Just watched Food Inc.

supercool111
supercool111 Posts: 87
edited September 20 in Food and Nutrition
And I have decided to become a vegan again. The film doesn't promote the vegan diet or anything but I just couldn't stand to see those animals treated so poorly. I just feel sick now...

Replies

  • tammietifanie
    tammietifanie Posts: 1,496 Member
    I have seen that movie it really opens your eyes up to how some of our foods are being made
  • MisoSoup79
    MisoSoup79 Posts: 517
    I saw it recently... in fact I bought it. I'm not a vegetarian and will probably never be... but I am definitely pushing toward the organic lifestyle. The way they treated the animals made me feel deeply sick to my stomach, even though none of that was a surprise to me. (I have read Fast Food Nation, Don't Eat This Book, watched Super Size Me, The Future of Food, etc.) The way the food industry views it's workers and it's consumers is actually far more disturbing to me...

    I just wish they would have made Food Inc available to watch for free on the internet... because they are keeping the message away from the people who need to hear/see it most - those who believe they cannot afford any alternative to their current lifestyle.

    And I agree, the movie doesn't promote a vegan lifestyle... it promotes an organic, educated and responsible lifestyle.

    It was a good movie.
  • I promise...I haven't ate chicken or beef since I saw that awful movie.
  • mamacassi
    mamacassi Posts: 131
    Well that didn't make me become a vegetarian, but it opens your eyes. I did it for me. Anyway, don't stop eating meat because you feel guilty, there's plenty of ways to get meat that is raised properly but it's just more difficult.
  • Celestia
    Celestia Posts: 106 Member
    I've been a vegetarian already for 2 years and watching that movie reminds me of the reasons why I became one in the first place; the movie really doesn't promote a veggie lifestyle which is great. What is does is open people's eyes to the disasterous food industry practices in place. But what really got to me was the political corruption and how the corporations pockets own the industry at the expensive of the people, animals and the environment.
  • hlanders
    hlanders Posts: 50
    So great ....now that I stay at home with the kids ..I make our own pasta sause...One day of pain...is a winter of awesome sause...
    We buy close to all of our meat from local farmers..EGGS, beef and potatoes...we also try to stick into 100 km diet...buy everything that was grown in that range...Preserve food in the summers...and carry it over to the winters. It;s nice to have sause (pasta) sause that isn't laddend with sugar. My kids could just eat it as a soup too!
    Eggs also taste soooo good farm fresh...and more vit .in them
  • nikbrown
    nikbrown Posts: 7 Member
    Yea I watched it a couple of weeks ago... really cauterized a lot of things I've been thinking about.

    I used to be a vegetarian and grew up mostly that way, but that's really not for me or my wife. Instead I'm looking heavily into starting us down the path of homesteading.

    There are a number of good communities out there, but I've been reading a lot of http://www.homesteadingtoday.com/. I'm not under any illusions we can produce 100% of our food, but if we can start down the path of producing 90% of our meat it would go a long way.

    If we can buy some land in the next couple of years I'm thinking Goats (we love goat meat anyway), ducks (the right breed of duck is very healthy meat and eggs), chickens & rabbits.

    We already have plans for a vastly expanded garden and do a lot of shopping from local farmers.
  • kdiamond
    kdiamond Posts: 3,329 Member
    Yes...I now buy only Organic milk, cage free eggs and grass fed meats. Isn't it crazy e-coli only exists because they feed the animals corn?
  • That was a great movie. I watched it several times.

    I think it was responsibly done. One step in the right direction for the health of our planet.
  • JABehler
    JABehler Posts: 82 Member
    I saw it recently... in fact I bought it. I'm not a vegetarian and will probably never be... but I am definitely pushing toward the organic lifestyle. The way they treated the animals made me feel deeply sick to my stomach, even though none of that was a surprise to me. (I have read Fast Food Nation, Don't Eat This Book, watched Super Size Me, The Future of Food, etc.) The way the food industry views it's workers and it's consumers is actually far more disturbing to me...

    I just wish they would have made Food Inc available to watch for free on the internet... because they are keeping the message away from the people who need to hear/see it most - those who believe they cannot afford any alternative to their current lifestyle.

    And I agree, the movie doesn't promote a vegan lifestyle... it promotes an organic, educated and responsible lifestyle.
  • JABehler
    JABehler Posts: 82 Member
    I have not seen this movie but have heard about it from my DIL. I probably will never be vegetarian, but am certainly leaning towards organic. I try to buy local, and read, read, read, labels.
    A great book to read is "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life" by Barbara Kinsolver. This book really opened my eyes to the whole food industry and gov"t mandates. I highly recommend it. Check your local Sat/Sun markets.
    I believe that if you subscribe to Netflicks, Food, Inc. is an watch instantly.
  • MisoSoup79
    MisoSoup79 Posts: 517
    I have not seen this movie but have heard about it from my DIL. I probably will never be vegetarian, but am certainly leaning towards organic. I try to buy local, and read, read, read, labels.
    A great book to read is "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life" by Barbara Kinsolver. This book really opened my eyes to the whole food industry and gov"t mandates. I highly recommend it. Check your local Sat/Sun markets.
    I believe that if you subscribe to Netflicks, Food, Inc. is an watch instantly.

    I can't do netflix where I am (Germany). They don't allow instant downloads at all here. :(

    I'll have to check out that book.

    and to Nikbrown - We're considering growing/raising our own, too... when we get back to the states (we can't here - active duty military living in base housing in a foreign country, etc.) But while living in the city, we're going to start with chickens and a backyard garden. I figure if we have enough chickens, we can trade eggs and produce to some of the other locals who raise different animals/crops. And you're right, there are a lot of supportive communities out there. The area where our house in AZ is, there are two farmers markets on different weekends within a 3 mile radius of home! That's definitely something we can take advantage of when we get back, provided they are still going on in 2012. And www.backyardchickens.com is a good source for information regarding raising your own chickens - even for city-dwellers.

    In the meantime, I'm starting an herb garden on my patio and looking into the practicality/cost of buying locally hunted game. It sucks, though, that my options are so limited. It is terribly expensive to buy meat on the economy here - 2-3 times what it costs at the commissary on base, and not having a firm grasp on the language makes reading labels virtually impossible. So right now, I'm stuck and I feel really bad for it... but I'm formulating plans to change.
  • lwebsmfp
    lwebsmfp Posts: 297 Member
    I saw this too and felt horrible for the animals. It's an eye opener for sure but it hasn't kept me from eating meat. I generally don't eat a lot of meat as it is but am careful about the type of meat I buy and where I buy it from.

    If you have a farmers market in your area, it's a great place to shop for food items. I try to buy Organic when shopping in the grocery stores too. If you have local farmers in your area, you can check with them about getting your food from them. We have farmers around us who allow this and it's a great alternative to buying the questionable items from the major food chains.

    Most of the foods we eat today are genetically modified and that includes fruits. So, I'm careful to read the label as most of the time it tells you what you're buying. As for fruits, you will know what you're getting by the stickers. Next time you're buying apples or bananas check out the sticker label. If the number starts with a 4, it's conventionally grown (using chemicals). If the number starts with a 9, it's organically grown. If the number starts with 8, it's genetically engineered/modified. You can google "numbers on fruit" to read more about this.
  • Laceylala
    Laceylala Posts: 3,094 Member
    Aside from how the animals are treated, what got me is the fact that they are washing meat in amonia mixes or chlorine mixes to prevent e coli and other nasty germs from spreading! I was so shocked when the guy it TX was talking about amonia rinsing the hamburger filler I seriously almost barfed.

    Also what got me is the soy beans and Monsanto. Soy is such a major protein component for many people who are trying to stay away from eating (and dairy) and here they are probably unknowingly eating genitically modified soy products. The movie didn't mention too much about organic soy products but considering how big Monsanto is, I would guess they have a gmo organic soy bean too that many products are made from. GROSS.
    It was also very frustrating and sad to see how Monsanto chases farmers who refuse to use their beans out of business. And makes millions off of it in the mean time.
  • robbienjill
    robbienjill Posts: 456 Member
    Welcome 2 my world!! Trust me. u will never miss the meat!!!
  • msarro
    msarro Posts: 2,748 Member
    If you care about the animals but don't want to give up meat:
    A) hunt wild game (or become friends with hunters)
    B) Find small farmers who sell meat to local butchers. Buy the meat there.

    The companies in stuff like Food Inc. are massive agribusiness congolmerates. They're not your average Joe farmers. If you go to the little guys, the animals are rarely mistreated. Small farmers usually get a small but vital income stream from showing their animals. That means they have to be healthy, and well taken care of.
  • innerhottie
    innerhottie Posts: 163 Member
    I am on day 6 of being Vegetarian, largely from watching movies like Food, Inc. , Fast Food Nation, The Future of Food.
    You should check out Earthlings. You can watch it for free online.

    I first started researching these movies as I moved to a more organic lifestyle, then, seeing the torture these animals face and the disgusting circumstances in the "production" of what we buy at the supermarket, I gave up meat.

    I will say that I used to really think that hunting was cruel and wrong. Now, I think that is far more humane than what these cows, pigs and chickens go through.
  • soccerfanatic10
    soccerfanatic10 Posts: 11 Member
    I haven't given up meat since watching the movie but I have been more active in choosing grass fed meats, cage free eggs, etc. I've been looking for local farmers markets but its still pretty cold here so it may be a few months.

    I was shocked at what can be made from corn! I don't eat corn but its becoming a scary grain.

    The farming pesticide non re-using seed thing in Indiana was absurd. I can't believe these companies hold these farmers hostage. Farming today is not like it was back in the 1800s.
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