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What's wrong with what we eat

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    I write about food. I write about cooking.
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    I take it quite seriously,
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    but I'm here to talk about something
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    that's become very important to me in the last year or two.
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    It is about food, but it's not about cooking, per se.
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    I'm going to start with this picture of a beautiful cow.
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    I'm not a vegetarian -- this is the old Nixon line, right?
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    But I still think that this --
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    (Laughter)
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    -- may be this year's version of this.
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    Now, that is only a little bit hyperbolic.
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    And why do I say it?
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    Because only once before has the fate of individual people
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    and the fate of all of humanity
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    been so intertwined.
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    There was the bomb, and there's now.
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    And where we go from here is going to determine
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    not only the quality and the length of our individual lives,
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    but whether, if we could see the Earth a century from now,
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    we'd recognize it.
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    It's a holocaust of a different kind,
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    and hiding under our desks isn't going to help.
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    Start with the notion that global warming
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    is not only real, but dangerous.
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    Since every scientist in the world now believes this,
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    and even President Bush has seen the light, or pretends to,
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    we can take this is a given.
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    Then hear this, please.
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    After energy production, livestock is the second-highest contributor
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    to atmosphere-altering gases.
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    Nearly one-fifth of all greenhouse gas
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    is generated by livestock production --
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    more than transportation.
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    Now, you can make all the jokes you want about cow farts,
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    but methane is 20 times more poisonous than CO2,
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    and it's not just methane.
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    Livestock is also one of the biggest culprits in land degradation,
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    air and water pollution, water shortages and loss of biodiversity.
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    There's more.
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    Like half the antibiotics in this country
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    are not administered to people, but to animals.
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    But lists like this become kind of numbing, so let me just say this:
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    if you're a progressive,
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    if you're driving a Prius, or you're shopping green,
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    or you're looking for organic,
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    you should probably be a semi-vegetarian.
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    Now, I'm no more anti-cattle than I am anti-atom,
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    but it's all in the way we use these things.
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    There's another piece of the puzzle,
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    which Ann Cooper talked about beautifully yesterday,
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    and one you already know.
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    There's no question, none, that so-called lifestyle diseases --
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    diabetes, heart disease, stroke, some cancers --
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    are diseases that are far more prevalent here
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    than anywhere in the rest of the world.
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    And that's the direct result of eating a Western diet.
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    Our demand for meat, dairy and refined carbohydrates --
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    the world consumes one billion cans or bottles of Coke a day --
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    our demand for these things, not our need, our want,
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    drives us to consume way more calories than are good for us.
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    And those calories are in foods that cause, not prevent, disease.
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    Now global warming was unforeseen.
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    We didn't know that pollution did more than cause bad visibility.
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    Maybe a few lung diseases here and there,
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    but, you know, that's not such a big deal.
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    The current health crisis, however,
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    is a little more the work of the evil empire.
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    We were told, we were assured,
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    that the more meat and dairy and poultry we ate,
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    the healthier we'd be.
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    No. Overconsumption of animals, and of course, junk food,
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    is the problem, along with our paltry consumption of plants.
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    Now, there's no time to get into the benefits of eating plants here,
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    but the evidence is that plants -- and I want to make this clear --
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    it's not the ingredients in plants, it's the plants.
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    It's not the beta-carotene, it's the carrot.
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    The evidence is very clear that plants promote health.
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    This evidence is overwhelming at this point.
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    You eat more plants, you eat less other stuff, you live longer.
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    Not bad.
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    But back to animals and junk food.
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    What do they have in common?
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    One: we don't need either of them for health.
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    We don't need animal products,
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    and we certainly don't need white bread or Coke.
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    Two: both have been marketed heavily,
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    creating unnatural demand.
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    We're not born craving Whoppers or Skittles.
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    Three: their production has been supported by government agencies
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    at the expense of a more health- and Earth-friendly diet.
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    Now, let's imagine a parallel.
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    Let's pretend that our government supported an oil-based economy,
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    while discouraging more sustainable forms of energy,
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    knowing all the while that the result would be
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    pollution, war and rising costs.
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    Incredible, isn't it?
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    Yet they do that.
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    And they do this here. It's the same deal.
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    The sad thing is, when it comes to diet,
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    is that even when well-intentioned Feds
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    try to do right by us, they fail.
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    Either they're outvoted by puppets of agribusiness,
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    or they are puppets of agribusiness.
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    So, when the USDA finally acknowledged
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    that it was plants, rather than animals, that made people healthy,
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    they encouraged us, via their overly simplistic food pyramid,
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    to eat five servings of fruits and vegetables a day,
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    along with more carbs.
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    What they didn't tell us is that some carbs are better than others,
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    and that plants and whole grains
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    should be supplanting eating junk food.
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    But industry lobbyists would never let that happen.
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    And guess what?
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    Half the people who developed the food pyramid
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    have ties to agribusiness.
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    So, instead of substituting plants for animals,
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    our swollen appetites simply became larger,
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    and the most dangerous aspects of them remained unchanged.
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    So-called low-fat diets, so-called low-carb diets --
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    these are not solutions.
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    But with lots of intelligent people
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    focusing on whether food is organic or local,
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    or whether we're being nice to animals,
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    the most important issues just aren't being addressed.
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    Now, don't get me wrong.
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    I like animals,
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    and I don't think it's just fine to industrialize their production
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    and to churn them out like they were wrenches.
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    But there's no way to treat animals well,
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    when you're killing 10 billion of them a year.
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    That's our number. 10 billion.
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    If you strung all of them --
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    chickens, cows, pigs and lambs -- to the moon,
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    they'd go there and back five times, there and back.
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    Now, my math's a little shaky, but this is pretty good,
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    and it depends whether a pig is four feet long or five feet long,
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    but you get the idea.
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    That's just the United States.
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    And with our hyper-consumption of those animals
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    producing greenhouse gases and heart disease,
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    kindness might just be a bit of a red herring.
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    Let's get the numbers of the animals we're killing for eating down,
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    and then we'll worry about being nice to the ones that are left.
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    Another red herring might be exemplified by the word "locavore,"
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    which was just named word of the year by the New Oxford American Dictionary.
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    Seriously.
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    And locavore, for those of you who don't know,
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    is someone who eats only locally grown food --
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    which is fine if you live in California,
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    but for the rest of us it's a bit of a sad joke.
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    Between the official story -- the food pyramid --
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    and the hip locavore vision,
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    you have two versions of how to improve our eating.
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    (Laughter).
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    They both get it wrong, though.
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    The first at least is populist, and the second is elitist.
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    How we got to this place is the history of food in the United States.
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    And I'm going to go through that,
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    at least the last hundred years or so, very quickly right now.
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    A hundred years ago, guess what?
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    Everyone was a locavore: even New York had pig farms nearby,
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    and shipping food all over the place was a ridiculous notion.
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    Every family had a cook, usually a mom.
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    And those moms bought and prepared food.
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    It was like your romantic vision of Europe.
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    Margarine didn't exist.
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    In fact, when margarine was invented,
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    several states passed laws declaring that it had to be dyed pink,
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    so we'd all know that it was a fake.
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    There was no snack food, and until the '20s,
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    until Clarence Birdseye came along, there was no frozen food.
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    There were no restaurant chains.
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    There were neighborhood restaurants run by local people,
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    but none of them would think to open another one.
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    Eating ethnic was unheard of unless you were ethnic.
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    And fancy food was entirely French.
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    As an aside, those of you who remember
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    Dan Aykroyd in the 1970s doing Julia Child imitations
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    can see where he got the idea of stabbing himself from this fabulous slide.
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    (Laughter)
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    Back in those days, before even Julia,
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    back in those days, there was no philosophy of food.
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    You just ate.
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    You didn't claim to be anything.
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    There was no marketing. There were no national brands.
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    Vitamins had not been invented.
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    There were no health claims, at least not federally sanctioned ones.
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    Fats, carbs, proteins -- they weren't bad or good, they were food.
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    You ate food.
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    Hardly anything contained more than one ingredient,
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    because it was an ingredient.
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    The cornflake hadn't been invented.
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    (Laughter)
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    The Pop-Tart, the Pringle, Cheez Whiz, none of that stuff.
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    Goldfish swam.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's hard to imagine. People grew food, and they ate food.
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    And again, everyone ate local.
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    In New York, an orange was a common Christmas present,
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    because it came all the way from Florida.
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    From the '30s on, road systems expanded,
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    trucks took the place of railroads,
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    fresh food began to travel more.
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    Oranges became common in New York.
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    The South and West became agricultural hubs,
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    and in other parts of the country, suburbs took over farmland.
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    The effects of this are well known. They are everywhere.
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    And the death of family farms is part of this puzzle,
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    as is almost everything
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    from the demise of the real community
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    to the challenge of finding a good tomato, even in summer.
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    Eventually, California produced too much food to ship fresh,
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    so it became critical to market canned and frozen foods.
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    Thus arrived convenience.
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    It was sold to proto-feminist housewives
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    as a way to cut down on housework.
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    Now, I know everybody over the age of, like 45 --
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    their mouths are watering at this point.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    If we had a slide of Salisbury steak, even more so, right?
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    (Laughter)
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    But this may have cut down on housework,
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    but it cut down on the variety of food we ate as well.
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    Many of us grew up never eating a fresh vegetable
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    except the occasional raw carrot or maybe an odd lettuce salad.
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    I, for one -- and I'm not kidding --
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    didn't eat real spinach or broccoli till I was 19.
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    Who needed it though? Meat was everywhere.
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    What could be easier, more filling or healthier for your family
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    than broiling a steak?
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    But by then cattle were already raised unnaturally.
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    Rather than spending their lives eating grass,
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    for which their stomachs were designed,
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    they were forced to eat soy and corn.
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    They have trouble digesting those grains, of course,
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    but that wasn't a problem for producers.
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    New drugs kept them healthy.
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    Well, they kept them alive.
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    Healthy was another story.
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    Thanks to farm subsidies,
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    the fine collaboration between agribusiness and Congress,
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    soy, corn and cattle became king.
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    And chicken soon joined them on the throne.
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    It was during this period that the cycle of
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    dietary and planetary destruction began,
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    the thing we're only realizing just now.
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    Listen to this,
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    between 1950 and 2000, the world's population doubled.
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    Meat consumption increased five-fold.
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    Now, someone had to eat all that stuff, so we got fast food.
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    And this took care of the situation resoundingly.
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    Home cooking remained the norm, but its quality was down the tubes.
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    There were fewer meals with home-cooked breads, desserts and soups,
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    because all of them could be bought at any store.
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    Not that they were any good, but they were there.
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    Most moms cooked like mine:
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    a piece of broiled meat, a quickly made salad with bottled dressing,
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    canned soup, canned fruit salad.
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    Maybe baked or mashed potatoes,
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    or perhaps the stupidest food ever, Minute Rice.
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    For dessert, store-bought ice cream or cookies.
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    My mom is not here, so I can say this now.
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    This kind of cooking drove me to learn how to cook for myself.
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    (Laughter)
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    It wasn't all bad.
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    By the '70s, forward-thinking people
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    began to recognize the value of local ingredients.
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    We tended gardens, we became interested in organic food,
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    we knew or we were vegetarians.
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    We weren't all hippies, either.
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    Some of us were eating in good restaurants and learning how to cook well.
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    Meanwhile, food production had become industrial. Industrial.
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    Perhaps because it was being produced rationally,
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    as if it were plastic,
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    food gained magical or poisonous powers, or both.
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    Many people became fat-phobic.
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    Others worshiped broccoli, as if it were God-like.
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    But mostly they didn't eat broccoli.
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    Instead they were sold on yogurt,
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    yogurt being almost as good as broccoli.
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    Except, in reality, the way the industry sold yogurt
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    was to convert it to something much more akin to ice cream.
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    Similarly, let's look at a granola bar.
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    You think that that might be healthy food,
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    but in fact, if you look at the ingredient list,
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    it's closer in form to a Snickers than it is to oatmeal.
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    Sadly, it was at this time that the family dinner was put in a coma,
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    if not actually killed --
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    the beginning of the heyday of value-added food,
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    which contained as many soy and corn products
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    as could be crammed into it.
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    Think of the frozen chicken nugget.
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    The chicken is fed corn, and then its meat is ground up,
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    and mixed with more corn products to add bulk and binder,
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    and then it's fried in corn oil.
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    All you do is nuke it. What could be better?
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    And zapped horribly, pathetically.
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    By the '70s, home cooking was in such a sad state
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    that the high fat and spice contents of foods
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    like McNuggets and Hot Pockets --
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    and we all have our favorites, actually --
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    made this stuff more appealing than the bland things
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    that people were serving at home.
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    At the same time, masses of women were entering the workforce,
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    and cooking simply wasn't important enough
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    for men to share the burden.
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    So now, you've got your pizza nights, you've got your microwave nights,
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    you've got your grazing nights,
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    you've got your fend-for-yourself nights and so on.
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    Leading the way -- what's leading the way?
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    Meat, junk food, cheese:
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    the very stuff that will kill you.
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    So, now we clamor for organic food.
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    That's good.
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    And as evidence that things can actually change,
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    you can now find organic food in supermarkets,
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    and even in fast-food outlets.
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    But organic food isn't the answer either,
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    at least not the way it's currently defined.
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    Let me pose you a question.
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    Can farm-raised salmon be organic,
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    when its feed has nothing to do with its natural diet,
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    even if the feed itself is supposedly organic, and the fish themselves
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    are packed tightly in pens, swimming in their own filth?
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    And if that salmon's from Chile, and it's killed down there
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    and then flown 5,000 miles, whatever,
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    dumping how much carbon into the atmosphere?
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    I don't know.
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    Packed in Styrofoam, of course,
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    before landing somewhere in the United States,
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    and then being trucked a few hundred more miles.
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    This may be organic in letter, but it's surely not organic in spirit.
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    Now here is where we all meet.
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    The locavores, the organivores, the vegetarians,
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    the vegans, the gourmets
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    and those of us who are just plain interested in good food.
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    Even though we've come to this from different points,
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    we all have to act on our knowledge
  • 15:52 - 15:56
    to change the way that everyone thinks about food.
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    We need to start acting.
  • 15:58 - 16:02
    And this is not only an issue of social justice, as Ann Cooper said --
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    and, of course, she's completely right --
  • 16:04 - 16:06
    but it's also one of global survival.
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    Which bring me full circle and points directly to the core issue,
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    the overproduction and overconsumption of meat and junk food.
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    As I said, 18 percent of greenhouse gases
  • 16:18 - 16:21
    are attributed to livestock production.
  • 16:21 - 16:24
    How much livestock do you need to produce this?
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    70 percent of the agricultural land on Earth,
  • 16:27 - 16:33
    30 percent of the Earth's land surface is directly or indirectly devoted
  • 16:33 - 16:36
    to raising the animals we'll eat.
  • 16:36 - 16:39
    And this amount is predicted to double in the next 40 years or so.
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    And if the numbers coming in from China
  • 16:41 - 16:44
    are anything like what they look like now,
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    it's not going to be 40 years.
  • 16:46 - 16:50
    There is no good reason for eating as much meat as we do.
  • 16:50 - 16:55
    And I say this as a man who has eaten a fair share of corned beef in his life.
  • 16:55 - 16:58
    The most common argument is that we need nutrients --
  • 16:58 - 17:01
    even though we eat, on average, twice as much protein
  • 17:01 - 17:06
    as even the industry-obsessed USDA recommends.
  • 17:06 - 17:10
    But listen: experts who are serious about disease reduction
  • 17:10 - 17:16
    recommend that adults eat just over half a pound of meat per week.
  • 17:16 - 17:20
    What do you think we eat per day? Half a pound.
  • 17:20 - 17:23
    But don't we need meat to be big and strong?
  • 17:23 - 17:26
    Isn't meat eating essential to health?
  • 17:26 - 17:28
    Won't a diet heavy in fruit and vegetables
  • 17:28 - 17:31
    turn us into godless, sissy, liberals?
  • 17:31 - 17:32
    (Laughter)
  • 17:32 - 17:35
    Some of us might think that would be a good thing.
  • 17:35 - 17:40
    But, no, even if we were all steroid-filled football players,
  • 17:40 - 17:42
    the answer is no.
  • 17:42 - 17:46
    In fact, there's no diet on Earth that meets
  • 17:46 - 17:50
    basic nutritional needs that won't promote growth,
  • 17:50 - 17:53
    and many will make you much healthier than ours does.
  • 17:53 - 17:56
    We don't eat animal products for sufficient nutrition,
  • 17:56 - 18:02
    we eat them to have an odd form of malnutrition, and it's killing us.
  • 18:02 - 18:05
    To suggest that in the interests of personal and human health
  • 18:05 - 18:08
    Americans eat 50 percent less meat --
  • 18:08 - 18:11
    it's not enough of a cut, but it's a start.
  • 18:11 - 18:16
    It would seem absurd, but that's exactly what should happen,
  • 18:16 - 18:19
    and what progressive people, forward-thinking people
  • 18:19 - 18:22
    should be doing and advocating,
  • 18:22 - 18:25
    along with the corresponding increase in the consumption of plants.
  • 18:26 - 18:29
    I've been writing about food more or less omnivorously --
  • 18:29 - 18:32
    one might say indiscriminately -- for about 30 years.
  • 18:32 - 18:34
    During that time, I've eaten
  • 18:34 - 18:37
    and recommended eating just about everything.
  • 18:38 - 18:40
    I'll never stop eating animals, I'm sure,
  • 18:41 - 18:43
    but I do think that for the benefit of everyone,
  • 18:43 - 18:46
    the time has come to stop raising them industrially
  • 18:46 - 18:48
    and stop eating them thoughtlessly.
  • 18:48 - 18:50
    Ann Cooper's right.
  • 18:50 - 18:55
    The USDA is not our ally here.
  • 18:55 - 18:57
    We have to take matters into our own hands,
  • 18:57 - 19:00
    not only by advocating for a better diet for everyone --
  • 19:00 - 19:04
    and that's the hard part -- but by improving our own.
  • 19:04 - 19:06
    And that happens to be quite easy.
  • 19:06 - 19:09
    Less meat, less junk, more plants.
  • 19:09 - 19:11
    It's a simple formula: eat food.
  • 19:11 - 19:13
    Eat real food.
  • 19:13 - 19:17
    We can continue to enjoy our food, and we continue to eat well,
  • 19:17 - 19:19
    and we can eat even better.
  • 19:19 - 19:22
    We can continue the search for the ingredients we love,
  • 19:22 - 19:27
    and we can continue to spin yarns about our favorite meals.
  • 19:27 - 19:31
    We'll reduce not only calories, but our carbon footprint.
  • 19:31 - 19:34
    We can make food more important, not less,
  • 19:34 - 19:36
    and save ourselves by doing so.
  • 19:36 - 19:39
    We have to choose that path.
  • 19:39 - 19:41
    Thank you.
Title:
What's wrong with what we eat
Speaker:
Mark Bittman
Description:

In this fiery and funny talk, New York Times food writer Mark Bittman weighs in on what's wrong with the way we eat now (too much meat, too few plants; too much fast food, too little home cooking), and why it's putting the entire planet at risk.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
19:43
TED edited English subtitles for What's wrong with what we eat
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