It’s
a tired old refrain you’ve probably heard before:
“Industrial agriculture is the only way to feed the world.” Even if you
shop at your weekly farmers market, and love your local kale and
carrots, maybe you also secretly worry: Are you cursing people to more
hunger around the world for your organic proclivities?
Well,
folks, the research is in. Study after study is showing the opposite is
true: we can onlyensure a well-fed world if we start shifting away from
an agricultural system dependent on fossil fuels, mined minerals, and
lots of water—all of which will only get more costly as they run out.
Some of the most esteemed global institutions have documented that the
best way to fight hunger—and grow food abundantly—is to go for organic
and ecological production methods andget people eating whole, real food
again.
So if we have scientific consensus, why don’t we have more
public consciousness? You can find the answer in the marketing budgets
of Big Ag. Thanks to well-funded, multi-decade communications campaigns
by the very corporations profiting from chemical agriculture, many of
us are still in the dark about the true costs of industrial
agriculture and the true potential of sustainable agriculture.
Thanks
to these efforts, we are inundated with messaging that we need their
products—chemicals, fertilizer, genetically engineered seeds—to ensure
the world is fed. We hear it all the time.
We hear the grain
trader, ADM, is supermarket to the world—while the company’s
price-fixing scandals were so outrageous they became fodder for a Matt
Damon, Hollywood film.
We hear Monsanto is going to “squeeze more
food from a raindrop”—that its genetically engineered crops will help
farmers deal with extreme drought—even though no genetically engineered
drought-tolerant seeds have been commercialized.
We hear
pharmaceutical behemoth, Bayer, is "helping to feed a hungry planet"
while at the same time it’s one of the biggest distributors
of antibiotics to the livestock industry, leading to a public
health crisis of antibiotic resistance. And it’s the maker of a
toxic pesticide, now covering nearly 90 percent of all U.S. corn seeds,
and a likely culprit in colony collapse disorder—the fancy name for
the disappearance of bees. It doesn’t take a PhD in agronomy to know
that pollinators like bees are an essential part of being able to feed
the world.
I don’t know about you, but I’m increasingly frustrated
by all this spin: by the ad campaigns, the trade-group public relations
machines, the lobbying, the front groups—the myth-making. And, while I
don’t have $817 million (that’s what Monsanto spent on advertising in
just one year), I do have some powerful allies—great food, farming
and labor groups who share my frustration and want to do something
about it. So together, we’re launching Food MythBusters: a one-stop shop
to get your burning questions about food answered through short
films, Q&As with experts and links to essential research.
Our
first film takes on the myth that we need industrial agriculture to feed
the world. We’re offering sneak peeks at SXSW Eco in Austin and with
partners in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Boston and culminating with a
national launch on Food Day, October 24th.
We’re inviting you –
yes you – to help join us in spreading the word about the potential for
sustainable food, farming and the exciting work springing to life across
the country to remake our food system. This will ensure more and more
of us have access to good, healthy,sustainably raised food.
Please
join us by screening our first film wherever you are—on
college campuses, in church basements, at CSA pickups and family rooms.
We hope screenings will stimulate conversation, educate more about
the real story of our food and compel people to get involved
in transforming our food system—in their communities and across
the country.
Visit
www.foodmyths.org
to see a teaser trailer and download a step-by-step toolkit for
organizing a screening—it’s not too late. Or tune on October 4 at
www.SXSWEco.com to watch a livecast.
Contact
JGordon@StopCorporateAbuse.org
if you’d like more information about how to join the many groups around
the country hosting a screening on Food Day, or any day this fall.
Together, we can take back the story of our food from the marketing
machine of Big Agriculture.
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