Personal choice is all well and good; I just wish you and I didn't have to subsidize it. Nobody is subsidizing the avocado, cucumbers and brown tomatoes I ate for dinner tonight (but they sure subsidized the shit out of the $2 soup I ate for lunch at the hospital cafeteria today...mmmm, factory chicken). Fuck me for having to subsidize some jerkoff's Big Mac,and oversized Walmart t-shirt. If there's one thing that would change our eating habits it would be for things to cost what they cost, and no less. The nominal prices of meat and major crop products are a joke, and unfortunately the environment and all the countless animals slaughtered in factories are the butt of it. Edit: For the record, I do think that Pollan is a good writer, and I've learned a lot from reading him over the years. I just happen to think this is more a political issue wrought by our out of date political system, than one of simply money vs. sanity. We've won those issues before, such as tobacco and acid rain. This one would need a constitutional amendment to make obsolete Iowa and the like.
This is gonna really bake your noodle: The three things you ate for dinner aren't even food according to the USDA. They're "specialty crops." "Food" is corn, soy, wheat and rice. Here's a PDF from the FDA on growing the "specialty crop" of plums. For the record, I agree with the intent of your edit. But I think a constitutional amendment isn't necessary, simply incentivizing different things. Everyone just wants to make money. The way we're doing now the people who make the most are pushing the hardest. I simply think change is going to be gradual and largely invisible to the consumer.
Well, it's not that it started off as subsidies for these products, the subsidies appeared elsewhere with good intentions (Overproduce, stockpile, prevent famine + destitute farmers). It's just that then others hopped on board to make money on the cheap crops.Fuck me for having to subsidize some jerkoff's Big Mac,and oversized Walmart t-shirt.
Oh, slightly different story from the one I'd remembered. Looking it up, the wikipedial says that subsidies I think I was thinking about started in the 20s-30s, but ended in the 70s?...
A large portion of the Republican manifesto has been rolling back the New Deal. '20s and '30s stuff was all about keeping The Red Menace at bay through selective socialism. Huey Long was pushing hard from the left and Prescott Bush and buddies were pushing hard from the right, so FDR went big into subsidies. Nixon and Ford were bargaining with grain and corn exports to the Soviet Union so they made sure you got lots of money for raising lots of grain and corn. Crop rotation was considered somehow communist.