Tuesday, April 22, 2008

The Omnivore's Dilemma

WARNING: LONG AND SEMI-POLITICAL POST AHEAD!!

I'm about halfway through a book called the Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollen. I was going to post my general thoughts on it when I was done, but it turns out that the book is far too interesting to leave it at that. The book is about food, what we eat, why we eat it and some of the potential consequences. I'm going to try to distill what I've learned so far into short, easy to understand thoughts.

Some time in the first world war a German scientist (Haber) trying to build bombs without the need from nitrates from Chile developed a way to artificially fix nitrogen, and make explosives artificially. Fixing nitrogen is something that has to happen for the nitrogen to be useful to plants growing in the soil. Usually animal feces or some kinds of plants do this in nature, which is why crops get cycled in tradiational agriculture. Anyway, this was a process by which a farmer could continuously grow the same thing on the same land.

Some time either just pre or just post cold war there was a depression and subsequent rise in the price of corn. As the effects of this rippled through the economy the government stepped in and began to stabilize, and then subsidize corn prices. The results of this led to the production of corn and nothing but corn (and some soybeans) by most farms in America's breadbasket, because you were guarenteed money by corn. The variety of corn produced by these Iowa cornfields isn't edible, it's just really starchy and provides the most calorie per square foot of any other grain or grass, that's why the grow it as opposed to other things.

So there's a big corn surplus that the food industry needed to find something to do with, so they started breaking it down and making high fructose corn syrup, glucose, ethanol, xanthan gum, corn starch, and animal feed.

This is where it gets a little wierd and nasty in my estimation. A steer's lifespan is 1200 lbs, slaughter weight. The natural diet of cattle is grass, they're rumen's, which means they can break down and digest the sugars in grass, corn is actually poisonous to them. Corn, as mentioned above in unparalleled in it's calorie density, so cows are brought up to weight with a diet of mostly corn and antibiotics as well as feed additives (inculding other cow bits). The idea being to get the cow fat enough to slaughter before it get's too sick.

What's the point and who cares you may ask fairly enough, if it's got protein, carbohydrates and fat, the macronutrients, then you're set. The thing is: you are what you eat, and you are what you eat eats too. Our meat eats corn, our soda is 100% corn, most preservatives we use in food come from corn. This leaves our diets remarkably lacking in most everything but corn, there's little to no 'biodiversity' in our diets.

Organic farming helps a little bit in this, since organic meats eat organic food (food not fetilized by Haber-ized nitrates, or with pesticides used on them). Pesticides and other ways we 'help' plants make them weak and low on all the vitamins and minerals that make plants good for us. Anyway, when an organically raised steer eats his food, he's getting a better deal in terms of nutrients than standarly raised steer. There's a lot more to say on this, but I don't want to go on too long.

The next bit is something that Al Gore spoke to a little while ago and was roundly ridiculed for, which is that eating meat contributes more to global warming than driving. Even if you don't believe in man-made global warming a reasonable person would certainly cede that America needs to get off foreign oil, or at least help the sky to be less brown. The reason I bring this up is 20% or the fuel used in the US is used to get food from one place to another, that's a lot. Certainly it takes a lot of fuel to get corn from silos in Iowa to feed-lots in Kansas, and meat from Kansas to most of the midwest, or California, where some of it ends up.

I don't want to fault people for what they eat, if the food is available and it tastes good to them and that's what they want to eat then that's their right. I'm certainly not going to start a new People's Park and stick it to the man, but the half of this book I've read so far has put a number of stones in my shoes in regards to how I eat. I curious now about buying local foods, and buying organic foods, not to mention trying some grass-fed beef. Anyway, buy the book and read the book, it's facinating.

7 comments:

Mark said...

I actually used to do organic gardening in the back, but it was too difficult sometimes there are certain insects that are impossible to get rid of without pesticides so I would use a combination of the two, organic and pesticides.

Organic food is way too expensive. Of course if they keep shoving corn down our gas tanks instead of eating it, everything may be so expensive organic foods may be just as expensive.

DDT was outlawed as a pesticide because of the unproven theory it had the potential of causing cancer, and as a result millions of Africans have been dying of malaria. DDT controlled malaria.

Al Gore - That guy is a fraud as well as global warming caused by humans. Even his "inconvenient truth" so-called documentary uses footage from, "The day after tomorrow" http://mark24609.blogspot.com/2008/04/earth-day-38th-anniversary.html. That is just the tip of the iceberg.

If you think we have brown skies, you should have been around in the 70s, there were days you couldn't see anything. we have cleaned the air a lot. Now the EPA just needs to justify their existence.

The global warming alarmists tend to be against the cleanest form of energy nuclear energy although some are changing their tune. Coal plants kill more than 50,000 people a year through lung diseases and other pollutants created from coal.

What we need to do is to first drill for our own oil first on our own land including Anwar. We have tons of oil, then start building nuclear power plants that are reliable and safe, then use natural gas for which we already have the infrastructure for alternative energy. It is the only form of alternative energy that we currently know works. We need to stop using corn ethanol which is creating a shortage of corn, inflating the cost of corn, grain, dairy products, and other food products world wide.

I will bet gas will have to get to ten dollars a gallon before politicians do what is right.

We need to free ourselves from foreign oil, and none of the candidates go far enough in doing what is necessary.

We need to stop doing what is politically correct, and start doing what is right.

Mark

http://mark24609.blogspot.com/

There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. John Maynard Keynes

Jesse and Melissa said...

Global warming or not, I'm less concerned with corn and ethanol and the price of my food than I am with getting off of foreign oil. 1/5 of the fossil fuel the US uses is to move food around the country. Buy local, it cuts the use of oil, and it supports people in your community.

Mark said...

I agree with you on that. I believe we do need to get off of foreign oil, but the way we are doing it is insane. We have tons of oil, we haven't created nuclear plants in 30 years. The politicians are not trying to get us off of foreign oil. They are trying to do what is politically expedient, and what will garner them points. Meanwhile, everything we eat goes up, and oil goes up. We should get off of foreign oil as soon as possible, and it is not a difficult process if they got rid of the environmental lobbies. Meanwhile, we pay 4 dollars a gallon for gasoline, petrodollars that go to regimes that want to kill us. I don't have a problem with buying local either. In fact, you do have a good argument. I don't have a problem with doing anything that will conserve energy.

If corn ethanol were a viable substitute, I would not be averse to a little increase in my food but it is not. It is causing food riots, etc. I wrote about some of the problems with corn ethanol here. http://mark24609.blogspot.com/2008/04/coming-economic-tsunami.html

New discoveries of oil are happening all over the world. The Bakken Formation in North Dakota contains 400 to 500 billion barrels of oil, then there is the gulf of Mexico, Anwar.

I am not sure we necessarily disagree. I think one of first priorities should be getting off of foreign oil, but its how we get there, and the way we are going we will never be off of foreign oil, but if we took proper action now, we could be off in ten years.

I sure am long winded

Mark

http://mark24609.blogspot.com/

Jesse and Melissa said...

Sure, those are all problems, but the reality of the matter is that our government isn't going to do anything about it any time soon, because they don't have to, there's not enough pressure on them to act. What you can do however, is vote them out of office, and buy local.

Mark said...

I can't disagree with you on that. The sad part is we have three candidates that aren't going to do anything or anything that is right to get us off foreign oil. I think its not going to happen until gas gets to 8 dollars or more a gallon, and you see a revolt among the people, then maybe we will see a viable candidate emerge.

I agree with Obama that we need change, of course not the change he is advocating.

Jesse and Melissa said...

FYI, Mark I, Melissa did not read this book. It was Jesse. I don't read these types of books.

Mark said...

That is like Jeanine. she would never read a book like that. I would read the political books or semi-political books. I did like the warning you gave at the beginning of the post. If I did that I would have to put a warning on every one of my posts :) I keep thinking I would post something else of a different topic like apologetics or finance or foreign politics which also interest me, but then I keep finding there is too much to write about especially when you keep hearing the silly ideas of the candidates and sometimes radical ideas to the detriment of the US economy.

Keep on blogging

Mark

http://mark24609.blogspot.com/

There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. John Maynard Keynes