High Food Prices are Good For You
April 3rd, 2008
WHILE grocery shoppers agonize over paying 25 percent more for eggs and 17 percent more for milk, Michael Pollan, the author and de facto leader of the food intellectuals, happily dreams of small, expensive bottles of Coca-Cola.
Along with some other critics of the American way of eating, he likes the idea that some kinds of food will cost more, and here’s one reason why: As the price of fossil fuels and commodities like grain climb, nutritionally questionable, high-profit ingredients like high-fructose corn syrup will, too. As a result, Cokes are likely to get smaller and cost more. Then, the argument goes, fewer people will drink them.
And if American staples like soda, fast-food hamburgers and frozen dinners don’t seem like such a bargain anymore, the American eating public might turn its attention to ingredients like local fruits and vegetables, and milk and meat from animals that eat grass.
The world has gone mad when people are reasoning that high food prices are somehow a positive thing. Read the entire article, if you have the stomach (no pun intended). It gets much worse.
h/t: Stevegg








April 4th, 2008 at 10:39 am
Makes sense to me.
Lookit how high the price of narcotics is, and how glowingly healthy most junkies are as a result…
-jjg
the Daily Scoff