to make these products, like corn and soy beans. Before watching Food, Inc i was well aware of the failures of the meat packing industry and the fast food industry because I actually read Fast Food Nation, and watched the movie. After reading this I was shocked, especially by that fact that fast food companies use chemicals in their foods to produce the smell and the taste. They are altering two main components of the foods if the smell and the taste isn't real, what part of it is? Even though i did read Fast Food Nation, Food, Inc taught me a lot and made me wonder why I started eating all this junk again. The movie kind of scared me, even though people told me any of the things i saw in the film, I ignored them but I don't want to accept the fact that the foods i love to eat can potentially lead to my death. After watching food inc it's like i'm, forced to listen, I can't ignore it any longer.
Some of the issues that stood out to me was the Monsanto Round-Up Soybean and corn grain, the lack of power the Food and Drug Administration, and the chemicals used in our meat. I knew that the meat industry is placing GMO's in our foods, but i wouldn't have ever guess they are genetically modifying the seeds farmers use to grow their crops. Just thinking about the millions of products made from the Monsanto Round-Up Soybean and the corn grains in the united states that have this processed unauthentic seeds is mind-blogging. It seems unfair that the Monsanto company can have a monopoly over the soybean being used. In 1996 only 2% of the soybeans produced in the U.S. was from the Monsanto company, but by 2008 that rose to 90%! That barely gives farmers a chance to use another brand of seeds, and if they do use a different one they wouldn't be making as much as thousands of other farmers that are producing hundreds of thousands of these Monsanto Round-Up Soybeans. The farmers who chose to do the right thing would end up losing their farm or their business. In other countries they have actually band the use of Monsanto seeds.There has to be some corrupt system going on here because if it's evident that these seeds aren't healthy for us, why isn't our government doing anything to stop it. Our government should be protecting its citizen from things that will harm us, and i'm sorry to say it but the processed and altered food is killing us. I was blown away when i learned that our own Food Drug Administration no longer has the right to shut down Plants if it continually fails the Ecoli & salmonella tests. If our own government can't shut down these plants that are sending out disease-ritten meats, then who can? The government places a large role in our food production. throughout history they have been apart of this industry. In President Bush and Clinton's administration there were people in charge of the FDA who were presidents and Vice presidents of food corporations and USDA farm and beef lobbyist. The FDA is ruled by food industry people, the same people who they are meant to be regulating. The last thing that really surprised me is that they douse our meat in Ammonia to kill bacteria. We're not even suppose to touch/smell bleach for long because it can damage our skin and internal functions, but the meat-packing industry think its alright to throw our meats in huge vats of ammonia? I mean come on this should be easily seen as a wrong doing, but i guess not to the FDA. To top it all off the ammonia vats are only killing 70% of the bacteria, so if that left over 30% contains bacteria there goes another 10 dead children, all because of the meat industry. In food, Inc they showed us farmers who raised and killed their animals themselves, and how much healthier those foods were. The sad part is that the FDA even tried to shut down some of these farmers but when their foods tested to be healthier and contain less bacteria than the top companies in the top companies in the U.S., they were forced to leave these farmers open for business.
My Food Formula would be stay away from unprocessed foods(GMOs) , Eat organics, but you can occasionally indulge in one of your guilty pleasure foods. I would follow this formula because even through its making you eat a healthy on a regular basis, it does allow you to go to a restaurant and eat something fattening. It allows you to eat a delicious slice or two of pizza when you're craving cheesy deliciousness. I think making food formulas are difficult to follow no matter who you are because in everyday life you're out and about and it's sometimes difficult to eat a certain way, when everything isn't available to you.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Extra Credit!
After reading "Two Ways to Belong in America" by Bharati Mukherjee, I had many questions scrabbling in my mind. Parts of her argument seemed contradictory, and she tended to look at everything with a black or white perspective. In life its rarely ever black and white and in the case of immigrants in the United States, it definitely some shade of gray.
I didn't like parts of Bharati Mukherjee argument where she states that she and her sister are both "freaks." Neither one of them are freaks, in america we have so many different types of immigrants. There are the ones that fully embrace american culture and others who still hold their own cultures but semi-assimilate in american society. Bharati Mukherjee is too critical of her sister, she feels her sister is in opposition of her and that she shouldn't be. What Bharati is forgetting is that America is a melting-pot, filled with many different people with many cultures and ideals. You don't have to drop your culture and everything you knew, to become an american.
Shelia Jasonoff responded to Bharati Mukherjee's essay, she believes that it would be a betrayal to think that there is only two ways for immigrants to live in america: "assimilating or refusing to assimilate." She directly goes against her argument. Jadonoff uses herself as a prime example because she too was an immigrant in america from South Asia. She knows how it feels to be an immigrant and it evident to her that there is a in between area where you don't have to fully assimilate or refuse to assimilate to be an american.
I didn't like parts of Bharati Mukherjee argument where she states that she and her sister are both "freaks." Neither one of them are freaks, in america we have so many different types of immigrants. There are the ones that fully embrace american culture and others who still hold their own cultures but semi-assimilate in american society. Bharati Mukherjee is too critical of her sister, she feels her sister is in opposition of her and that she shouldn't be. What Bharati is forgetting is that America is a melting-pot, filled with many different people with many cultures and ideals. You don't have to drop your culture and everything you knew, to become an american.
Shelia Jasonoff responded to Bharati Mukherjee's essay, she believes that it would be a betrayal to think that there is only two ways for immigrants to live in america: "assimilating or refusing to assimilate." She directly goes against her argument. Jadonoff uses herself as a prime example because she too was an immigrant in america from South Asia. She knows how it feels to be an immigrant and it evident to her that there is a in between area where you don't have to fully assimilate or refuse to assimilate to be an american.
Fast Food Nation
Eric Schlosser's argument is that fast food industry not only changed how Americans eat but also that its methods and values have become the country's chief export. Schlosser uses several different methods to support his argument He believes that by using several different methods and topics it creates a "balance" that most essays need.
He begins "What We Eat" by using the description method. Schlosser describes the fast food industry in american society. He describes how Fast food restaurants have grown in our society exponentially; these restaurants are evident in "stadiums, airports, zoos, high schools, universities, on cruise ships, trains, airplanes, K-marts, and Wal-marts." He then uses the example method to explain the experience of going to a fast food restaurant. the typical experience at a fast food restaurant starts with you "pull[ing] open the glass door,feel[ing] the rush of cool air, walk[ing] in, get[ting] on line,study[ing] the black lit color photographs above the counter, plac[ing] your order, and hand[ing] over a few dollars, [etc]" .Schlosser uses the cause and effect method throughout his essay. He states the causes of the fast food rapid growth in the united states. One of the causes was "the fundamental changes in american society." Many women entered the work force, which in turn "greatly increased demand for the types of services that housewives traditionally perform," cooking being on of them.
Schlosser essay benefits from using several different methods because it clearly identifies his argument and persuades the audience to side with him. He uses many descriptions, examples, statistics, and stories. I personally enjoyed his writing style it logically went toward in history and explained the many facets of the fast food industries. I believed he had a strong argument but at times some of his facts didn't seem reliable. For example when he stated "the golden arches are now more widely recognized than the Christian cross." I feel like proof is needed for such a strong statement it seems like an exaggeration just to emphasize his point.
He begins "What We Eat" by using the description method. Schlosser describes the fast food industry in american society. He describes how Fast food restaurants have grown in our society exponentially; these restaurants are evident in "stadiums, airports, zoos, high schools, universities, on cruise ships, trains, airplanes, K-marts, and Wal-marts." He then uses the example method to explain the experience of going to a fast food restaurant. the typical experience at a fast food restaurant starts with you "pull[ing] open the glass door,feel[ing] the rush of cool air, walk[ing] in, get[ting] on line,study[ing] the black lit color photographs above the counter, plac[ing] your order, and hand[ing] over a few dollars, [etc]" .Schlosser uses the cause and effect method throughout his essay. He states the causes of the fast food rapid growth in the united states. One of the causes was "the fundamental changes in american society." Many women entered the work force, which in turn "greatly increased demand for the types of services that housewives traditionally perform," cooking being on of them.
Schlosser essay benefits from using several different methods because it clearly identifies his argument and persuades the audience to side with him. He uses many descriptions, examples, statistics, and stories. I personally enjoyed his writing style it logically went toward in history and explained the many facets of the fast food industries. I believed he had a strong argument but at times some of his facts didn't seem reliable. For example when he stated "the golden arches are now more widely recognized than the Christian cross." I feel like proof is needed for such a strong statement it seems like an exaggeration just to emphasize his point.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)