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B. F. Socaspi said:My two cents, as someone working towards veganism (for solely political/philosophical reasons -- I could care less about my health):
The "green" hype is an absurd farce that I truly, truly despise. A good way to get me hot under the collar is to be on that bandwagon.
Like with most grassroots movements that have now become trends, its all in how its sustained. If this 'trend' gets legislation passed that can help in the long run, and gets people to change habits, then annoying as it may be, I say good for the trend.
B. F. Socaspi said:Why? Because it's a marketing scheme. To be certified organic isn't hard to achieve, and it doesn't mean that the farmers are treated fairly or are using sustainable, environmentally friendly farming practices. It's a ploy to get you to spend more.
The best set of rules for 'certified organic' came in the early 1990s by OFPA. Major food chains freaked out, and wanted more watered down standards. So the new criteria (most of what has passed with this 'trend' we so speak of) are the standards we see today. You can still find items that use the 1990 standards, but you gotta look. No matter what anyone tells you, a TV dinner cannot be 'organic'.
Its a shame that the term organic has been taken away from its original movement, because it did have a lot of power and identity behind it.
B. F. Socaspi said:And if you're going to ship your organic food 200 miles to your local health market, you might as well just eat at McDonald's. I live in a farming town, so I have it easy when it comes to buying fresh food, but even if you don't, most cities have a farmers' market. Shop there.
"Organic" is pretty much the new bottled water.
Hence the new, and more conceivable moment that I am more fond of, 'sustainability'. It boils down to how much energy does your food use to get to you. How much waste does it make?
If you can follow the trail of your food to within 200 miles, thats fantastic. Local farmer, local feed for cattle, local cattle, local restaurant gets cattle, local patrons of restaurant and so on and so forth. Its about not shipping the cattle processing off to another state, not shipping the cattle waste to another state, and the balance of size vs need.
A few acres can absorb the waste of a few hundred heads of cattle, not a few thousand. Same with corn, soybean, and most any other mega crop. Diversity in foods, eating things in season, all of this can fold itself into the 'organic' trend, and if you follow farms that do this, most of them are organic.
As someone who is vegan, I tend to believe the more processed the food is, the less it matters if its 'organic' or not.
Stuff thats brown (sugar, flour, rice) is going to be less processed than stuff that is white. Stuff that is darker (blueberries, strawberries, red potatoes, beets, spinach) is going to have more nutritional value than stuff thats lighter (pears, yellow potatoes, iceberg lettuce). Weather that can or can not fit into 'organic', hmm....
But a good rule of thumb to get the 'most' from organic is, if it has a skin/shell you dont eat (avocado, banana, coconut) dont but it organic. Leafy greens, potatoes, carrots, stuff like that, where pesticides get absorbed into the food, if organic is your fancy, go for it.
I will stop talking now, everyone have a nice day
LD