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Food, Inc.Rating: - AstoundingI loved this movie so much! It has motivated me to become an organic raw vegan. It's definetly an eye-opener. If you have common sense you will watch this movie. Rating: - Hard to watch, no matter who you areI have been a vegetarian for almost all of my adult life and a vegan for the last few years. I started out for ethical reasons, but even if I stopped caring tomorrow I would still eschew animal products. The way they are produced is just too scary. I've been reading about these issues for over twenty years, so there was little that surprised me. For me, the value of the film was showing the human costs, both direct and indirect, in our food system. Let's back up- this film and many others like it would have you believe that McDonalds, Walmart and Tyson invented the model for the farm, restaurant and supermarket as factory. They didn't. We've been mechanizing our food systems to the best of our ability since we started trading in and consuming sugar. The scary part now is that we can do it so much more "efficiently" than we could before because our technology has improved so much. The hell of sugar was the way it not only depended on slaves but literally destroyed them. Slavery has been outlawed, but the conditions under which laborers in the food industry work are little better than what the slaves labored in. One of the farmers makes the point that "Big Food" previously depended on African American men to, literally, do their dirty work. Now it's undocumented workers. One of the prices our country pays for cheap food. The story about the little boy who died after eating contaminated hamburgers- and then the inability of the corporation to apologize- drew both tears and indignant gasps. And well it should. Even worse, what people can say about food companies- Food, Inc- is heavily restricted. When someone can sew Oprah Winfrey for speaking out against a food company, no one is safe. And that's a shame. It was the story about the small family trying to balance the costs of food and health care that showed what the true cost of our food system really is. Other organizations have cited that we spend the same 26% of our incomes on healthcare and food combined as we did forty years ago. The difference is that we used to spend 18% on food and 8% on healthcare; now it's reversed. Actually, the biggest difference is that we used to have a better quality of life when we did. It's a powerful film, especially for children, especially for meat eaters (although the message is emphatically not that everyone has to become a vegetarian). But... it's not the comprehensive indictment of the food system I thought it would be. They focus on one quirky, independent farmer as part of the solution. What about more about CSAs? What about how to make all of that work in a city? (It felt like this, as well as many other films on the subject, was talking to someone in the suburbs.) And while I understood what they were saying about Walmart being potentially part of the solution, there's A LOT more to that story, such as how vulnerable businesses become when 40 to 60% of their business becomes dependent on Walmart- and keeping them happy. This is a very good work and it should be required viewing in school. It's just not the final, most comprehensive resource. Rating: - I Decided Not To Be One of the MajorityAfter seeing the movie, I decided to be a Vegan. I never would have dreamed I'd become one, but actually, I am feeling better physically and have lost weight!!!! Between watching the movie, reading "Eat to Live" and a book by Ruth Heidrich, who is vegan and a triathlete, I think I've made a healthy as well as "green" decision. Plus, I don't want to support those companies which were focused on in the movie and treated animals with such disrespect. Rating: - A remarkable movieThis is a remarkable movie, and it will change the way you eat. It puts pictures to the words of some of the most important books books on the subject, such as Omnivore's Dilemma, Fast Food Nation, etc. and the imagery is very moving. Amazing what is hidden from the view of the public. Rating: - Food Inc. (the dvd)I think everyone in America should see this movie. It was such a shock to see how only 4 companies control the food that is produced in the United States and how greedy they are and how they don't care if we get sick from the food they produce. The movie was very well done and I hope more people watch it and maybe speak out on the behalf of the American public. |
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