Michael Pollan: Eating Is a Political Act
Michael Pollan discusses food
production, consumer choices, the future of organics and climate change.
By Mark Eisen, The
Progressive. Posted November 8, 2008.
AlterNet
Michael Pollan has got people talking.
His recent books, The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals and
In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto, have captured the public imagination,
setting off countless coffee shop discussions, dinnertime arguments, and
oh-so-many blog posts.
Even more impressively, his exploration of modern-day
agriculture and the dysfunctional American diet has prompted his readers to
look at their own eating habits with a new sense of understanding and often a
desire for change.
Pollan has taken Wendell Berry's
memorable phrase "eating is an agricultural act" one step further.
"It's a political act as well," Pollan
advises.
A lot of people agree. The alternative food movement --
organic farming, local food systems, sustainable agriculture, and more -- is
burgeoning today because, one family at a time, consumers are backing away from
the global food network. Instead, they patronize farmers' markets, buy food
shares from CSA (community-supported agriculture) farms, and favor grocers who
sell local meat and produce.
Pollan's books are essential
reading in this movement. He details the importance of grazing to a sustainable
farm's operation and the problems of corn as the cornerstone of
Pollan's topics include a thorough
demolition of "nutritionism," the reigning
health ideology that offers dizzying and ever-changing advice on
polyunsaturated this and low-fat that, often in the cause of selling highly
processed food products.
A good diet is really pretty simple, Pollan
declares: Avoid "edible foodlike
substances." Instead, eat real food. "Not too much. Mostly plants. That, more or less, is the short answer to
the supposedly incredibly complicated and confusing question of what we humans
should eat in order to be maximally healthy."
I caught up with Pollan two days
after he returned from a book tour in
Mark Eisen: You argue that
consumer ignorance is essential for maintaining the industrial agriculture
system.
Michael Pollan: If people could
see how their food is produced, they would change how they eat. My interest in
the topic traces to two moments, in 2000, when I learned how our food is
produced.
One was driving down Route 5 in California and passing the
Harris ranch, which is a huge feedlot right on the highway. It's a stunning
landscape. I had never seen anything quite like that.
Miles of manure-encrusted land teeming with thousands of
animals and a giant mountain of corn and a giant mountain of manure. And a
stench you can smell two miles before you get there.
Most feedlots are hidden away on the High Plains. This one
happens to be very accessible. Then I visited an industrialized potato farm in
These two things changed the way I ate. I don't buy
industrial potatoes, and I don't eat feedlot meat.
It's only our ignorance of how our food is grown that
permits this to go on. Most people, if they went to the feedlot or to the
slaughterhouse and saw how the animals are raised and killed, would lose their
appetite for that food.
The industry knows this. It works so hard not to label where
the food comes from, how it's made, and whether or not there are GMOs [genetically modified organisms] in it, because they
know very well from their own research that people don't want food grown that
way.
ME: The national organic rules, which took effect in 2002,
are credited with creating the boom in organic food sales. Yet you seem
skeptical.
MP: Something was gained and something was lost when the
federal government defined what "organic" meant. The rules were drawn
in a way to make organic friendly to large corporations looking to do organic
as cheaply as possible and on as large a scale as possible.
For example, the fight over whether you should really
require pasturing for dairy so the cows can eat grass: They drew those rules so
broadly that companies like
An "organic feedlot" should be a contradiction in
terms, but it's not under the rules. They really wanted to make it possible to
have a mirrored food supply. So you could take everything in the supermarket
and make its organic doppelganger. Is that a bad thing or a good thing? It's a
mixed thing.
The Chinese organic is a real question. First, how organic
is it? You hear stories that make you wonder. The other issue is what you can
do within the organic rules and still be sending contaminated product. Because
the soil is so badly contaminated in China, even if they don't put chemicals on
their fields for three years [as U.S. organic rules require for certification],
the heavy metals are still there.
So what the consumer thinks they're buying -- organic food
-- may not be what they're really getting from
ME: The case is made that Wal-Mart's entry into organic
sales won't hurt organic farmers, but will help the movement by creating more
customers for co-ops and natural food stores.
MP: I hope that's true. But Wal-Mart is one of the reasons
we grow beef the way we do in this country, which is to say with brutal
efficiency and lots of pharmaceuticals. Wal-Mart's focus on low price tended to
mean squeezing their suppliers very, very hard.
Wal-Mart isn't doing that yet with organic. But long term,
that's what I would worry about: that they would force organic prices down not
by being more efficient in distribution but through pressuring suppliers.
ME: The organic folks I talk with say that Wal-Mart sells
only the most popular organic items and doesn't offer the wide selection that
serious organic shoppers want.
MP: Wal-Mart feeds the bottom third of the population. So
they're not competing with Whole Foods or the corner co-op. It is bringing more
people into organic.
The other virtue of Wal-Mart getting into organic is the
education factor. There are lots of people in this country who don't know what
organic is, and they will learn about it from Wal-Mart.
When I first started talking about the industrialization of
organics, there really was a sense that "big organic" would crush
"little organic." But I don't think that's what is happening.
They are very separate worlds. There is overlap, but
"little organic" is like these smart independent bookstores. They
figured out a way to be in a different business. They do events and hand-sell
books and have a whole conversation about books that Barnes & Noble and
Amazon can't do.
In the same way, you see the really entrepreneurial farmers
figuring out they don't have to compete with Whole Foods and certainly not
Wal-Mart. They can offer a higher level of quality and more personal attention
through the whole CSA relationship and by selling at farmers' markets now.
ME: Newsweek ran a story arguing that the organic market was
leveling off because it's just too expensive in an era of higher food prices.
Do you agree?
MP: No, I think it's still growing quickly. The demand is
still there.
What's slowing the growth is that there is less incentive
for farmers to convert to organic because conventional prices are so high. If
you're a wheat or corn grower you're getting a real good price. Why would you
endure the economic hardship of converting to organic farming?
It takes three years. You have to follow organic practices
without getting the benefit of the organic label for your effort. It's a big
investment to make the switch.
That's what's slowing down organic growth.
ME: In The Omnivore's Dilemma, you detail the rise of
MP: As a journalist, I was describing what was. I don't
think I made any predictions. But the story has changed a lot. How it's going
to play out is very hard to predict.
A good deal of The Omnivore's Dilemma dealt with how we took
making food out of the solar basis and put it on a fossil-fuel basis. This is
what the industrialization of food is essentially. It's introducing cheap
fossil fuel in what had been a strictly solar process of using photosynthesis
to grow food.
When you do that, suddenly your food economy is dependent on
your energy. And that's why prices have gone up. When oil went up, that was the
shock. That, and using corn to produce ethanol.
At this very moment, there are executives sitting around the
table at Coca-Cola, saying the price of high fructose corn syrup is spiking and
will probably stay there for a while. "Do we shrink the portion size, or
do we raise the price? Do we to go back to the days before supersizing and sell
eight-ounce Coca-Colas instead of twenty-ounce Coca-Colas?"
I hope they shrink the portion size. That would be good for
public health.
ME: Does the world have a food shortage now, or is it more a
problem of distribution and changing diets?
MP: The spot shortages around the world are really not so
much about supply as the price. There are really high prices, and that's driven
by ethanol, high oil prices, and the growing demand for grain in
The whole free trade regime around grains is trembling right
now. Countries are recognizing that you don't want to lose control of your
ability to feed your population. You don't want the price of food in your
country to be dependent on decisions made in Wall Street or the White House.
Trade globalization has forced cheap American and Brazilian
grains into all of these countries. As a consequence, they've lost the ability
to grow their own grain.
Now they wish those farmers were there.
ME: You seemed to struggle with the concept of vegetarianism
and arguments against meat eating.
MP: I'm a pretty harsh critic of 99 percent of
If you believe strongly in building up local food economies,
there are places where meat is the best way to get protein off of the land.
It's too hilly, too dry. Having animals is very important for sustainable
agriculture. If you're going to have animals on the farm, they're going to die
eventually, and you're going to eat them.
But I have enormous respect for vegetarians. They're further
ahead than most of us. They've gone through the thought process in making their
eating choices. They've just come out in a different place than I have.
I think we're going to focus on meat-eaters the way we have
on SUV drivers. There will be a lot of pressure and education to show that a
heavy meat diet is a big contributor to climate change, and that there are many
good reasons to eat less meat.
ME: How is meat consumption tied to climate change?
MP: In several ways. First, it's
fossil-fuel intensive. If you are feeding animals
grain on feedlots you are growing that grain with fossil-fuel fertilizers and
pesticides. You are moving that grain around the country to feedlots. You're
moving the meat around the country.
It's a very inefficient way to feed ourselves. It takes ten
pounds of grain to get one pound of beef, seven pounds of grain to get one
pound of pork, and two pounds of grain to get one pound of chicken.
There is an equity issue, too. If we really have a limited
amount of grain to feed the world, and we're feeding 60 percent of it to
animals, and another 10 percent to our cars, that's going to be hard to defend
in the future.
ME: To a striking degree, you argue that individuals in
their daily lives can make a difference.
MP: I really have a lot of faith -- and I know that it's
considered naive by some people on the left -- that consumers can change
things. I have seen too many cases of what happens when consumers decide to
inflect their buying decisions with their moral and political values. It brings
about change.
The food industry is remarkably skittish. They're terrified
of food scares and food fads, both of which can cost them billions overnight.
So they're actually more responsive than you would think.
It's just a matter of consumers voting with their forks for
things like grass-fed meat and producers hearing that market signal. But I
don't think you can completely reform the food system by just voting with your
fork.
There are policy issues, too. The Farm Bill matters greatly.
So I'm not naive in thinking all of our answers lie in
changes in personal behavior. The same is true of global warming. Individuals
have a lot to do, but we also need public solutions. You can't have one without
the other.
ME: How is climate change a crisis of lifestyle and
character?
MP: Look, 70 percent of economic activity in this country is
consumer -- it's our purchasing decisions. That is the economy. We are
implicated in these problems, and we have to recognize that. It's our
lifestyles; it's how we've organized our cities and the countryside. It's the
size of our houses and how we heat our houses. It's all these things. This is
global warming.
We can look at supranational institutions to create a new
set of rules for this economy. But I don't think that will happen in the
absence of people discovering that they can change their lives.
I really believe in what Wendell Berry said in the '70s --
that the environmental crisis is a crisis of character. It's really about how
we live.
ME: Are people getting it?
MP: On food I have a lot of optimism. I see evidence that
people are changing the way they consume. I don't foresee the industrial food
system going away. I see it shrinking.
One of the powerful things about the food issue is that
people feel empowered by it. There are so many areas of our life where we feel
powerless to change things, but your eating issues are really primal. You
decide every day what you're going to put in your body -- and what you refuse
to put in your body. That's politics at its most basic.
Mark Eisen writes about food,
political, and business topics from
alternet.org