Some kids attending school rely on school lunch because it’s free for them and their parents do not have money to provide them with their own lunch five days of the week. Due to this, kids are provided with disgusting and unhealthy food in their school cafeterias. They are supposed to be fueling their minds to learn for the rest of the day with healthy and nutritional foods, but how can they possibly do this when they are being fed literally nothing but garbage? The food industry is so low that it will serve kids at school food that has been declared as “unfit for human consumption,” by the USDA (Schlosser 219). It is ridiculous to know that this is being approved and it really shows how the food industry and the government work together in trying to making the most profit that is available. This topic interested me because I thought of myself as a student at school. I have been eating school lunch since my whole life and now I completely regret it. I thought I was being fed healthy, nutritional food but what I was really eating was probably old and contaminated meat. The thought of this really makes cringe and it probably made you cringe too. All of us have been eating school lunches since our first day of kindergarten and it should be stopped immediately. Kids in elementary, junior high school and high school are all still growing and we need good nutrition from the food we eat. School lunch is probably equally as bad as eating at McDonald’s or any other fast food restaurant.
“A 1983 investigation by NBC News said that the Cattle King Packing Company – at the time, the USDA’s largest supplier of ground beef for school lunches and a supplier to Wendy’s – routinely processed cattle that were already dead before arriving at its plant, hid diseased cattle from inspectors, and mixed rotten meat that had been returned by customers into packages of hamburger meat” (Schlosser 218). This quote really disturbed me because it tells readers about a real investigation that was done by a national news channel and the secrets they had found in a food companies factories. All these kids want is a good meal provided by their school and what they actually get is diseased and disgusting old meat that was dead before it was even slaughtered. I sure wouldn’t want my kids eating school lunch after finding out this information. How much lower can these food companies be? When will they end all the pain and suffering the outcome of their unhealthy food gives us for the kids that simply want to eat a good meal? It isn’t fair to the kids, parents and to anyone else eating it. This is just one example of how messed up food companies are. They take making the most profit possible rather than giving kids something healthy to eat.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Secrets of the Pet Food Industry
The pet food industry in the United States is the only industry legally allowed to lie to consumers, and the only food industry allowed to violate Federal food safety laws. Food recalls not only happen to food that we eat, but also to our family dogs and cats that we love so much. This major pet food recall had occurred in 2007.
U.S. Magistrate Judge John T. Maughmer sentenced Sally Qing Miller and husband Stephen Miller, owners of ChemNutra, Inc., to pay a $25,000 fine and three years probation. ChemNutra Inc. was at fault for importing melamine tainted vegetable protein ingredients. These ingredients were put into the pet food and was responsible for the thousands of illnesses and deaths in dogs and cats. ChemNutra pleaded guilty but was fined $25,000 because of knowingly importing contaminated poisonous vegetable proteins and the manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, will pay $150 million in criminal fines to settle allegations it knowingly sold the contaminated ingredients.
Menu foods who is another pet food manufacturer responsible for hundreds of recalls and thousands of deaths in pets in 2007. They settled for $24 million dollars for pets who consumed melamine tainted pet foods. A human drug company was fined $600 million in civil penalties and its product did not result in any illness or death. This controversy explains itself. We pay a lot of money for the well being of our pets and the pet food industry obviously does not care about the welfare of the animals that we treat like family members. This really needs to be changed. What more can the food industry lie to us about?
Monday, November 1, 2010
Prospectus
Today, cows, sheep and other grazing animals diets have only consisted of corn instead of grass. This causes many problems in the animal and bad consequences for both the grazer and us. The reasons factory farms have started doing this was because it’s much cheaper, faster and profitable. In the United States, cows would be slaughtered after four or five years. Today, they are slaughtered after fourteen or sixteen months. This is done with large amounts of corn, protein supplements, antibiotics and growth hormones. Feeding a cow corn instead of grass is extremely disturbing to their digestive systems and it can possibly kill the animal if it is not done as gradually as possible and with massive amounts of antibiotics. Feeding cows grass is much more positive because it produces high quality meat with less bacteria and infections that make us sick.
The health effects of feeding corn to cows take a number of tolls on our bodies. The beef that we eat has caused waste runoff into rivers and ocean and pollutes the water and the environment. Infectious E. coli is found in many beef products because of the poor diets of cows. The poor diets of corn and grain cause their stomachs to be very acidic, just like our stomachs. The acid in our stomach helps to kill off bacteria from food that we’ve eaten, but the bacteria is now immune because of the high acidic levels in the cows. Nothing is being done about this problem because food companies try to make the most profit possible and in the cheapest way. They do not care about the welfare of the consumers eating the food they produce because it’s all about money.
The sources I will be using is a blog written by a student that uses a lot of important and useful on the effects of corn fed diets in cows and the effects of it on humans. I will be using the book “The Ethics Of What We Eat,” by Peter Singer because he talks about all the practices factory farms follow. I will also be using the LaGuardia database to find books related to my research.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
E. Coli...A Close Friend
1 million pounds of ground beef products were recalled on August 6, 2010 because of seven people who fell ill with E. coli contamination. The company Valley Meat Co., of Modesto, sold the contaminated meat to California, Texas, Oregon, Arizona and internationally, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said. Most of the products were sold frozen and processed from October 2, 2009 to January 12, 2010. The source of the outbreak was determined but one of the seven sickened patients, with a meat sample in their freezer.
The USDA was looking for stores where the products were sold to remove them from the shelves. "This is the first recall in our history and we will investigate the matter thoroughly and take any measures deemed necessary to further elevate our safety standards, protect consumers, and ensure confidence in our products," Valley Meat stated. Valley Meat advises consumers to throw out the potentially contaminated meat with the establishment number "EST. 8268" on the label, and throw it out or bring it back to stores for a refund.
The majority of infected people were in Northern California. Exposures also took place in Marin, Mendocino, Placer, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Siskiyou and Kern counties. Ralph Montano said that none of the patients cases were so severe that they need hospitalization, and all of them recovered. Symptoms include severe stomach cramps, diarrhea, vomiting and a low fever. If the situation is on a higher level of severity, the infection can lead to kidney failure, brain damage and even death.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Salmonella, the FDA, Jack DeCosta, and Continued Bad Habits
Corporations and factories have been allowed to participate in many unsafe practices and the government hasn’t done a thing to promote food safety habits. Due to this, Wright County Eggs and Hillandale Farms are responsible for the recent outbreak of salmonella in eggs, and have recalled about half a billion eggs in May 2010. Salmonella causes fever, severe vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain and can cause fetal infections if it gets into the bloodstream. Their have already been 1,300 cases of salmonella between May and July but only about one in every 38 cases of salmonella are actually reported. So the numbers are actually much higher and approximately in the ten thousands.
Austin “Jack” DeCoster is Wright County Eggs owner and also has family ties to Hillandale Farms, which also come together because they manufacture and buy their eggs from the same places. He has a long list of animal and environmental abuses, and Secretary Robert Reich, writer of the Christian Science Monitor blog on August 24, commented, “DeCoster agreed to pay a $2 million penalty (the most we could throw at him) for some of the most heinous workplace violations I’d seen. His workers had been forced to live in trailers infested with rats and handle manure and dead chickens with their bare hands. It was an agricultural sweatshop.”
In a Forbes investigation in 2006, a detailed report of the conditions at Ohio Fresh Farms showed similar conditions to those at the Wright County Egg Farms and stated, “In the three years of its existence the company has incurred dozens of enforcement actions from the state, up to seven issued in a single day, for such violations as promoting swarms of flies at ‘extreme levels’ and discarding empty vaccine vials, mixed in with manure in a vacant field.” Investigators also added that they had discovered Salmonella on the site and the factory had one of the worst ammonia emissions, which cause skin and lung irritation.
Their is an outcome of about 9,000 deaths each because of 81 million cases of food-related illnesses. The Food and Drug Administration is responsible for overseeing corporations in the food industry and has 450 inspectors for about 156,000 different sites. These companies are visited by the inspectors about once a year which tells us that instead of protecting consumers, they are contributing to the population in not knowing that our food really isn’t safe. The corporations are enabled to continue business, despite their violations and unsafe practices.
Heres a link to daily food recalls and outbreaks:
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/default.htm
Monday, October 11, 2010
Hidden Ingredients
MY NEW PROJECT:
I did not like my original blog project so I thought of a different topic. My new topic will be based on food recalls and how bad food is effecting people in the United States. I will be finding my information from the past five or ten recent years and post my findings on my blog one a week. I will write about how and why these things happened in certain places and where the food that was recalled came from. The themes of my project are food and health and the morality of big food companies. What I hope to learn about are the foods that I should be eating less of and why these foods make people sick. I already know that these problems are the companies fault but I hope to further learn how they can avoid these problems.
MY OLD PROJECT:
My weekly blog for class will be based on a research project of how many of our foods contain high fructose corn syrup, soy bean, and modified ingredients. Every few days I will look at one supermarket item in my refrigerator and look at the ingredients they contain. I will keep my eye on the foods that contain one or more of the three ingredients and report on what supermarket food I examined. Most of the foods we thought would never contain these ingredients probably do because of all the many different forms corn can be morphed into.
I did not like my original blog project so I thought of a different topic. My new topic will be based on food recalls and how bad food is effecting people in the United States. I will be finding my information from the past five or ten recent years and post my findings on my blog one a week. I will write about how and why these things happened in certain places and where the food that was recalled came from. The themes of my project are food and health and the morality of big food companies. What I hope to learn about are the foods that I should be eating less of and why these foods make people sick. I already know that these problems are the companies fault but I hope to further learn how they can avoid these problems.
MY OLD PROJECT:
My weekly blog for class will be based on a research project of how many of our foods contain high fructose corn syrup, soy bean, and modified ingredients. Every few days I will look at one supermarket item in my refrigerator and look at the ingredients they contain. I will keep my eye on the foods that contain one or more of the three ingredients and report on what supermarket food I examined. Most of the foods we thought would never contain these ingredients probably do because of all the many different forms corn can be morphed into.
Our class has recently watched a movie called “Food Inc.”, and in the movie it mentioned that the supermarket is basically fooling us. All the foods that we think are so different from each other are actually very similar because they contain at least one out of those three ingredients. Corn and soy beans have recently been modified for mass production and used for many things. This includes feeding cows, pigs, chickens and even fish corn because it is so cheap. Corn has become revolutionized in America.
The themes of my project are basically food and health. What I hope to learn from this project is about my food and exactly what is in it. We are fooled by all these big companies that we think produce all this diverse and good tasting food, but we are really just eating the same thing over and over and not receiving the right nutritional values . The kinds of thoughts I hope to inspire my readers with are to also do the same thing that I am doing for my project. I am hoping that they will do investigating in what they eat too like checking labels and researching certain companies and how they produce their food. It will be very educational to myself and all of my readers and knowledge is power.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Problem-Posing Assignment
The problem in Chapter 3 is the amount of violence coming from the young and the poor, working in the fast food industry in Eric Schlossers book “Fast Food Nation.” Many of the robberies and theft that go on in fast food restaurants are from current or former employees. These young employees are angered by the minimum wage they receive and how they are treated unfairly, without respect or value. The effects of this are employee outbursts and commitment of armed robbery early in the mornings or late at night. They can steal money from the restaurant because they are so angry with there jobs. This effects and endangers both employees and customers. For example, on page 84, Eric Schlosser explains a situation at a McDonald’s in Moorpark, California where the restaurant was being robbed. The day shift manager recognized the night shift manager under his mask. An example of a political issue that has risen caused by violence in the workplace is that of The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). This act could help promote safety guidelines during the night shift at fast food restaurants and because of the high levels of workplace fatalities in women. The National Restaurant Association and one hundred congressmen opposed the act because they were bribed with money. In January 1999, The National Council of Chain Restaurants lobbied against OSHA and formed an organization called the “Alliance for Workplace Safety.”
“No other American industry is robbed so frequently by its own employees”, Joseph A. Kinney notes, the president of the National Safe Workplace Institute. He also adds that we shouldn’t be wasting time installing cameras and such but we should improve the job experience for workers. This relates to violence in fast food restaurants because its showing how an employer himself is telling restaurants that they need to do a better job in satisfying there employees. Americas fast food industry workers are looked at as no more than slaves who worked in the fields. It is the same principle except in modern times. That is what the fast food industry in America is all about. Paying workers as little as possible and making the most profit possible.
My personal experience goes back about three years ago. It isn’t as violent as an armed robbery, but I can relate to the subject. I worked in a coffee shop and closed around eleven o clock. It was about ten and I was cleaning up the espresso machines when an old African American man with an unshaved face and a limp walked in. His clothes made it noticeable that he wasn’t the richest man in the world. I noticed my tip jar a few minutes before and saw a dollar crammed inside with a red, circular stamp plastered on it. The man walked up to the register and asked for a cup of coffee, so I turned around and went in the same step by step process to fill up the little cup. I turned around and asked for a dollar and fifty cents. The man handed me the same dollar that was in my tip jar, and I noticed my almost now empty jar. I told him that I knew he had taken the money from the cup and he started mumbling and cursing as he walked out of the store. I had called the police and when they came we watched the video of him taking the money while I had my back turned to make his coffee. I felt angry and upset to know the money I had worked hard for had been taken.
Solutions that have been tried and failed were everything from security cameras, burglar alarms, panic buttons, drop-safes and additional lighting on the premises. Even the most thoroughly guarded fast food restaurants are still vulnerable. For example, in April 2000 a Burger King located on the grounds of the Offut Air Force Base in Nebraska was robbed by two men in ski masks and armed with shotguns. The equipment did not the effect the robbery one bit and they got away with over $7,000. My personal experience is from my account that I have mentioned before. In my case, the solution worked and didn’t worked. I still got my money taken but the cameras helped to identify the thief.
If I was given unlimited resources and connections, I would hire a security guard to protect the place when it closed and another when it opened in the morning and I would work with the police force. These fast food franchises have so much money that they can use to hire security guards and it will save the workers lives, and prevent any money from being stolen from the restaurants. This would lower the violence rate in the fast food industry and workers would feel much safer and probably appreciate their bosses more. I would also pose a solution towards the managers or franchisee holders. I would tell them to take the money out of the registers and safes and keep them somewhere out of the fast food restaurants several times a day to prevent robberies in which they take more money.
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