Wednesday, April 11, 2012

the food conspiracy




Snake Cake / sweet poison


Let them eat....poison!





How food corporations have poisoned the food supply in pursuit of profit

The food we eat is controlled every step from the farm to the dinner table by huge corporations.
 It doesn't taste as it used to and isn't as healthy.
 How did it get this way and what can you do about it?
James Colquhoun , director of the film Food Matters , along with health and nutrition expert, Daniel Vitalis http://www.danielvitalis.com/, offer insight on why food companies purposely make you addicted to their food, and how eating the right things can  make you healthy  and cure virtually any disease. http://gerson.org/gerpress/

Investigative reporter Charles Duhigg http://www.foodmatters.tv/talks about how habits shape our lives, and how we can shape our habits.http://charlesduhigg.com/

There have been a lot of different food fads and diets that have come and gone, said Vitalis, and people are really confused about what to eat.
"Either by design or a grand pattern, there's a food conspiracy now,"
and people out there are starving to death, even though they keep eating and eating, he continued, explaining that many processed foods lack nutrients and are detrimental to health.
Artificial sweeteners like aspartame, and flavor enhancers such as MSG are particularly addictive, as well as unhealthy, said Colquhoun, which suggests to him that these additives are put into our food for economic reasons --i.e. to increase company profits.
The FDA doesn't really protect the consumers' interests, but rather, is there rather to facilitate the approval of various substances into the marketplace.

Vitalis addressed the problem of diet foods, noting that while they may have reduced calories, they have low nutrition. To lose weight, he suggested people increase their nutrient to calorie ratio
http://www.ehow.com/info_8532151_foods-nutrition-calorie-ratio.html.
Colquhoun also talked about the problems of sugar being abundantly used in food processing and manufacturing, and the rise of GMO foods.
Vitalis outlined methods to detox the body including consuming whole fresh food, using saunas, and drinking clean water (preferably from a natural spring). He also advocated eating organic foods, shopping at local farmer's markets, or even growing your own food from heirloom seeds. For more, check out this trailer

http://www.coasttocoastam.com/videos/?uri=channels/455280/1636259

from Colquhoun's new documentary,
http://www.danielvitalis.com/Hungry for Change .


>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
10 things the food industry doesn't want you to know

By Ben Maller

Bigger, juicier, saltier, sweeter, crunchier.
Most of all, more.

 The food industry and its nonstop marketing has been tabbed by many experts as a major player in the obesity epidemic."The result of constant exposure to today's 'eat more' food environment," write Marion Nestle and Malden Nesheim in their upcoming book "Why Calories Count," has been to drive people to desire high-calorie foods and to become 'conditioned overeaters.
Even as the food industry takes steps seemingly in the right direction--by launching campaigns to bring healthy products to schools, for example--wellness initiatives are often just marketing ploys, contends David Ludwig, a pediatrician and coauthor of a commentary published in 2008 in theJournal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)that raised questions about whether big food companies can be trusted to help combat obesity. Ultimately, he has argued, makers of popular junk foods have an obligation to stockholders to maximize profits, which means encouraging consumers to eat more--not less--of a company's products. Health experts including Ludwig and Nestle, a professor of nutrition at New York University, both of whom have long histories of tracking the food industry, spoke with U.S. News and highlighted 10 things that junk food makers don't want you to know about their products and how they promote them. Here's a peek behind the curtain:

1. Junk food makers spend billions advertising unhealthy foods to kids. According to the Federal Trade Commission, food makers spend some $1.6 billion annually to reach children through the traditional media as well the Internet, in-store advertising, and sweepstakes. An article published in 2006 in theJournal of Public Health Policyputs the number as high as $10 billion annually. The bulk of these ads are for unhealthy products high in calories, sugar, fat, and sodium. Promotions often use cartoon characters or free giveaways to entice kids into the junk food fold. On TV alone, the average child sees about 5,500 food commercials a year (or about 15 per day) that advertise high-sugar breakfast cereals, fast food, soft drinks, candy, and snacks, according to the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity. Compare that to the fewer than 100 TV ads per year kids see for healthy foods like fruits, veggies, and bottled water.

 2. The studies that food producers support tend to minimize health concerns associated with their products. In fact, according to a review led by Ludwig of hundreds of studies that looked at the health effects of milk, juice, and soda, the likelihood of conclusions favorable to the industry was several times higher among industry-sponsored research than studies that received no industry funding. "If a study is funded by the industry, it may be closer to advertising than science," he says.

3. More processing means more profits, but typically makes food less healthy. Minimally processed foods such as fresh fruits and vegetables obviously aren't where food companies look for profits. The big bucks stem from turning government-subsidized commodity crops--mainly corn, wheat, and soybeans--into fast foods, snack foods, and beverages. High-profit products derived from these commodity crops are generally high in calories and low in nutritional value. Ultraprocessed foods, for example, lack fiber, micronutrients, and healthful plant substances called phytochemicals that protect against heart disease and diabetes, Ludwig wrote in a 2011JAMAcommentary. Consider: A 10-ounce, 90-calorie portion of strawberries has 5 grams of fiber, abundant vitamins and minerals, and dozens of phytochemicals, while a 1-ounce portion of Fruit Gushers also has 90 calories, but virtually none of the fruit benefits.

4. Less-processed foods are generally more filling than their highly processed counterparts. Fresh apples have an abundance of fiber and nutrients that are lost when they are processed into applesauce. And the added sugar or other sweeteners increase the number of calories without necessarily making the applesauce any more filling. Apple juice, which is even more processed, has had almost all of the fiber and nutrients stripped out. This same stripping out of nutrients, says Ludwig, happens with highly refined white bread compared with stone-ground whole-wheat bread.

5. Many supposedly healthy replacement foods are hardly healthier than the foods they replace. In 2006, for example, major beverage makers agreed to remove sugary sodas from school vending machines. But the industry mounted an intense lobbying effort that persuaded lawmakers to allow sports drinks and vitamin waters that--despite their slightly healthier reputations--still can be packed with sugar and calories.

6. A health claim on the label doesn't necessarily make a food healthy. Health claims such as "zero trans fats" or "contains whole wheat" may create the false impression that a product is healthy when it's not. While the claims may be true, a product is not going to benefit your kid's health if it's also loaded with salt and sugar or saturated fat, say, and lacks fiber or other nutrients. "These claims are calorie distracters," adds Nestle. "They make people forget about the calories." For example, tropical-fruit flavored Gerber Graduates Fruit Juice Treats show pictures of fresh oranges and pineapple to imply that they're made from real fruit, according to a 2010 report from the Center for Science in the Public Interest. In reality, the main ingredients are corn syrup, sugar, and white grape juice concentrate. And Keebler's Townhouse Bistro Multigrain Crackers boast that they're made with "toasted whole wheat," although sugar content far outweighs the
whole wheat. "'Made with whole grains' should send up a red flag," says registered dietitian Marisa Moore, a spokesperson with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. "If you're eating packaged food, like cereal, bread, or pasta, check the ingredient list to verify that the first ingredient is in fact a whole grain." (Think of the first ingredient listed on a package as the main ingredient; those listed farther down are included in smaller amounts.) Although the government is working to develop guidelines for front-of-package labels, no consensus has been reached.

7. Food industry pressure has made nutritional guidelines confusing for consumers. As Nestle explained in her 2003 bookFood Politics, the food industry has a history of preferring scientific jargon to straight talk. As far back as 1977, public health officials attempted to include the advice "reduce consumption of meat" in an important report calledDietary Goals for the United States. The report's authors capitulated to intense pushback from the cattle industry and used this less-direct and more ambiguous advice: "Choose meats, poultry, and fish, which will reduce saturated fat intake." Overall, says Nestle, the government has a hard time suggesting that people eat less of anything.

8. The food industry funds front groups that fight antiobesity public health initiatives. Unless you follow politics closely, you wouldn't necessarily realize that a group with a name like the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) has anything to do with the food industry. In fact, Ludwig and Nestle point out, this group has lobbied aggressively against obesity-related public health campaigns--such as the one directed at removing junk food from schools--and is funded, according to the Center for Media and Democracy, primarily through donations from big food companies We've got to attack [activists'] credibility as spokespersons." On its website, the group calls Nestle "one of the country's most hysterical a such as Coca-Cola, Cargill, Tyson Foods, and Wendy's.

9. The food industry works aggressively to discredit its critics. According to the 2008 JAMAarticle, the Center for Consumer Freedom boasts that "[our strategy] is to shoot the messenger.  We've got to attack [activists'] credibility as spokespersons." On its website, the group calls Nestle "one of the country's most hysterical anti-food fanatics."

10. "Pink slime" is on its way out--but it's not gone. Ground meat is commonly bulked up with what critics call "pink slime," butchering scraps that have been cleansed with ammonia. While the industry insists that its "lean, finely textured beef trimmings" are harmless, some experts are questioning the safety of the ubiquitous filler. Following a public outcry, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced this month that school districts can choose between receiving beef with the trimmings or without, but at a higher fat content. A growing number of grocery stores, including Safeway and Supervalu, have announced that they're ditching so-called "pink slime." Still, it remains USDA-approved, and the food industry is free to use it.









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the positive effect of Hunza diet reproduced in rats


https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:LKj6-dciic0J:www.globaldialoguefoundation.org/files/41.pdf+Hunza+Black+mulberry&hl=en&gl=ca&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESgKf3HnP3jH0gHbnuSxEprOO9TbG4bUHKzwkiFlXqVg7QUVeVe7Zs-IqdQ0vkSVj3n0CGyEr891QUHtbWIedH1ah_QC53oZLTPFrXnO0tffqz8ThtmKIJtF1s-xWZXuBVo8LKZy&sig=AHIEtbRkDWEfV_iWZJKkHQUyJwuO49lSLQ&pli=1


81 comments:

  1. Looks like the obsessive drive for money/profit is poisoning us in more ways than one!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. new "flavour enhancers" coming to processed food products on your grocery shelf
















    I believe this company, Senomyx, has identified and isolated some new “flavor enhancing” molecules.
    The motivation behind this research is to introduce these chemical additives into processed foods so that consumers will buy more of the “flavor enhanced” product and the food corporations that manufacture processed foods can make more money!!
    They don’t care about our health; they only care about their profit!!
    You may believe that the onus should be on the food corporations to prove to the FDA that these “flavour enhancing” additives are safe and not harmful to human health.
    But the FDA approved MSG which is now a disguised ingredient in most processed food.
    The “bottom line” is that these profit-driven corporations abetted by so-called regulatory agencies are intent on not only stealing our money but also stealing our lives!

    Buyer Beware!





    It is misleading to suggest that human cells are being introduced into food products.
    My understandi.g is that some molecules (we don’t know whether they are sugar or protein molecules) said to have “flavour enhancing” properties have been identified and isolated from human cells.
    Once the structure of theze molecules has been determined they will be synthezized in a commercial laboratory (there would no longer be any need to extract them from their original cell source) and sold to food corporations for inclusion in their processed food products.
    If you value your health and your life. ..do not buy or consume processed foods!!



    The government regulatory agencies need to get tough on the food-processing industry

    in order to protect the health of consumers.

    Warning labels should be mandatory on all processed food products!

    ..as well as labels detailing all added chemical ingredients sush as preservatives, dyes,taste-enhancers ,and all other additives ...so that consumers are forewarned!

    Government should slap an extra tax on all processed foods wch could be used to offset the healthcare costs of consuming such products.

    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>



    Future Food!!



    For all hard-core meatatarians:
    We can now tissue culture muscle cells (protein) in vitro (in a chemical nutrient broth)
    Such factory-produced protein could be made from a human cell source...and could be reconstituted into chicken/beef or any other meat-flavoured wafers or patties .
    By mass-producing such meat on an industrial scale we can feed more people (the global population continues to increase and food scarcity is causing an increase in tension,conflict,and violence) without farming animals "on-the- hoof" (raising farm animals for food is a major source of carbon emissions and global warming. Also a meat-based diet requires seven times more land than a meatless diet).
    Tissue-cultured nutritious protein does not require raising and killing animals!
    Then again plant sources of protein may be more palatable.
    Another way to deal with the global food shortage is to develope a taste for insects!Insects are mostly edible,and are a highly nutritious source of protein. They also reproduce quickly, and so there are plenty of them.

    But if this sounds a little cannabalistic to you,..we needn't use your cells or even human cells.

    We could use muscle cells from fish or a designer bacterium engineered to produce a gamut of tasty flavour-enhancing molecules.



    We all destroy life--whether animal or vegetable--in order to eat and live.

    It may be more ethical to grow and harvest a clump of cells in a "petri dish"

    than to raise and kill living creatures for food!

    Either way we should regard food as a sacrament (to be regarded with reverence)!!
    ..because it becomes what we are!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Food as an industrial product:

    I agree that stricter labeling regulations are required..but if we want to see changes in our food system ,we have to be willing to change our diet.
    It would be interesting to get some data on how much of the North American food supply/diet consists of "processed food" ,and what would be the economic impact of eliminating these products from the food supply.
    Food prices would certainly go up.
    But perhaps our health would improve ,and health care costs would come down.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Factory Food by any other name is still poison!

      Delete
  4. Most processed food is not fit for human consumption, and it's synthetic additives are likely responsible for the increasing incidence of obesity,cancer and dementia

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Seemingly cheap food ends up in the long run being very costly ---becuz we end up paying for it with ill health and shortened lives!

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    2. The processed food induztry needs to be more strictly regulated...to the point of requiring graphic images on packaging depicting the health consequences of consuming carcinogens (just like the tobacco industry)

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    3. Regulatory agencies are toothless becuz thats how tbe food processing industry likes it!

      Delete
    4. Ontario doctors call for highrr taxes and graphic labelling on junk food:

      http://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/ontario-doctors-want-tax-warnings-on-junk-food-1.1007426

      Delete

    5. Ontario Medical Association calls for tobacco-like warnings on unhealthy food:


      http://ca.news.yahoo.com/video/call-tobacco-warnings-junk-food-165011413.html

      Delete
  5. reminds me of the movie "Soylent Green" set in the future when overpopulation compels the "powers that be" to exercise a creative solution to shortages in the food supply:
    Humans at the end of their productive years are euthenized and literally recycled --their protein rendered/reconstituted into wafers that are distributed to feed the starving masses.
    Why waste all that nutrient-rich, life-sustaining protein!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Protein for and from the people!!
      Now that's taking "recycling" to the next level!!
      Eat 'em up!!

      Delete
  6. Fake food:

    We know that real blueberries are full of antioxidants but look at what several BIG food companies are doing to make for huge profits. Quite the video. Isn't this something? Nothing but disregard and greed! Who would have thought Kellogg's or Betty Crocker products deceiving? Watch for yourself, they are killing us little by little.

    Here is the link and please watch it and send it to your friends. .....talk about scamming us !!

    http://naturalnews.tv/e-video.asp?v=7EC06D27B1A945BE85E7DA8483025962&s=1

    ReplyDelete
  7. Health Sciences Institute:

    http://hsionlineorders.net/video/ACS_LP_pic_signup_OLP/?pco=LHSIN501&efo=HSIOP111121&xco=XHSIN501

    ReplyDelete
  8. We love the taste, convenience, and comfort of processed and junk food.
    The immediate gratification outweighs the delayed negative health consequences.
    So I quess "processed food" is not going anywhere soon!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. the demand for prepared, ready-to-eat food is driven by consumer demand and is connected to our frenzied hectic lifestyles

      Delete
    2. If you want to be healthy
      throw away your microwave
      and take the time to cook!

      Delete
  9. taste for flesh:

    Evidence is we'll eat anything to survive!
    We need food to live!

    If killing another creature is required to enable one's own survival ...,most people will choose to live!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Animals taste good!
      I,ve yet to come across any artificial meat that tastes good.
      Veggie burgers---yuuck!

      Delete
    2. Anything that moves
      -dana goodyear


      http://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/11/08/books/anything-that-moves-on-food-culture-by-dana-goodyear.html

      http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/podcasts/current_20131220_19205.mp3

      Delete
  10. Interesting that those who say they would not eat (human) flesh to save their life
    do not think twice about consuming the flesh of other species.
    ...and would have even less qualms about accepting a life-giving transplant organ
    from any species to prolong their own life.
    (such "transplanted" flesh becomes a part of them as much as any flesh they might consume as food)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Industrial food/pig production
      (hidden camera video)


      http://www.ctvnews.ca/mobile/w5/undercover-investigation-reveals-disturbing-and-inhumane-treatment-of-factory-farm-animals-1.1070919

      Is this what you want to support by your purchases?

      Delete
    2. Industrial methods of food production are due to consumer demand for cheap food/ meat.
      If uou dont like it,stop eating meat!

      Delete
    3. Turkey farm video:
      http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/#!/content/1.2571451

      Delete
    4. Turns my stomach...how food animals are abused.
      It's enuf to make one swear off meat.

      Delete
    5. Turkey farm hidden video:


      http://o.canada.com/news/video-shows-blatant-animal-cruelty-at-ontario-turkey-farm/

      Delete


    6. UN calls for an end to industrialized farming

      http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/27636-united-nations-calls-for-an-end-to-industrialized-farming

      Delete
  11. “The Taste of Tomorrow: Dispatches from the Future of Food” by Josh Schonwald

    ReplyDelete
  12. American extravagance:

     Study shows Americans discard 165 billion worth of food annually: 

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/21/food-waste-americans-throw-away-food-study_n_1819340.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That number is 27 billion in Canada (much higher per capita)!

      see how Americans waste:

      http://m.yahoo.com/w/ygo-frontpage/lp/story/us/2680088/coke.bp%3B_ylt=A0KjqXr_RmtQm1cA_QMp89w4%3B_ylu=X3oDMTI2aXJyanJkBGNjb2RlA3lyZARjcG9zAzYEY3NlYwNtb2JpbGUtdGQEaW50bAN1cwRwa2cDaWQtMjY4MDA4OARwb3MDMQRzbGsDdGh1bWI-?ref_w=frontdoors&view=today&.intl=US&.lang=en

      Delete
    2. How food waste contributes to climate warming:

      http://video.kcts9.org/video/2365373117/

      America’s food waste problem is gigantic -- 36 million tons of grub per year as estimated by the EPA. That's not just wasteful but harmful to the environment, as food waste from landfills converts into methane, a potent climate-change-causing greenhouse gas. Even with composting programs, food is the single-largest thing we throw away. Learn about innovative approaches to the food waste problem.

      Delete
  13. Corporations have hijacked the food supply!

    The better to poison you, my dear!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. When food becomes a commercial product
      producers will seek to increase their profit margin by adulterating the food with cheaper ingredients (e.g. milk spiked with melamine or beef cut with cheaper horsemeat
      or ham cut with human flesh)

      Delete
    2. http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/health-26254989">
      http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/health-26254989

      Scientists say "far too little" is known about tbe health risks,possibly even cancer, of more than 4,000 chemicals used in food packaging.

      http://bbc.co.uk/news/health

      Delete

  14. healthy food versus health food 

    Our eating habits are determined more by advertising (food corporations spend billions to get us to buy their products--that, after all,is what the branding,the packaging, and the marketing is designed to do) than by any knowledge of food and nutrition.
    We eat mostly processed food and fast food. ..and then attempt to render such a diet adequate by taking vitamins and herbal supplements...not realizing that these so-called natural/health food supplements are also manufactured by profit-motivated corporations(the nutritional supplement industry generates billions of dollars annually) ..and are hence often themselves adulerated/poisoned.

    ReplyDelete



  15. Watch DOCUMENTARY: "Food Inc." on YouTube 

    http://www.metacafe.com/w/6765271/

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yh8c9OUti4c&feature=youtube_gdata_player

    ReplyDelete
  16. Food will become wholesome and pure when consumers demand it.
    When consumer illness and high healthcare costs outweigh
    cheap food costs, consumers will not be taken in by deceptive advertizing practices...and will be willing to pay more for pure
    unadulterated food.
    Then food producers and food processors will admit they cannot determine and control demand through advertizing.
    Today the Food Industry is confident it can manipulate
    consumer demand through advertixing.
    Advertizers operste under yhe premise that consumers are extremely suggestible and can be told what to want --even to the limit of making their poisonous products seem desireable.

    Wake up....people!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Health care costs are increasing more rapidly than economic growth.
      Therefore this increase is not sustainable.
      Prevention is always more cost effective than cure!

      Delete
    2. Increasing rates of obesity (and all it's associated health complications), cancer, and dementia
      are overwhelming the health care system.

      Delete
    3. It is true that processed convenience foods wouldn't be around if there weren't consumer demand for them....but agressive advertising is also used to stimulate and drive demand.
      It's called "marketing"!
      If it didn't work(i.e. if it were proven not to be profitable) businesses would not waste their money on it!

      Delete
    4. food fraud;

      The food giants seek to maximize their profits by maximizing consumption.
      They will do so by any means they can!

      Delete
  17. Where the advertisers lead, the sheeple will follow.

    They're called "sheeple" because....

    they're not smart enuf to be called "stupid" !

    ReplyDelete
  18. " we allow these ingredients into our food supply until they are proven dangerous,” said Robyn O’Brien, a former food industry analyst and author of The Unhealthy Truth. “In light of the fact that the President's Cancer Panel reports that 41 percent of us are expected to get cancer in our lifetimes and the burden that disease in placing on our economy, perhaps it is time to exercise precaution.”
    The onus should be on food processing corporations to prove the safety of any exogenous chemical ingredients before they are allowed to be introduced into food products.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Food safety questioned
    Kelowna Capital NewsPublished: October 23, 2012 01:00 PMUpdated: October 23, 2012 01:471 PM
    Open letter to Kelowna–Lake Country MP Ron Cannan:

    For our recent Thanksgiving dinner, the problems at XL Foods have caused me to question the safety of the food I was  about to put on my table.I have just read the Canadian Food Inspection Agency food recall reports from Jan 1, 2009, to Oct. 4, 2012, available at the website www.active.inspection.gc.ca.During the past 45 months while you have been in Ottawa, there were a total of 594 CFIA food recall reports issued due to microbiological contamination, including salmonella, listeria and E. coli.The sheer number of these reports is staggering and raises the question:  Is Canada’s food supply safe?During the first nine months of 2012, there were 152 CFIA food recall reports issued involving microbiological contaminants, including three reports involving the XL Foods processing facility in Brooks, Alta.Projecting these year-to-date numbers forward to the end of 2012 shows that CFIA is on track to issue 202 food recall reports caused by microbial contaminants.Recent press reports have criticized the federal minister of agriculture and the owners of XL Foods for not taking responsibility to exercise their due diligence to protect the public food supply.Apparently, current legislation prohibits federal prosecution of XL Foods for contaminating the food supply. What’s going on in Ottawa anyway?Why won’t you act correctly and do the right thing to ensure that my food is safe to eat?Why won’t you do the right thing and stop deregulating industries, particularly those industries that pollute the air we breathe, the water we drink and the food we eat?Clearly, Canada needs better public policies, more effective legislation, more stringent enforcement and more public spending to support the mandates of CFIA, Health Canada, Environment Canada and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to ensure protection of the food supply over the long-term.When are you going to start voting to support all Canadians instead of just industry?When are you going to start changing your voting behaviour in the House of Commons and begin voting for a cleaner environment, for a healthier food supply and for more stringent federal regulatory oversight that will actually protect—rather than jeopardize—public health and safety?
    Richard Drinnan,Kelowna Find this article at: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/opinion/letters/175482381.html 

    ReplyDelete
  20. Replies
    1. The soda industry doesn’t want us to drink less soda.
      The beef and pork industries don’t want us to eat less beef and pork.
      The fast-food restaurant industry and the junk-food industry don’t want us to eat less period.

      More important, Big Food doesn’t want the government to use the sensible advice in the Dietary Guidelines to change the school lunch programs for the better, to improve Nutrition Facts labels, or to enact other policies that help Americans choose diets—and encourage companies to produce foods—that are better for our health and the planet.
      The government’s basic nutrition advice should be based on science, and not watered down because of the political muscle and lobbying clout of the beef, pork, dairy, soda, sugar, corn syrup, or salt industries. 

      Delete



  21. appetite for protein:

    United Nations pushes eating insects to fight hunger

    http://www.examiner.com/article/united-nations-pushes-eating-insects-to-fight-hunger

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Growing livestock animals for meat protein is not sustainable:
      Meat can now be grown in laboratory in a petri dish.
      Laboratory-grown muscle cells could ease the need for
      raising anomals as a meat/protein source.


      http://www.treehugger.com/green-food/300000-synthetic-hamburger.html

      Delete
    2. Insects as food:

      .. Frying Pan - Oct 9, 2013 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/podcasts/ current_20131009_36751.mp3 

      Delete
    3. Environmental Benefits

      
Insects have a high feed conversion efficiency because they are cold‑blooded. Feed‑to‑meat conversion rates (how much feed is needed to produce a 1 kg increase in weight) vary widely depending on the class of the animal and the production practices used, but nonetheless insects are extremely efficient. On average, insects can convert 2 kg of feed into 1 kg of insect mass, whereas cattle require 8 kg of feed to produce 1 kg of body weight gain.
The production of greenhouse gases by most insects is likely to be lower than that of conventional livestock. For example, pigs produce 10‑100 times more greenhouse gases per kg of weight than mealworms.
Insects can feed on bio‑waste, such as food and human waste, compost and animal slurry, and can transform this into high‑quality protein that can be used for animal feed.
Insects use significantly less water than conventional livestock. Mealworms, for example, are more drought‑resistant than cattle.
Insect farming is less land‑dependent than conventional livestock farming.

      Health Benefits

      
The nutritional content of insects depends on their stage of life (metamorphic stage), habitat and diet. However, it is widely accepted that:Insects provide high‑quality protein and nutrients comparable with meat and fish. Insects are particularly important as a food supplement for undernourished children because most insect species are high in fatty acids (comparable with fish). They are also rich in fibre and micronutrients such as copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorous, selenium and zinc.Insects pose a low risk of transmitting zoonotic diseases (diseases transmitted from animals to humans) such as like H1N1 (bird flu) and BSE (mad cow disease).

      Livelihood and Social Benefits

      
Insect gathering and rearing can offer important livelihood diversification strategies. Insects can be directly and easily collected in the wild. Minimal technical or capital expenditure is required for basic harvesting and rearing equipment.
Insects can be gathered in the wild, cultivated, processed and sold by the poorest members of society, such as women and landless people in urban and rural areas. These activities can directly improve diets and provide cash income through the selling of excess production as street food.
Insect harvesting and farming can provide entrepreneurship opportunities in developed, transitional and developing economies.
Insects can be processed for food and feed relatively easily. Some species can be consumed whole. Insects can also be processed into pastes or ground into meal, and their proteins can be extracted.
      (Source: information guide based on the FAO’s Edible insects: future prospects for food and feed security.)

      Delete
  22. Marketing junk food to kids through cartoons and toys:

    9 year old Hannah Robertson takes on the CEO of McDonalds:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IW6dJj98rCc&sns=em

    ReplyDelete
  23. Buy whole food only from small scale fresh-market organic producers






    ReplyDelete
  24. Read "Consumed" by Sarah Elton


    http://arts.nationalpost.com/2013/04/26/book-review-consumed-by-sarah-elton/

    ReplyDelete
  25. Under the influence of the pervasive marketing conspiracy:buyer beware

    We are being manipulated/baited by advertising?
    We are being influenced without our even knowing that we are being influenced.(i.e. subliminally).
    We are constantly being tempted.
    Corporations are spending billions to convince you that consumer goods confer
    magical and protective powers on buyers.
    They wouldn't waste their money if their "marketing"  efforts didn't work.
    People are easy targets for advertisers who design seductive campaigns telling us we must have their product to be happy and whole.

    No money? No problem--buy on credit.
    Go into debt.

    The relationship between marketers and consumers is a predator-prey relationship.
    For example, the food industry wants us to expand our waistline so they can meet their profit target. (listen to "Stuffed" on CBC Radio)
    http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/episodes/2013/12/09/stuffed-part-1/


    http://cds1.yospace.com/access/selector/u/1/1/74684883?f=000020623622&d=so&account=Radio&adcategory=&show=Ideas&location=iphone&a=true

    When we cave in to advertizing pressure we allow others to control us.
    But all the marketing strategies are powerless if we refuse to permit ourselves to be hypnotized by them.

    "On average" says
    The Narcissism Epidemic
    "materialistic people are less happy and more depressed.Even people who simply aspire to have more money
    suffer from poor mental health; they also report more physical health problems such as sore throats,backaches,a.d headaches a.d were more likely to drink too much alcohol and uze illegal drugs.Striving for
    financial success,apparently makes people miserable."

    Listen to Stompin Tom Conner's
    "The Consumer"
    http://www.lyricsfreak.com/s/stompin+tom+connors/the+consumer_20785502.html

    http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jl75Ou3hNTY&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3Djl75Ou3hNTY

    ReplyDelete
  26. Check out "the psychology of pricing":

    http://www.cbc.ca/undertheinfluence/mobile/touch/index.html

    ReplyDelete
  27. Watch tbe film "GMO OMG"

    https://www.facebook.com/gmoomgfilm

    ReplyDelete
  28. this gives new meaning to the phrase
    "homegrown terrorism" :

    Poisoned by the "bread of life"

    http://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/real-reason-for-toxic-wheat-its-not-gluten/#sthash.RkERgczo.dpuf

    ReplyDelete
  29. 90% of all GMO crops are sprayed with glyphosate(Roundup)

    The poisoning of our food supply:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiU3Ndi6itk&authuser=0

    ReplyDelete
  30. food industry resists US ban on trans fats:

    http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/business/u-s-trans-fats-ban-puts-pressure-on-health-canada-1.2472351

    ReplyDelete
  31. Center for Science in the Public Interest

    http://cspinet.org/changethetune/

    It's time to change the tune.

    For decades, Coca Cola and other big soda companies have spent billions of dollars trying to convince Americans and citizens around the world that soda equals happiness.
    Perhaps no other advertisement in history exemplifies that more than the iconic “Hilltop” ad, where singers on a hillside expressed their wish to “buythe world a Coke.”
    You might have seen it reappear in the season finale of “Mad Men” on AMC recently.Well, we thought it would be interesting to see a fresh take on the Hilltop ad—where real people, suffering from real soda-related healthproblems—could tell their stories.

    Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Mountain Dew, and other sugar drinks promote type 2 diabetes, , tooth decay, obesity, and other health problems.  Soda even promotes heart disease.  Soda is not happiness; drinking too much soda equals sadness.

    "I’d like to buy the world a drink… that doesn’t cause disease". (new version of Coke ad)

    http://action.cspinet.org/ea-action/action?ea.client.id=1927&ea.campaign.id=39828&ea.tracking.id=Pic&ea.url.id=420059&forwarded=true

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you drink soda...you've been played for a fool!

      Soda isn’t happiness. It’s just sugar and water … and a billion dollars in advertising!!

      Watch the video:

      https://www.e-activist.com/ea-action/broadcast.record.message.click.do?ea.url.id=477409&ea.campaigner.email=bQyERhLttKStENudF7sM8oNPjbcek5hH&ea.campaigner.id=MCIIsRVJrxGZkArzVWMSmA==&ea_broadcast_target_id=0 

      Delete
  32. 4

    Food corporations are only motivated by profit; they don't care about your health and safety!

    9 Hidden Facts the Food Industry Doesn't Want You to Know

    http://www.livestrong.com/slideshow/1011186-9-hidden-food-industry-doesnt-want/?utm_source=yahoo&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=9_Hidden_Facts_the_Food_Industry_Doesnt_Want_You_to_Know&utm_campaign=Yahoo_Partnership

    ReplyDelete
  33. tissue culture technology can be used to produce lab-grown meat!

    Meat grown in labs is a big deal!
    Not only does it eliminate the cruelty associated with using animals for food, raising animals takes a huge amount of energy and space, and is environmentally destructive and unsustainable.

    Whoever makes an appetizing cost- effective product by this method will be on tbe way to joining tbe billionaires club.

    ReplyDelete

  34. lab analysis finds 2% of hotdogs contained human DNA!

    http://www.clearfood.com/food_reports/2015/the_hotdog_report">http://www.clearfood.com/food_reports/2015/the_hotdog_report

    " ...human DNA in 2% of the samples.
    2/3rds of the samples with human DNA were vegetarian products."

    #Where have all the "missing" people gone?
    Shades of Willy Pickton.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Yet another instance of food fraud:
    http://www.ktva.com/seafood-fraud-study-shows-43-of-salmon-sampled-was-mislabeled-904/

    ReplyDelete

  36. Big Sugar vs Big Fat: the propaganda wars

    sugar industry paid Harvard scientists for favourable research results

    http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/health/sugar-harvard-conspiracy-1.3759582

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/sep/12/sugar-industry-paid-research-heart-disease-jama-report

    ReplyDelete


  37. tbe "factory food" industry is poisoning us.

    Their primary motivation is to maximize their profit.
    All proceszed food is full of such chemical additives:


    ************************

    >
    >

    http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/additive-breakfast-cereals-could-make-brain-forget-stop-eating-1634413?utm_source=social&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=%2Fadditive-breakfast-cereals-could-make-brain-forget-stop-eating-1634413

    ReplyDelete
  38. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  39. That Atlantic salmon you ate last week may have been genetically altered

    > first genetically-engineered animal enters tbe human food chain:
    >
    > http://www.google.ca/search? hl=en&redir_esc=&client=ms-android-samsung&source=android-search-app&rlz= 1Y2ECZH_en___CA525&v=141338691&qsubts= 1502815077164&q=gm+salmon

    > Does gene modification technology have a positive role in augmenting our food supply?
    What happens when tbese creatures escape...as they surely will!?
    Atlantic salmon invade Pacific ocean

    thousands of non-native Atlantic salmon escape from fishfarm in Washington state (puget sound)

    https://www.treehugger.com/animals/farmed-atlantic-salmon-escape-pacific-ocean.html

    every technology has the capacity to be used for good or ill.
    Sometimes the best-intentioned use of a technology can result in unintended/unanticipated negative consequences.

    ReplyDelete
  40. The global food system is broken:

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/nov/28/global-food-system-is-broken-say-worlds-science-academies

    ReplyDelete
  41. Food is making us sick!

    New FDA Report : 84 Percent of Fruit Samples, 53 Percent of Veggies Test Positive for Pesticides

    https://www.organicconsumers.org/blog/new-fda-report-84-percent-fruit-samples-53-percent-veggies-test-positive-pesticides

    ReplyDelete

  42. "Let food be your medicine "....

    " We become what we eat"



    We aren't properly aware of the interactions between our bodies and our foods and how they can help or harm.

    The fast food industry* and the increase in food additives, the use of pesticides, and genetically altered foods should be of major concern to everyone,

    All this adulteration of our food supply has an enormous effect on healthcare costs

    People don't want to do the work to grow and prepare their own food...but don't realize that in the end they pay for the convenience of processed and fast food with their health!





    If you're buying and eating commercially grown fruits and vegetables ,you can bet your future cancer that your "food"

    has been sprayed many times for weeds, fungi, insects.

    Once a crop is sprayed the chemical residue is there(on your now perfect produce) for your consumption!

    You can't wash off 100% of that spray residue.

    Its not visible and it won't give you an immediate stomach ache or rash/hives...but those low dose poisons have a cumulative effect.

    It may take decades but those accumulating toxins will eventually manifest as cancer and degenerative disease.

    Commercially grown potatoes are one example: just before hsrvest the tops are knocked down with chemical to dry the tops so harvesting is easier.

    Soy beans,corn,wheat,barley,oats are mostly GMO , and are sprayed with RoundUp(glyphosate) for weed control



    *Corporations have one purpose: to mazimize return to their shareholders...and they achieve this goal by ignoring safeguards to public health.

    Their business is to produce food for profit!

    ReplyDelete


  43. unless your plant-based diet is 100% organic...your food has been poisoned with chemical sprays:





    84 Percent of Fruit Samples, 53 Percent of Veggies Test Positive for Pesticides



    https://www.organicconsumers.o rg/blog/new-fda-report-84-perc ent-fruit-samples-53-percent-v eggies-test-positive-pesticide s





    ***************** "***********



    https://www.asyousow.org/





    MORE THAN 1 BILLION POUNDS of conventional pesticides are used in the U.S. each year.

    READ As You Sow's report examining the growing risk to food manufacturers posed by the use of synthetic pesticides in agricultural supply chains.



    READ HERE --> https://bit.ly/2pE6kEp



    Over one billion pounds of conventional pesticides¹ are used in the United States each year.² In the most recent year of data, Americans spent $9 billion on pesticides for use in agriculture.³ The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's biomonitoring has found pesticide residues in the bodies of 90% of Americans studied.⁴

    Farming has not always required the intensive use of chemicals that constrains our farmers today. Humans have been growing food for over 10,000 years; it is only over the past 60 years that we have become dependent on a complicated and costly system of pesticide use. Following World War II, industrialization of agriculture and the introduction of pesticides (derived from chemicals invented as weapons), contributed to major growth in productivity and farm efficiency. But this shortcut has come with tremendous consequences. Science is now beginning to catch up with the myriad ways in which pesticides are harming humans, animals, and the environment. As new information exposes these growing risks, companies that rely on conventional agricultural supply chains are increasingly tied to these risks.

    Pesticides in the Pantry: Transparency & Risk in Food Supply Chains
    is a report designed to examine the growing risks posed by the use of synthetic pesticides in agricultural supply chains to consumers, and to provide benchmarks for improved management and transparency. Consumers, regulators, courts, and the media are paying increased attention to the human health and environmental harms caused by the intensive use of pesticides in agriculture. As a result, investors are calling on major food companies to reduce supply chain use of these chemicals to mitigate risk.

    *************************************

    U.S. Annually Uses 388 Million Pounds of Potentially Fatal Pesticides Banned in the EU, China and Brazil


    https://www.ecowatch.com/us-pesticide-usage-bans-2638789192.html?utm_campaign=RebelMouse&socialux=facebook&share_id=5057889&utm_medium=social&utm_content=EcoWatch&utm_source=facebook

    ReplyDelete
  44. Study links Parkinsons disease to two commonly used agrochemicals (paraquat and maneb)

    Used on a variety of Canadian crops, paraquat is used on crops as they grow, and maneb prevents post-harvest spoiling.

    https://news.uoguelph.ca/2018/05/u-g-study-uncovers-cause-pesticide-exposure-parkinsons-link/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. pmep.cce.cornell.edu/profiles/extoxnet/haloxyfop-methylparathion/maneb...
      Maneb is used in the control of early and late blights on potatoes and tomatoes and many other diseases of fruits, vegetables and field crops and ornamentals . Maneb controls a wider range of diseases than any other fungicide



      Paraquat was manufactured by Chevron. It is one of the most widely used herbicides. It is quick-acting and non-selective, killing green plant tissue on contact. It is also toxic to human beings and animals due to its redox activity, which produces superoxide anions. It has been linked to the development of Parkinson's disease

      Delete
  45. organophosphates are neurotoxins and by far the most hazardous pesticides used in agricultural production

    Organophosphate pesticides are applied as contact and systemic insecticides

    refers to a group of insecticides (pesticides) that act on the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (see also carbamates).
    Today, organophosphates make up about 50% of the killing agents in chemical pesticides.

    the following contain organophosphates:
    Malathion, methyl parathion, fenitrothion, diazinon, chlorpyrifos, tetrachlorvinphos, dichlorvos, phosmet, and azinphos methyl.

    ReplyDelete
  46. Would you like some fries with your poison?!

    glyphosate as a preharvest dessicant

    https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/pre-harvest-roundup-crops-not-just-wheat/

    To increase storage life they also soak the potatoes in sprout inhibiting chemicals!
    https://www.potatopro.com/about/sprout-inhibitors

    Our food is poisoning us!

    ReplyDelete
  47. Powerful rant by Bill Maher on WetMarkets:

    https://youtu.be/-OoT2OZWCOI

    ReplyDelete
  48. desecration of dairy

    Butter adulterated with palm oil!

    https://www.nelsonstar.com/news/buttergate-when-it-comes-to-cows-you-are-what-you-eat/

    ReplyDelete
  49. palm oil has replaced hydrogenated oils and trans fats in processed foods. With this transition came the demand to produce more palm oil. Swaths of rain forests have been cut down to make room for palm tree plantations having devastating effects on animal habitats including orangutangs,elephants,and tigers.The destruction of the rainforests increases carbon emissions wc h in turn fuels climate change.

    ReplyDelete