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I Endorse Slow Food Nation's Declaration. Do You?

by: Jill Richardson

Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 09:00:00 AM PDT


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In celebration of the start of Slow Food Nation, the Declaration for Healthy Food and Agriculture is now available on the web. I've endorsed it. Did you?

More on the flip.

Jill Richardson :: I Endorse Slow Food Nation's Declaration. Do You?
The following is a draft version of the declaration, taken from their site before the official version was unveiled. It was written by people we love such as Michael Pollan, Mark Winne, and Alice Waters.

We, the undersigned, believe that a healthy food system is necessary to meet the urgent challenges of our time. Behind us stands a half-century of industrial food production, underwritten by cheap fossil fuels, abundant land and water resources, and a drive to maximize the global harvest of cheap calories. Ahead lie rising energy and food costs, a changing climate, declining water supplies, a growing population, and the paradox of widespread hunger and obesity.

These realities call for a radically different approach to food and agriculture. We believe that the food system must be reorganized on a foundation of health: for our communities, for people, for animals, and for the natural world. The quality of food, and not just its quantity, ought to guide our agriculture. The ways we grow, distribute, and prepare food should celebrate our various cultures and our shared humanity, providing not only sustenance, but justice, beauty and pleasure.

Governments have a duty to protect people from malnutrition, unsafe food, and exploitation, and to protect the land and water on which we depend from degradation. Individuals, producers, and organizations have a duty to create regional systems that can provide healthy food for their communities. We all have a duty to respect and honor the laborers of the land without whom we could not survive. The changes we call for here have begun, but the time has come to accelerate the transformation of our food and agriculture and make its benefits available to all.

We believe that the following twelve principles should frame food and agriculture policy, to ensure that it will contribute to the health and wealth of the nation and the world. A healthy food and agriculture policy:

1. Forms the foundation of secure and prosperous societies, healthy communities, and healthy people.

2. Provides access to affordable, nutritious food to everyone.

3. Prevents the exploitation of farmers, workers, and natural resources; the domination of genomes and markets; and the cruel treatment of animals, by any nation, corporation or individual.

4. Upholds the dignity, safety, and quality of life for all who work to feed us.

5. Commits resources to teach children the skills and knowledge essential to food production, preparation, nutrition, and enjoyment.

6. Protects the finite resources of productive soils, fresh water, and biological diversity.

7. Strives to remove fossil fuel from every link in the food chain and replace it with renewable resources and energy.

8. Originates from a biological rather than an industrial framework.

9. Fosters diversity in all its relevant forms: diversity of domestic and wild species; diversity of foods, flavors and traditions; diversity of ownership.

10. Requires a national dialog concerning technologies used in production, and allows regions to adopt their own respective guidelines on such matters.

11. Enforces transparency so that citizens know how their food is produced, where it comes from, and what it contains.

12. Promotes economic structures and supports programs to nurture the development of just and sustainable regional farm and food networks.

Our pursuit of healthy food and agriculture unites us as people and as communities, across geographic boundaries, and social and economic lines. We pledge our votes, our purchases, our creativity, and our energies to this urgent cause.

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A shot across the capitalistic bow was fired! (4.00 / 3)
Let's hope it people sign it and more importantly, do something about it.

Sic Transit Gloria Locavore!



Totally endorse it! (4.00 / 2)
But here's the problem with Slow Food Nation--Whole Foods is a huuuuge sponsor,and they violate almost all of the bullet points of the Declaration.  Here's a new blogpost about this from The Haphazard Gourmet Girls, fellow LA locavores who are very activist:  
http://haphazardgourmet.blogsp...

great point - want to write a diary about this? (4.00 / 2)
I think it would be an interesting discussion to have. I'm not hard core anti-Whole Foods but at the same time I completely understand that they do NOT represent our ideal AT ALL.

One thing I will say for them is that they pay semi-decently and provide health care so that their employees aren't totally destitute. I think ultimately that's one of the keys to fixing our food system, so that even lower income folks have time for gardening and/or cooking if they so choose to pursue it. Then again, Whole Foods could certainly stand to pay a few more dollars an hour. I know a couple who both work at Whole Foods and bought a house on their money made from the job (and neither are store management or above) but I know enough others who work there would couldn't dream of affording a house. A single mother of 3, for example. On salary, 4 mouths to feed.  

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


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