Pesticides in produce - are nonorganic fruits and vegetables worthwhile?
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my question is do you think the nutrients of fruits and vegetables are worthwhile despite the pesticides?
I'd say do what you can do. Cleaning up your diet a bit is never a bad thing but don't do it at the expense of livelihood.
So how did I not answer the question?
You really don't see how your ambiguous response is not an answer?
OP asks if people think the benefits of fruits and veggies (nutrients) outweigh the potential negatives (pesticide residue). You respond with "do what you can do", and mention the kind of meat you choose. And didn't address pesticides at all, which is the primary concern contained within the OP.
So no. You did not answer the question.0 -
professionalHobbyist wrote: »People have wildly varied opinions based on limited information
DDT was supposed to be safe. The same govt tells us all these pesticides are safe.
Thalidomide was supposed to be safe. The govt told us so. There was a generation of babies born with birth defects.
Smoking was actually touted as healthy at one time!!
I try to avoid poisons when I can.
I don't know for sure how safe they are or are not. But if I consume as little as possible I feel better about my chances!
It is a personal choice.
as far as pesticides go, DDT is not that toxic to us. It just has that nasty little problem of degrading to DDE then sticking around to play with your grandkids.
Its invention and use has saved millions around the world though...
Except that exposure to DDT is now thought to be responsible for some of the breast cancer cases in women without any risk factors (70% of women who develop breast cancer have none of the known risk factors).0 -
They say that if you wash your fruits and veggies, there is no more risk with non-organic than there is with organic.
Some of the veggies in my grocery store - I see no difference. I wonder if they don't put the same stuff in both sections. The same bunches of scallions, in the same shape, with the same rubber bands...makes me wonder.0 -
Washing your fruits and vegetables gets rid of most of what remains.
The reason apples are on the 'dirty dozen' list and not oranges is that you peel oranges which means you get rid of the outer layer of the fruit where most of the pesticides would remain. You could peel your apples and grapes to lessen your risk if you want.0 -
GroovyLord wrote: »Also, organic produce is often not pesticide free either. It seems the more you learn about food the more it seems like nothing is completely good for you. Anyways, what do you think folks?
I think life expectancy increased dramatically in the era of increased pesticide use.
Draw from that whatever conclusion fits your biases (we all have them!)
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Organic foods have pesticides on them. Just different ones than the regular farmers use. And because they are "natural" the certified organic farmers have to use a lot more of it than the farmers who just grow the food.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/apipkin/10-things-farmers-are-tired-of-hearing-131ey
Wash your produce and enjoy.0 -
MexicanOsmosis wrote: »
Lovely.
I'll add this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlqk8oV1FVIshadowfax_c11 wrote: »Organic foods have pesticides on them. Just different ones than the regular farmers use. And because they are "natural" the certified organic farmers have to use a lot more of it than the farmers who just grow the food.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/apipkin/10-things-farmers-are-tired-of-hearing-131ey
Wash your produce and enjoy.
That was a beautiful thing.
I'm loving this thread and its majority of rational responses.
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My boyfriend follows a rule when it comes to organic. He only buys organic if it's food that he eats a lot. Eggs and milk he buys organic, that's about it.0
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I won't get into organic pros/cons; that's a battle that's been going on for years and will continue for years yet to come. What I will say is that if you want to add known-pure, unadulterated vegetables to your diet... grow you own. Even a tiny yard can host a small vegetable garden, and if you can spare even that, container gardening on decks and patios can produce a surprising amount of food. Lettuce, kale, spinach, chard, carrots, radishes... many veggies are dead easy to grow, and you have complete control over what goes on 'em.
I grow (non-certified) organic produce for my family and a handful of friends. We control weeds and disease with heavy mulch and hand-picking, and fertilize with compost and aged manure (mostly chicken and rabbit). Bugs are controlled by rotating crops around each year and hand-picking or washing them off if they do appear... and a certain amount of "over-production" because we know we'll lose some to the critters. There are no industrially-produced chemical fertilizers or herbicides on anything, contrary to what some here are saying. (I know this is not necessarily the case for commercial organic-labeled products).
Are we healthier for it? I don't know. I don't think anybody else does, either - including the scientists arguing both sides of the debate. "Proven facts" about health and nutrition are debunked or recanted every day, it seems, and I don't believe anyone can say with 100% certainty that ag chemicals are safe... or not. We eat naturally-raised food because ultimately, common sense tells me it's the least risky choice.0 -
professionalHobbyist wrote: »People have wildly varied opinions based on limited information
DDT was supposed to be safe. The same govt tells us all these pesticides are safe.
DDT's issue was overuse. Like with any chemical (including water and oxygen) dose counts, and DDT got dumped a LOT, especially in areas where malaria was a problem. Also: It was also the government who did the investigation that led to the U.S. ban. Do you trust that government decision?Thalidomide was supposed to be safe. The govt told us so. There was a generation of babies born with birth defects.
Assuming by "the govt" you mean the U.S. government: Incorrect. In the U.S., thalidomide was never approved for use during the era of Thalidomide babies. That phenomenon was largely in Germany.
Also: thalidomide has since been approved by the FDA and is still in use in the U.S. today as a component of chemotherapy. Many people benefit from using thalidomide.
I would also point out that the government also approves the safety of the cars you drive and the buildings you live/work in. Do you wake up every morning paranoid that the ceiling is going to collapse on you or that your car will explode when you start it?
Governments are imperfect, but don't try to argue that just because the government has made mistakes in the past it cannot ever be trusted again.0 -
organic or not, many fruits and veg contain salicylate (a toxin) which they produce by themselves as a protection from molds and mildews. This does not matter to the majority but for some of us a build up of salicylate, in our systems cause some people many seemingly unrelated health problems. A food diary will only show these problems if you know what you are looking for.0
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I usually soak my veggies in vinegar and water to remove pesticides.0
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There was not a generation of thalidomide babies. As soon as so many babies were deformed, they thought about why, quickly linked it to the thalidomide and stopped giving it to pregnant women.
I knew a woman who had hands coming out of her shoulders. She'd been a thalidomide baby. I'm not downplaying how much it sucked for those people...and their poor mothers, who felt guilt even though there was no good reason for it. The whole thing was horrible.
But it didn't go on for a long time.0 -
I won't get into organic pros/cons; that's a battle that's been going on for years and will continue for years yet to come. What I will say is that if you want to add known-pure, unadulterated vegetables to your diet... grow you own. Even a tiny yard can host a small vegetable garden, and if you can spare even that, container gardening on decks and patios can produce a surprising amount of food. Lettuce, kale, spinach, chard, carrots, radishes... many veggies are dead easy to grow, and you have complete control over what goes on 'em.
I grow (non-certified) organic produce for my family and a handful of friends. We control weeds and disease with heavy mulch and hand-picking, and fertilize with compost and aged manure (mostly chicken and rabbit). Bugs are controlled by rotating crops around each year and hand-picking or washing them off if they do appear... and a certain amount of "over-production" because we know we'll lose some to the critters. There are no industrially-produced chemical fertilizers or herbicides on anything, contrary to what some here are saying. (I know this is not necessarily the case for commercial organic-labeled products).
Are we healthier for it? I don't know. I don't think anybody else does, either - including the scientists arguing both sides of the debate. "Proven facts" about health and nutrition are debunked or recanted every day, it seems, and I don't believe anyone can say with 100% certainty that ag chemicals are safe... or not. We eat naturally-raised food because ultimately, common sense tells me it's the least risky choice.
I really love being able to run down to the garden for fresh greens and herbs. This year's bumper strawberry crop is finally waning, just in time for the raspberries. Right now I am also harvesting green peas, swiss chard, bok choy, oregano, chives, sage, basil, cilantro, dill. Looks like I'm a week away from tomatoes.
Had I known there would be baby woodchucks able to fit through my garden fence, I would have massively over produced the kale, of which they can't get enough. I thought they were finally to big to get through the main fence and the reinforcement I put up a few weeks ago, but was just out there and one of the kale plants looks freshly nibbled >.<
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I have used BT for cabbage worms, and as it kills pests it is a pesticide, but:
Less Toxic Insecticides
...Microbial insecticides contain microorganisms (viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, or nematodes) or their by-products. Microbial insecticides are especially valuable because their toxicity to nontarget animals and humans is extremely low.
Insecticidal products comprised of a single species of microorganism may be active against a wide variety of insects or group of related insects (such as caterpillars) or they may be effective against only one or a few species. Most are very specific. Since there is such a narrow range of insects killed, they spare the beneficial insects almost entirely.
Bacillus thuringiensis products are the most widely used microbial insecticides in the United States. They are commonly known as Bt. Different subspecies of Bt are effective against different groups of insects or their larvae.
Read more: http://www.clemson.edu/extension/hgic/pests/pesticide/hgic2770.html
BT is acceptable in organic gardening.0 -
.
[/quote]
as far as pesticides go, DDT is not that toxic to us. It just has that nasty little problem of degrading to DDE then sticking around to play with your grandkids.
Its invention and use has saved millions around the world though...[/quote]
This, how many people that bemoan things like pesticides gene mod and other advances would rather have the epic mortality rate we used to suffer not so long ago.0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »well, you wash your fruit and veg right?
also, organic produce also uses pesticides...
FYI everyone, you can't wash off pesticides! Pesticides are now applied systemically, which means that they are absorbed through the seed/soil/or leaf.
I am not wealthy by any means (and I mean not even close!) but I chose to splurge on buying as much quality organic and non-gmo food as I can. I really believe that you are what you eat and pesticides and herbicides are poisons. Period.0 -
As far as nutrients, it is true that our soil is being depleted of nutrients and our food is less nutrient dense than it was 100 years ago, but that is due to bad farming practices, organic or not. Although those damaging practices are harder to use when you aren't using pesticides and herbicides, most organic farms also have better farming practices than conventional ones-which is easier on our soils and our pollinators. One more reason to buy organic0
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Time Magazine, Scientific American, NY times, and The Journal of Hortsience says so. They don't blame it completely on soil depletion, they also blame us 'breeding out' nutrient dense species for tastier species, but they do outline how big a problem soil depletion is. Both are good reads! @Mr_Knight
http://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1880145,00.html
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/soil-depletion-and-nutrition-loss/0 -
kellydavis970 wrote: »Time Magazine, Scientific American, NY times, and The Journal of Hortsience says so. They don't blame it completely on soil depletion, they also blame us 'breeding out' nutrient dense species for tastier species, but they do outline how big a problem soil depletion is. Both are good reads! @Mr_Knight
http://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1880145,00.html
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/soil-depletion-and-nutrition-loss/
Few things. Time and scientific american aren't actual science. I am assuming you haven't actually read the article they cite. It looks at all the research which has been done on the topic up till then. Their findings?
The literature contains some evidence to
support the hypothesis that increasing tuber
yields, either by elevating CO2 concentrations
or by growing higher-yielding varieties,
can lead to decreased concentrations of some
mineral elements in tubers, but this is not
universally observed.
As well as:
Recently, a more extensive investigation
of genetic variation in concentrations of
mineral elements in potato tubers was initiated
at the Scottish Crop Research Institute.
During this investigation, field trials incorporating
26 commercial potato varieties provided
no support for the hypothesis that
higher-yielding varieties have lower concentrations
of mineral elements in their tubers
than lower-yielding varieties (Fig. 1; Table
3).
I can promise you it isn't as good of a read you think.0 -
kellydavis970 wrote: »Time Magazine, Scientific American, NY times, and The Journal of Hortsience says so.
You really should read the articles you link to before offering them as support for your claims, because those do NOT say what you are saying.
Massive Google Ninja fail...
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The "dirty dozen" list is provided by the environmental working group. They are not an objective source for info on organic vs GM food. One look at their website shows some anti-vax leanings too. They rely on the emotional response to terms like "natural, pure, toxin, clean, dirty" etc to pick up where lack of science to support their ideologies leaves off. I avoid organic foods strictly on principal. Eat plenty of (conventional) fruits and veggies, give em a good rinse, and don't give it another thought. There's no difference in the nutritional value, either.0
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I'm also pleased to see so many responses that favor facts and science over "toxins" and "chemikillz" it really gives me hope!0
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Uumm... That's exactly what those articles are saying. They both report on a study at that found that "the average vegetable found in today's supermarket is anywhere from 5% to 40% lower in minerals (including magnesium, iron, calcium and zinc) than those harvested just 50 years ago." if you don't believe that study, that's your problem. But I think it's pretty clear that they found that modern farming practices (including the use of pesticides and herbicides) are producing less healthy food. I'm not saying that conventionally grown vegetables are unhealthy, I'm not even saying that organiclly grown produce is more nutritious. But what I can say is that I don't want to support farming practices that are slowly stripping nutrients from our foods- not to mention the impact it has on our water and our pollinators.
I'm sure that we can go back and forth about this forever, but only time will tell for sure and in the meantime I want to do everything I can to keep our land fertile and my family healthy.0 -
kellydavis970 wrote: »... stripping nutrients from our foods- not to mention the impact it has on our water and ...in the meantime I want to do everything I can to keep our land fertile and my family healthy.
The good news is that GM farming practices can help keep soil healthy, can help conserve water, can and produce safe, nutritious food, too! As far as suspected causes of ccd, a definite cause has yet to be sussed out, as there are several factors in play. As others have said, there's no cause for concern in serving your family conventional produce, and makes the most sense from a global perspective too.0 -
I only buy organic carrots0
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I only buy organic tofu, because apparently it doesn't come any other way.0
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There is pesticide on fruit and veg, there is plastic in fish and in honey. And who knows what else is in our food.
I'm not worrying about it too much, it is almost impossible to avoid it so worrying gets you nowhere. I much rather enjoy food.0
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