Why A Salad Costs More Than A Big Mac
This graphic tells the story about as well as Micheal Pollan could. It's all about the priorities we set as a society. If we support subsidizing corn and soybeans in order to feed them to cows (and Cargill) to make cheap burgers of to Coca-Cola to make cheap soft drinks, we shouldn't be too shocked when people buy those cheap foods and feed them to their families, especially in the current economy when some people are having to choose between food, healthcare, and heating oil. In our tea-party flavored times, some might argue that government shouldn't have a role in righting the balance between cheap, unhealthy foods and more expensive, healthy ones, but such thinking ignores the role that federal policy already plays in food pricing. Just for the sake of flexing your creative thinking muscles, imagine if we flipped our priorities as a society and made the healthiest foods the easiest and cheapest ones to access? Food for thought.
- Roger Doiron's blog
- Login or register to post comments
Kitchen Gardeners Unite!
We're planting a new website which will sprout in February 2012. In the meantime, you can join our community by signing up for mailing list here:
Member login
Like Us On Facebook
Blog with KGI!
Are you garden writer, blogger, or teacher with access to a digital camera? Do you have a unique geographic perspective or area of expertise that you'd like to share with thousands of other gardeners? If so, we'd love to have you blog with us. All you need to do is join our site (or log in, if you've already joined) and click on this link to add a blog post of your own.






The Ominvore's Dilemma
the Omnivore's Dilemma