Food Company, Inc. Food Company (2008) is a documentary directed by Robert Kenner, which shows the ugly nature of the American food industry. This documentary is a powerful and amazing indictment on industrial food production, clarifying what we eat, the way we produce it, how we become a country and where we will go I will. In this documentary, I persuaded to persuade people to use the signboard and tragedy about the industrial production of meat (chicken, beef, pork), cereals, vegetables (corn, soybeans), and finally the major food companies involved.
Last night I went to the documentary "Food Inc.". It has recorded an extensive industry that people most appropriately call the "food production and distribution" industry. Well, the fact that I learned from this movie is the existence of the so - called vegetarian law (the law which made Oprah 's comment about the beef industry in 1996), so I keep a lot about Food Inc. Sacred landscape There seems to be many problems from premature diabetes to epidemics of E. coli, labor practices, suspicious policy decisions - everyone should feel the need to do something that has a positive impact on the food industry. As the movies point out very effectively, the tobacco industry has similarities (hints, hints).
Following the publication of The Omnivore's Dilemma and the film company's announcement, Michael Pollan's latest work "Food Defense" is an attempt to solve the problem in an easier way. What should I eat? He studied the problem closely and tried to browse the supermarket, catering industry, health food industry, and other places we found and chose to eat. This book is a philosophical and scientific study on American food, not some food guide to make you healthy. Polan 's position is that our surprisingly complex approach to food and food is likely to cause us more problems than to save us.
Eating habits changed everything. Google is "youtube: Food Inc Part 1". The same movie explains how the food industry changes the structure and quality of food and how it affects people. It also shows the number of animals and cereals (soybeans and maize) being used, or the consumption of these fast food chains. Because the number of large companies that own, receive and release food is very small, everyone supports the whole "business" and reveals their desire for monopoly and control in early interviews with the movie did. Market, in fact the world