Food, Inc. documentary

seek10

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
"Food, Inc." is a horror movie for the socially conscious, the nutritionally curious and the hungry. Robert Kenner's documentary does for the supermarket what "Jaws" did for the beach. The film “marches straight into the dark side of cutthroat agri-business, corporatized meat and the greedy manipulation of both genetics and the law.”

There is no release date yet, but it should be out soon. Click the link below for more information.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqQVll-MP3I
 
In the same inspiration :

Our daily bread
http://plus7.arte.tv/fr/detailPage/1697660,CmC=2535662,scheduleId=2510890.html

Freezing and without speech pictures of the European food industry: an implacable film meditation.
 
FYI Ellipse, this video isn't available in other countries (than France I guess).

"Pour des raisons de droit, la consultation de cette vidéo depuis votre pays n'est pas possible"

Any alternatives maybe?
 
Argh ! :mad:

I will try to find a french proxy so you can connect through. If I do not find one, I will record the video.
 
Ellipse said:
92' :
_http://leweb2zero.tv/video/samsara_35478cbd0836511

thanks ellipse for the link. shocking to see. It will be a complete shock to imagine human fate in those 200 Million dollar piece concentration camp halliburton has built waiting for their Food.
 
I watched Food Inc. yesterday, which outlines how all the "foodchains" are connected. It starts from corn, then goes to beef, pigs, hens, and then to fast food. From there you get the dumbing down of the people, obesity, E.Coli, diabetes, allergies, antiobiotic resistencies and a whole host of other issues. You also get the pathological view of animals as "vessels for protein". The movie describes the relationships quite well, and also describes the underlying corporate and political situation, whereby most high officials related to food come from the food industry. A lot of pathological corporations are described, and not surprisingly Monsanto is still the king of the hill in that department. Their ingenuity in harassing and controlling farmers is just mindboggling.

My impression afterwards was that the single biggest change that *should* be made (but won't), and which would change sooo many other things including how food is created and processed, and how other countries outside the US are affected as well, and also the immense health issues, would be to remove the subsidy of corn. That seems to be the big key to all this pathological business, from a governmental point of view (not including pathology etc.). If the subsidy of corn could be removed the playing field would be much more level. Which is why it won't happen, of course. But it was interesting to see have central of an issue it is.
 
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