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I don't care where my food comes from -- and neither should you.
UPI ^ | September 26, 2002 | Ronald Bailey

Posted on 09/29/2002 6:09:37 PM PDT by gcruse

The Reason Foundation

LOS ANGELES -- I don't care where my food comes from -- and neither should you.

By Ronald Bailey

"People should know where their food comes from," an organic farmer from Montana declared at a conference on agriculture and the environment I attended this past weekend, sponsored by the Political Economy Research Center. This notion is increasingly popular among political environmentalists. It is usually a shorthand way to express opposition to genetically enhanced crops and to convey approval for their organic equivalents.

From a nutritional and ecological point of view, the idea is bunk.

First, a bit of background. It is not at all surprising that most Americans think that chickens come plastic-wrapped without bones, that milk pours from gallon jugs, or that fresh fruit can be picked year around. After all, less than two percent of the country lives on farms today.

But when I was growing up in the 1960s I knew exactly where at least 90 percent of the food I ate came from: my family's crops. Every tomato, bean, squash, cucumber, pea, potato, ear of corn, turnip, mustard green, carrot, and cabbage I ate came from our huge garden. We picked wild blackberries and grew gallons of strawberries. We had cherry, apple, peach, walnut, and European chestnut trees. We canned nearly everything and had a root cellar. Our honey came from more than 20 beehives.

As for meat, we raised and slaughtered all the beef, pork, chicken, goat, lamb, and turkey we ate. Our milk came from our dairy herd, and we spent many hours churning butter. The domesticated meat was occasionally supplemented with squirrel, groundhog, opossum, and mud turtle. Although I didn't much care for them, our fish consisted of crappies and catfish taken from the farm ponds.

My father's standing orders for butchering the beef was to make as many steaks as possible and turn everything else into hamburger. The meat was wrapped in waxed butcher paper and stored in giant freezer chests. We had a smokehouse in which we salted our own hams. I even knew the names of the cows and pigs we ate. You can't know much more about where your food comes from than that.

It is precisely this personal food history that makes me cherish modern grocery stores and restaurants. American grocers can choose what they offer their customers from among more than 320,000 different packaged foods. As a kid, it was an enormous treat to go to the local Piggly Wiggly to buy tasty exotic prepackaged items like hot dogs, spaghetti, and Velveeta. (Incidentally, it was Piggly Wiggly that invented the novel concept that customers should be allowed to roam a store's aisles and pick out their own groceries.) And the proliferation of fine restaurants in the last two decades has been amazing.

Which brings me back to the absurd assertion that everybody should know where his or her food comes from. I knew where my food came from because it took my family a huge percentage of our time just to do the mind-numbing and back-breaking labor of raising it. Of course, we sold our surplus cows, milk, and wool for money so that we could buy incidentals like clothing, medicines, books, refrigerators, televisions, tractors, trucks, and cars. And no one hectored us about knowing where those items came from.

One of the great glories of modern life is the enormous elaboration of the division of labor and how the efficiencies gained from that division makes people much wealthier than they could otherwise be. Since we all don't have to stitch our own clothes, bake our own bread, compound our own medicines, or even cook our own meals, we are all much better off. This is why as a society we can afford to have economic niches like pet dentists and manufacturers of elastomolds for pastry chefs who specialize in baking madeleines.

And why should they care? Food today is cheap, nutritious, and safe. The last century has seen a vast improvement in food quality and safety. In millennia past, food and water were the chief sources of many deadly diseases. Consider that as recently as 1933-35, a U.S Public Health Service survey found that 5,458 children between the ages of 1 and 15 died from diarrhea and enteritis, most caused by food-borne pathogens.

By contrast, a recent survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control found that just 29 Americans died of food-borne illnesses between 1993 and 1997. Meanwhile, stomach cancer rates are down by 75 percent since 1950 because old-fashioned food preservation techniques like salting, pickling, and smoking have been replaced by refrigeration.

That doesn't mean people are or should be prevented from learning about where their food comes from, if that's the way they want to spend their time. Among life's greatest pleasures are fine dining and food connoisseurship. The expanding division of labor and our growing technological prowess is nurturing more and more differentiation among foods, permitting the creation and appreciation of thousands of wines, cheeses, chocolates, coffees, teas, and so forth.

I might prefer parmigiano-reggiano versus your inexplicable fondness for boursin. Or I might think that Rombauer Napa Valley Zinfandel is nectar and sniff at that swill from Australia that you quaff. Today, you can choose "slow food" (though it has some unsavory ideological baggage) over fast food, or choose both when that suits you.

Nor is there anything wrong with waking up on Saturday mornings to rush out to the local farmers market. I, too, cannot resist organic heirloom tomatoes. I buy organic not because such foods are ecologically or nutritionally superior -- they aren't -- but simply because the local lady who grows the Brandywines, Mortgage Lifters, and Yellow Pears I crave chooses that method of production. I'm glad she grows them, not least because that means that I don't have to anymore.

For those who are deluded enough to think that organic foods are nutritionally superior, the market makes the opportunity to buy them widely available, generally at a 30-percent price premium. (Ideologically motivated organic aficionados should keep in mind that organic production typically yields a third less food than other means. That means that more land is being plowed down, leaving less for forests and other wildlands.)

But there is something wrong with the puritanical notion that it's a sin to live in blithe ignorance of the ultimate sources of your nourishment. Life is too short for most people to learn how to fix their computers and cars, and too short for most to learn about food production. And that's just fine. Eating shouldn't be a moral duty; it should be a pleasure.

(Ronald Bailey, Reason's science correspondent, is the editor of "Global Warming and Other Eco Myths" and "Earth Report 2000: Revisiting the True State of the Planet.")

Copyright © 2002 United Press International
 


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: farms; food; gulla
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To: teresat
When strawberries were imported from Mexico, it was revealed that they were free to use waste water we're not up here. We spent our first two hundred years bettering this nation only to trash our standards in the interest of corporate profits. I don't like to address it this way, but the truth is the truth. Health be damned, just so long as somebody can claim higher profit margins.
21 posted on 09/29/2002 7:37:58 PM PDT by DoughtyOne
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To: gcruse
bravo! I loved this article (not least of which because I'm what's commonly known as a "foodie".. not a food snob, mind you.. but there's so much wonderful stuff out there available these days, that's it become somewhat of a ..well.. comsuming passion.
22 posted on 09/29/2002 7:42:20 PM PDT by goodieD
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To: goodieD
The younger people of today, dagnabbit!, take for
granted the year round availibility of fresh fruit
and vegetables that we have now. I'm afraid they have
this illusion that the produce comes from just
across town, not a worldwide system of trains, trucks,
planes, and international trade agreements.
And that is fine. But when they start parroting
the leftist line of protective tariffs, 'fair' trade,
ecofriendly coffee, and environmental investing, they
are tearing down the structure that brings them the
carefree dining they take for a given.
23 posted on 09/29/2002 7:50:35 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Yuck. I hate Reason magazine. The author lives in his head.
24 posted on 09/29/2002 7:53:31 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: gcruse
Sounds a bit like how I and my wife both grew up, except we still raise our own chickens and most of our own veggies. I also build and fixing my own computers. Not because I have to, but because I enjoy doing it for myself and I know just how good and fresh it is. And gardening is a great stress reliever.

Of course the food in the stores is fresher and safer than it was 40-50 years ago. But knowing where it comes from and how it was grown doesn't hurt. This guy might be happy eating Soylent Green.

25 posted on 09/29/2002 7:58:29 PM PDT by eggman
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To: independentmind
Yuck. I hate Reason magazine. The author lives in his head.

I live in mine, too.  Evidently you live out of your head?

26 posted on 09/29/2002 8:00:01 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Don't listen to Betty Bowers. She's a populist, and she "wants her cake and eat it, too". She has no idea how wealth is created. Bringing back ankle-length dresses and defeating "corporatism" will save "Murrica".

Sing hallelujah!

27 posted on 09/29/2002 8:05:32 PM PDT by Senator Pardek
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To: eggman
 I also build and fixing my own computers. Not because I have to,
but because I enjoy doing it for myself and I know just how good and fresh it
is.
 

LOL  Yeah, there's nothing like a byte of
fresh motherboard smothered in good
old Log-on Cabin Syrup!!


28 posted on 09/29/2002 8:05:53 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: Senator Pardek
We are by necessity at the mercy of civilization.
Those who find this unacceptable fly planes into buildings.
29 posted on 09/29/2002 8:09:29 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: Senator Pardek
I should have known you couldn't let sleeping dogs lie, Pardek. Shall I remind you that you are breaking forum rules? Still stewing over our last conversation, hmmmm? I must have really struck a nerve. LOL!

If you really don't understand the importance of where food comes from, my guess is that New York has infected your brain.

30 posted on 09/29/2002 8:11:46 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: gcruse
Or the more tame rant about "lack of civilization" on PCs made available to the average dummy by - you guessed it! "CORPORATISM!"
31 posted on 09/29/2002 8:12:37 PM PDT by Senator Pardek
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To: independentmind
The best food comes from corporations, and the crappiest comes from "poor farmers".

Deal with that fact, and you'll sleep better at night.

It will be a great day in America when the last "independent" farmer is on welfare.

32 posted on 09/29/2002 8:14:56 PM PDT by Senator Pardek
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To: Cicero
Put me down for local food and organic if possible. I'm a techno-peasant at heart.
33 posted on 09/29/2002 8:19:06 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: Senator Pardek
Perhaps you can explain to me, then, why many of the oh-so-chic go-there-to-be-seen restaurants in Manhattan are constantly on the look-out for exotic ingredients from boutique farms.
34 posted on 09/29/2002 8:20:05 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: Cicero
fresh grown and local grown is certainly tastier and healthier

Even Brussels sprouts and cauliflower are edible when fresh-picked.

35 posted on 09/29/2002 8:20:16 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: independentmind
Perhaps you can explain to me, then, why many of the oh-so-chic go-there-to-be-seen restaurants in Manhattan are constantly on the look-out for exotic ingredients from boutique farms.

Because they cater to people who pay $200 for a pair of jeans which cost $5 to make.

And do really think those $300 dollar-a-plate restaurants don't buy ingredients at the local bodega? Wake up - LOL!

36 posted on 09/29/2002 8:23:48 PM PDT by Senator Pardek
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To: gcruse
Well that's the problem with leftists, they have no concept of reality, everything for them is emotion and utopian ideals. Manna comes from the government,(in their eyes) and if they would just tighten those restrictions, it could all be organic manna.
37 posted on 09/29/2002 8:32:23 PM PDT by goodieD
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To: independentmind
The BEST duck, in the world, comes from Long Island. Yes, will wonders never cease ... there ARE still fams on Long Island. N.Y.C. restaurants don't buy dicks and geese from Zimbabwe, or India, or Brazil.

Long Island sweet corn , unlike the hog swill, that is grown in the midwest, is also without peer ; though, truthfully, my local Conn. corn is also very tastey.

Woner of wonders, Jersey has always produced wonderful produce too and the fancy Manhattan restaurants, which you patently don't know much about, do buy local produce.

Exotic ingrediants, aren't all that " exotic " to those used to eating in N.Y.C. or any other large metropolis.

Just what do you suppose is served in expensive restaurants, anway ? Great chefs get paid a lot of money, fads come and go, and most expensive / chic restaurants don't rely on " special " ingedients, to lure people into their establishments.

38 posted on 09/29/2002 8:32:50 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: Senator Pardek
Ever study the Irish Potato Famine, Pardek?

BTW, you may want to do a little research on boutique farms that do nothing but cater to the supposedly refined tastes of Manhattanites. I'm quite a serious cook, you know. (I do that in between lengthening all of my dresses down to the floor--by hand, course.)

39 posted on 09/29/2002 8:33:21 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: RightWhale
Even Brussels sprouts and cauliflower are edible when fresh-picked.
_________________________


Nothing like a stalk full of Brussels sprouts that have been through a frost or a freeze. That's living!
40 posted on 09/29/2002 8:34:55 PM PDT by dennisw
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