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Unraveling Organic

by: Sophy

Wed Jul 08, 2009 at 14:04:13 PM PDT


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The organic food that you're buying may not be 100% organic and therefore discredits the integrity of the organic certification. That is the basic gist of The Washington Post's much deliberated article, "Purity of Federal 'Organic' Label is Questioned", published July 3rd. It is a well-known fact that the organic certification is not perfect nor is it the end-all, be-all solution to our broken food system. In truth, I am quite tired of hearing people use "organic" as the sole qualifier to their healthy, "sustainable" diet. A Cheeto is a Cheeto, is a Cheeto by any other name, even "organic", and the company that produces it may not be sustainable in the least.

Multinational corporations have been gobbling up organic companies since they figured out they could make a buck or two off the $23 billion-a-year business. When you buy Horizon Milk, you're supporting dairy giant and factory farmers extraordinaire, Dean Foods. Boca Burgers are owned by Kraft, Odwalla is owned by Coca-Cola, Stonyfield by Danone. (For some great charts on organic food, click here.) For those who care simply about eating healthier, perhaps it doesn't really matter who owns the brand. For others who care about where their dollars are going, buying conventional organic is just buying into the same old corporate machine.

Granted, there are a good number of successful companies who have managed to remain independent. Organic Valley, Amy's Kitchen and Eden Foods are just a few examples that have managed to stay away from corporate takeover. There are also some serious benefits that come along with organic. Animals are fed vegetarian feed and are not given hormones or antibiotics unless ill. Fruits and vegetables are not treated with pesticides. The organic certification also prohibits genetic modification, sewage sludge and irradiation.  

Sophy :: Unraveling Organic
On the other hand, organic gives no guarantee that animals will have the freedom to roam. Sure, they are technically supposed to have access to the outdoors, but many companies (not all) find loopholes to this rule. Organic is no guarantee of biodiversity either. Fields and fields of organic soybeans don't leave room for much else, and can quickly deplete the soil's resources. Organic food may also be shipped thousands of miles to your nearest Whole Foods or Wild Oats, and it may come packaged in loads of plastics, Styrofoam and who knows what else. That's why we're called Sustainable Table, not Organic Table.

Organic does not equate health either. Organic chips, fatty dips, frozen burritos and pizza are not health foods, something that confuses many consumers. Many tout their healthy, organic diets, but in the end they are eating the junk food all the same, it's just more expensive. On the other side of the fence, there are those who disapprove of the 5% of organic product ingredients that need not be organic. The list of allowed ingredients has gone up from 77 to 245 substances since the programs birth in 2002.

There is really only one true solution to these problems. Get over relying uniquely on the organic label and go beyond. You put food into your body at least three times a day; it's probably worth getting to know what you're putting in. If you're in a huff about the 5% of non-organic ingredients, make the food from scratch. The organic industry is now a corporate machine; chances are they aren't going to change much. If you make simple meals from scratch, you will really know what's going in and chances are it will be healthier and cheaper.

Do research. There are many great food companies and farms out there, some organic certified and some not. Many farmers who use biodynamic and organic practices can't afford or can't be bothered to get certified, but they may produce a better product. Find ones that you can honesty support and stand behind without feeling like you're giving in to the man. Go the farmers market, talk to the farmers and find out their practices. They are friendly people, ask them questions. When you buy at a farmer's market, they get the much more money on the dollar then when you buy in a store. Support a dying breed, this country was founded on farming, and now they make up less then 2% of the population.

I appreciate the Washington Post taking a good look at the organic label and bringing to everyone's attention. In recent years, it has become so wrapped up in bureaucracy and big business that it confuses consumers and has begun to lose its original meaning. To truly support independent, wholesome organic, do you're research and get to know you're food. Maybe someday we'll have an organic 2.0.

Read more at Sustainable Tables blog, The Daily Table, www.sustainabletable.org/blog.  

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Why the vegetarian feed? (4.00 / 2)
from wiki..

Chickens are considered omnivores.[9] In the wild, they often scratch at the soil to search for seeds, insects and even larger animals such as lizards or young mice


I can attest to that! (4.00 / 2)
A couple of weeks ago one of my hens was running around like a mad fiend with a mouse clamped firmly in her beak. Why was she running? 6-7 hens were in hot persuit.....

I had to save a large garden snake from the land sharks a couple weeks ago as well. Poor thing was holed up between one of my cement blocks and a plank. I shoed the hens away and had to 'encourage' the poor snake to go under the brooder shed. I had to use the toe of my boot instead of picking him/her up. The hens had the snake so riled up that he/she was striking at anything that got close.

Regarding locavores as elitists - explain to me how supporting local business is elitist....


[ Parent ]
Cattle and sheep are supposed to be vegetarian (4.00 / 2)
The animal component of non-vegetarian feed would be generally from rendered animals, animals that may have been euthanized with various chemicals and may have been full of other chemicals during life. It's not like a nice wholesome mouse or grasshopper or worm.

As it was, he did a deal with a blancmange, and the blancmange ate his wife.

[ Parent ]
I understand that (4.00 / 2)
it's just always struck me as odd when various egg farms advertise an all vegetarian diet as being healthy for chickens. Of course for those farms that keep their hens in a cage free environment they're probably scratching bugs out of the litter in the barn or layer building. It's pretty much impossible to keep bugs, especially darkling beetles, out of such a building unless the floor in the barn is concrete with litter over that.

Regarding locavores as elitists - explain to me how supporting local business is elitist....

[ Parent ]
It's attractive to me (0.00 / 0)
not because I think an all-veg is necessary for chickens, but just because I figure it means they're not feeding the cheapest possible food.

As it was, he did a deal with a blancmange, and the blancmange ate his wife.

[ Parent ]
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