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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDon’t Ask How to Feed the 9 Billion - Mark Bittman
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/12/opinion/dont-ask-how-to-feed-the-9-billion.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0At dinner with a friend the other night, I mentioned that I was giving a talk this week debunking the idea that we need to grow more food on a large scale so we can feed the nine billion the anticipated global population by 2050.
She looked at me, horrified, and said, But how are you going to produce enough food to feed the hungry?
I suggested she try this exercise: Put yourself in the poorest place you can think of. Imagine yourself in the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example. Now. Are you hungry? Are you going to go hungry? Are you going to have a problem finding food?
The answer, obviously, is no. Because she and almost all of you reading this would be standing in that country with some $20 bills and a wallet filled with credit cards. And you would go buy yourself something to eat.
The difference between you and the hungry is not production levels; its money. There are no hungry people with money; there isnt a shortage of food, nor is there a distribution problem. There is an I-dont-have-the-land-and-resources-to-produce-my-own-food, nor-can-I-afford-to-buy-food problem.
And poverty and the resulting hunger arent matters of bad luck; they are often a result of people buying the property of traditional farmers and displacing them, appropriating their water, energy and mineral resources, and even producing cash crops for export while reducing the people growing the food to menial and hungry laborers on their own land.
Poverty isnt the only problem, of course. There is also the virtually unregulated food system that is geared toward making money rather than feeding people. (Look no further than the ethanol mandate or high fructose corn syrup for evidence.)
More at link.
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Don’t Ask How to Feed the 9 Billion - Mark Bittman (Original Post)
geardaddy
Nov 2014
OP
jwirr
(39,215 posts)1. This is something that is easy to see. What I do not see is how does the hungry child in the USA fit
into this scene?
freshwest
(53,661 posts)2. Whoa, this is it! Thanks.