[amc] Re: Whole Foods or Whole Fraud: The Myth Of Organic Foods

  • From: "Nevitt D. Reesor" <reesor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: Austin Mennonite Church <amc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 22:05:12 -0600

FYI, John Mackey is a co-founder and board member of FLOW Idealism, the radical libertarian group I have mentioned from time to time. I don't know whether Mackey endorses all the principles of the group, but many of its members believe the best political economy would be one with no government regulation at all, that is, a complete free market with no restrictions of any sort on businesses. FLOW Idealism believes the best and fastest way to encourage the growth of peace, justice, and equality is to expand unregulated capitalistic free markets and develop entrepreneurial businesses throughout the world.

Nevitt


On Mar 22, 2006, at 7:53 PM, Micheal J. Mc Evoy wrote:


As a follow on to last Sundays's discussion, I do feel that the best way for us to practice our faith is to live it. It is what Mennonites do best.

But are we failing to live up to our standards by following the
propaganda of the earthly empire?

If we feel that Wal-Mart is a "bad-thing (c)", then doesn't Whole
Foods fall into the same catagory?  After all, they are the "Wal-Mart"
of "organic" food.

Shalom,
Micheal

Is Whole Foods Wholesome?
The dark secrets of the organic-food movement.

By Field Maloney Posted Friday, March 17, 2006, at 1:34 PM ET

It's hard to find fault with Whole Foods, the haute-crunchy
supermarket chain that has made a fortune by transforming
grocery shopping into a bright and shiny, progressive
experience. Indeed, the road to wild profits and cultural
cachet has been surprisingly smooth for the supermarket
chain. It gets mostly sympathetic coverage in the local and
national media and red-carpet treatment from the communities it
enters.  But does Whole Foods have an Achilles' heel? And more
important, does the organic movement itself, whose coattails
Whole Foods has ridden to such success, have dark secrets of
its own?

Granted, there's plenty that's praiseworthy about Whole
Foods. John Mackey, the company's chairman, likes to say,
"There's no inherent reason why business cannot be ethical,
socially responsible, and profitable." And under the umbrella
creed of "sustainability," Whole Foods pays its workers a solid
living wage-its lowest earners average $13.15 an hour-with
excellent benefits and health care. No executive makes more
than 14 times the employee average. (Mackey's salary last year
was $342,000.) In January, Whole Foods announced that it had
committed to buy a year's supply of power from a wind-power
utility in Wyoming.

But even if Whole Foods has a happy staff and nice windmills,
is it really as virtuous as it appears to be? Take the produce
section, usually located in the geographic center of the
shopping floor and the spiritual heart of a Whole Foods
outlet. (Every media profile of the company invariably contains
a paragraph of fawning produce porn, near-sonnets about
"gleaming melons" and "glistening kumquats.") In the produce
section of Whole Foods' flagship New York City store at the
Time Warner Center, shoppers browse under a big banner that
lists "Reasons To Buy Organic." On the banner, the first
heading is "Save Energy." The accompanying text explains how
organic farmers, who use natural fertilizers like manure and
compost, avoid the energy waste involved in the manufacture of
synthetic fertilizers. It's a technical point that probably
barely registers with most shoppers but contributes to a vague
sense of virtue.

Fair enough. But here's another technical point that Whole
Foods fails to mention and that highlights what has gone wrong
with the organic-food movement in the last couple of
decades. Let's say you live in New York City and want to buy a
pound of tomatoes in season. Say you can choose between
conventionally grown New Jersey tomatoes or organic ones grown
in Chile. Of course, the New Jersey tomatoes will be
cheaper. They will also almost certainly be fresher, having
traveled a fraction of the distance. But which is the more
eco-conscious choice? In terms of energy savings, there's no
contest: Just think of the fossil fuels expended getting those
organic tomatoes from Chile. Which brings us to the question:
Setting aside freshness, price, and energy conservation, should
a New Yorker just instinctively choose organic, even if the
produce comes from Chile? A tough decision, but you can make a
self-interested case for the social and economic benefit of
going Jersey, especially if you prefer passing fields of
tomatoes to fields of condominiums when you tour the Garden
State.

Another heading on the Whole Foods banner says "Help the Small
Farmer."  "Buying organic," it states, "supports the small,
family farmers that make up a large percentage of organic food
producers." This is semantic sleight of hand. As one small
family farmer in Connecticut told me recently, "Almost all the
organic food in this country comes out of California. And five
or six big California farms dominate the whole industry."
There's a widespread misperception in this country-one that
organic growers, no matter how giant, happily encourage-that
"organic" means "small family farmer." That hasn't been the
case for years, certainly not since 1990, when the Department
of Agriculture drew up its official guidelines for organic
food. Whole Foods knows this well, and so the line about the
"small family farmers that make up a large percentage of
organic food producers" is sneaky. There are a lot of small,
family-run organic farmers, but their share of the organic crop
in this country, and of the produce sold at Whole Foods, is
minuscule.

A nearby banner at the Time Warner Center Whole Foods proclaims
"Our Commitment to the Local Farmer," but this also doesn't
hold up to scrutiny. More likely, the burgeoning local-food
movement is making Whole Foods uneasy. After all, a
multinational chain can't promote a "buy local" philosophy
without being self-defeating. When I visited the Time Warner
Whole Foods last fall-high season for native fruits and
vegetables on the East Coast-only a token amount of local
produce was on display. What Whole Foods does do for local
farmers is hang glossy pinups throughout the store, what they
call "grower profiles," which depict tousled, friendly looking
organic farmers standing in front of their crops. This winter,
when I dropped by the store, the only local produce for sale
was a shelf of upstate apples, but the grower profiles were
still up. There was a picture of a sandy-haired organic leek
farmer named Dave, from Whately, Mass., above a shelf of
conventionally grown yellow onions from Oregon. Another profile
showed a guy named Ray Rex munching on an ear of sweet corn he
grew on his generations-old, picturesque organic acres. The
photograph was pinned above a display of conventionally grown
white onions from Mexico.

These profiles may be heartwarming, but they also artfully
mislead customers about what they're paying premium prices
for. If Whole Foods marketing didn't revolve so much around
explicit (as well as subtly suggestive) appeals to food ethics,
it'd be easier to forgive some exaggerations and distortions.

Of course, above and beyond social and environmental ethics,
and even taste, people buy organic food because they believe
that it's better for them. All things being equal, food grown
without pesticides is healthier for you. But American populism
chafes against the notion of good health for those who can
afford it. Charges of elitism-media wags, in otherwise
flattering profiles, have called Whole Foods "Whole Paycheck"
and "wholesome, healthy for the wholesome, wealthy"-are the
only criticism of Whole Foods that seems to have stuck. Which
brings us to the newest kid in the organic-food sandbox:
Wal-Mart, the world's biggest grocery retailer, has just begun
a major program to expand into organic foods.  If buying food
grown without chemical pesticides and synthetic fertilizers has
been elevated to a status-conscious lifestyle choice, it could
also be transformed into a bare-bones commodity purchase.

When the Department of Agriculture established the guidelines
for organic food in 1990, it blew a huge opportunity. The
USDA-under heavy agribusiness lobbying-adopted an abstract set
of restrictions for organic agriculture and left "local" out of
the formula. What passes for organic farming today has strayed
far from what the shaggy utopians who got the movement going
back in the '60s and '70s had in mind. But if these pioneers
dreamed of revolutionizing the nation's food supply, they
surely didn't intend for organic to become a luxury item, a
high-end lifestyle choice.

It's likely that neither Wal-Mart nor Whole Foods will do much
to encourage local agriculture or small farming, but in an odd
twist, Wal-Mart, with its simple "More for Less" credo, might
do far more to democratize the nation's food supply than Whole
Foods. The organic-food movement is in danger of exacerbating
the growing gap between rich and poor in this country by
contributing to a two-tiered national food supply, with healthy
food for the rich. Could Wal-Mart's populist strategy prove to
be more "sustainable" than Whole Foods? Stranger things have
happened.

Related in Slate ________________________________

In 2003, the organic farmer and magazine publisher MaryJane
Butters wrote a Slate diary. In June, Daniel Gross analyzed why
Wal-Mart would start selling organic food. Field Maloney's last
article for Slate attempted to free Bob Marley's legacy from
his stoned suburban fans.

Jessica Garay, RD Nutrition Educator Food Bank of Central New
York 6970 Schuyler Road East Syracuse, NY 13057 Telephone:
(315) 437-1899 x. 267 Cell: (315) 842-7016 Fax: (315) 434-9629
E-mail: jgaray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx www.foodbankcny.org "We work for
food"


--
Micheal McEvoy                                  St Brigid's Gate Farm
chewy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx                            Mahomet, Texas

Micah4 Consulting -- Appropriate Technology for Sustainable Community

"And what does the Lord require of you but to do justice,
  and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?"
  -- Micah 6:8

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