Maintenance Phase - Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma"
Episode Date: April 5, 2022How a liberal journalist entrenched a libertarian fantasy. Thanks to Sarah Taber for helping us with the research for this episode!Support us:Hear bonus episodes on PatreonDonate on PayPalGet Maintena...nce Phase T-shirts, stickers and moreLinks!Julie Guthman's "Weighing In" Rachel Laudan's "Cooking and Empire"Heidi Zimmerman's "Caring for the Middle Class Soul"Joel Salatin’s Unsustainable MythChris Newman’s BlogEverything I Want to Do Is Racist: How America’s favorite farmer lost his way.Clean Food: If You Want to Save the World, Get Over Yourself.The USA lags behind other agricultural nations in banning harmful pesticidesGoverning food: Media, politics and pleasureMichael Pollan's Misguided Food Nostalgia A Plea for Culinary ModernismThe French Terroir Strategy, and Culinary ModernismThe Dark Side of Local Thanks to Doctor Dreamchip for our lovely theme song!Support the show
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Welcome to MaintenanceFaze, the podcast that thinks that you should eat food, whatever you see fit.
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Hi everybody and welcome to Maintenance Faze, the podcast that wants you to eat food as
much as you want, whatever you see fit.
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but you're doing the maintenance phase one.
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Our version I would propose would be eat food,
however much you need, how about that?
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I'm Michael Hobbs.
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And today, Michael Hobbs, we are talking about a different Michael.
Yeah, I'm really curious what you know about this.
We are doing a diet book deep dive into the omnivores dilemma, which came out in 2006,
and is by Michael Pollan, who is like quite an influential person when it comes to like
food and food policy and how to eat.
So my relationship to all of this is I live in Portland, Oregon
and I have a white upper middle class family
and that means I never stop hearing about Michael.
Oh yeah.
Never.
Never.
You've got a garden in the backyard.
I mean, I do.
You're going to farmers markets.
Here's the thing that is challenging for me
about all of this is I have not read Michael Pollan's work
myself.
I have a number of family members and like former colleagues
and such who have.
And the things that people are like quoting to me
and telling me about Michael Pollan's work
are not like anti-fat things, but those people
hold really deep anti-fat beliefs.
Right.
There's a correlation happening there, and I don't totally know what to do with that correlation.
It's actually an odd mirror version of SuperSizeMe.
Oh, same more about that.
I mean, SuperSizeMe was like kind of an excuse to make fun of people who eat at McDonald's.
And yeah, the omnivores dilemma and what Michael Paulin's whole kind of career arc has been,
it's basically selling thinness back to people as virtue.
You're not shopping at a farmer's market
because you like shopping at a farmer's market.
You're shopping at a farmer's market
because you're a good person and you care
about saving to earth.
And you're part of a food movement.
This uprising of people who are trying to change
the industrial sources of our food.
Oh, interesting.
If you do this, like if you eat these,
quote unquote, healthy foods,
you are performing a civic act.
He's quite, he's quite explicit about that.
Oh, I have.
So he's, woof.
You're gonna love this.
You're, you're already excited.
If we're gonna get into the relationship
between civic participation and what kind of food you eat,
then I am gonna have things to say, Michael.
Luckily, you're sitting in front of a microphone
and you're in a corner of mine.
Oh, imagine that.
A friend of yours who you make a show with.
I just had breakfast, I'm all tanked up,
you're ready to roll.
You got your carbs.
Let's yell about some shit, Michael.
You're loaded up, I'm excited.
I am ready.
So I think it's important to like talk about how influential
Michael Pollan was in the mid 2000s.
Yep.
Michael Pollan showed up everywhere.
He was on late night talk shows.
He was on Oprah eventually.
Whoa.
He's kind of like NPR royalty.
Uh huh.
The way that he framed food and the way that he framed
the problem with the American food system and the solution to it, you know, you know, things, things can age badly in like the vocabulary that they use as a
change or like there's a homophobic joke or something, but then there's things that age badly in just like their ideology and their underpinning assumptions. And so much about this book has just aged really badly as far as like what we know now
and what has happened with the ideas that Michael Paulin
was essentially like,
incepting into the population.
I don't think that's a word.
But it's like, it's just very 2006.
It's so 2006 that it's wearing like sandblasted
boot cut jeans with those like,
bejeweled flat pockets.
It's showing up at a community meeting to fight against a skateboard park.
It's wearing a Vong D'Au chat.
Yeah.
So the full title of the book is the Omnivore's dilemma,
a natural history of four meals,
which drives me fucking nuts because there's only three meals described in
book. I don't, I don't know if I like missed something really obvious, but the book is
split into three parts. What we're gonna do in this episode is we're gonna kind
of walk through the book and debunk as we go. So we're gonna start with the
introduction, which is called our national eating disorder. Just we're in
good hands already. And so he starts with the question,
what should you have for dinner? And he says, this book is a long and fairly involved answer to
this seemingly simple question. Along the way, it also tries to figure out how such a simple question
could ever have gotten so complicated. He uses the rise and fall of the Atkins diet as a jumping
off point to talk about how America bounces from like
fad diet to fad diet. Eating is so fundamental to the human condition and yet we don't seem to know
how we're supposed to eat and we're constantly getting these weird whiplash messages about what we
should and shouldn't eat and the science isn't all that helpful and the marketing isn't all that
helpful. It actually starts out sounding a lot like this show. I was going to say, it sounds like a thing that you and I are also trying to sort of navigate.
Exactly.
He says, we don't have a culture of food.
He says, a country with a stable culture of food would not shell out millions for the
quackery or common sense of a new diet book every January.
It would not be apt to confuse protein bars and food supplements with meals or breakfast
cereals with medicines.
It probably would not eat a fifth of its meals in cars or feed fully a third of its children
at a fast food outlet every day, and it surely would not be nearly so fat.
Oh, I don't care for this.
And then he does some like French people or skinny or stuff like you.
This opening, we're just setting the stakes and I don't care for it.
Yes.
Everyone's too fat, there need to be fewer fat people.
Look at you, feeding your kids in your car.
And also, this is something I've learned
making this show with you.
I think people in most modern countries
have like a deeply ambivalent feeling about modernity.
And especially about urbanization.
He does a lot of stuff about how there was this
traditional way of life.
You know, these food rules later they'll say,, if your great grandmother wouldn't recognize it as food, you shouldn't eat it.
Sure. A lot of his message, even in the very, very intro of this book, is about how, like, we used to have these traditional farming societies.
People lived on farms, you know, maaan, paa, raising the goats, whatever.
And we've lost that, and now it's like, it's all fast food, and we're eating in our cars,
and there's really this sense of a fallen society.
So, the other thing that follows from this point
is this is also when we get a big, weird wave
of white people roots stuff.
We start to get mump-ford-and-sons after this.
We start to get...
Do you know what you're blaming him for Mumford and Sons?
No, I'm not blaming him for Mumford and Sons.
I'm just saying, there is this wave of white people
interested in doing things, quote unquote,
how they used to be done,
or sort of harkening back to quote unquote simpler times,
which is always fraught.
Yeah.
That's always a fraught thing for white people to do.
Yeah, and also, when is he talking about,
where is he talking about?
Yeah.
We can't forget this so much in the show
because almost all of these nostalgia arguments
break down the second you start to think about them.
So Rachel Lodden is a historian who is a historian of food,
like how people used to eat.
She wrote a really good book called Quizine
and Empire, Cooking in World History. And she has written a historian of food, like how people used to eat. She wrote a really good book called Quizine and Empire Cooking in World History.
And she has written a number of responses
to Michael Pollan over the years.
In an article that she wrote right after this book came out,
she says,
Michael Pollan's fable of disaster of a fall from grace
smacks more of wishful thinking
than of digging through archives.
She basically goes through the idea
that like we were all eating these pure foods,
living on farms
Growing our own foods, you know tending to the cattle. That just isn't true. Yeah first of all
Life expectancies are now longer than they've ever been in human history
So like you sort of have to reckon with that
Yeah food like the life of a person who ate food was not good for most of human history
So she talks about how if you lived on a farm,
you have this harvest and there's all this abundance,
but then for three or four months of the year,
typically you're eating canned or jarred foods
because there isn't, there's no crops growing
in January, February, March.
So you're literally, you're eating this gruel porridge
for breakfast and then the other two meals of the day
are like an ear of corn that you can't nine months ago.
Yum yum.
She has colleagues from Italy who talk about
like super high rates of pelagra in Italy
because people were eating polenta three meals a day.
These like peasant farmers.
Wait, what's pelagra? I don't even know.
It's a B-vitamin deficiency.
Oh shit, okay.
And a lot of what we think of as like traditional foods,
traditional practices are actually the tiny percentage
of the population that had servants who could afford
to like make them food all day.
She talks about how in Mexico in the 1800s,
people who didn't have servants like women,
it was always women who were doing this kind of work,
would spend up to five hours a day grinding the maize
for tortillas for like dinner.
Yeah, I sure. But when you're talking about like the golden age grinding the maize for tortillas for dinner. Yikes.
But when you're talking about the golden age of farms,
who was picking those crops?
Yeah.
Sharecroppers, who owned that land?
The minute you start doing this stuff about,
we need to tell the story of our food,
it's like the actual history of this stuff
gets pretty ugly, pretty fast.
Well, and also, even if you were like a white farmer,
there's also still the fucking dust bowl
and potato famine.
Being a farmer in itself is also not a picnic.
It just isn't like a sophisticated analysis
of what has gone wrong with the American food system.
To just be like, it used to be good, and now it's bad.
It's worse now than it used to be in some ways,
and it's better in some ways.
Yeah.
So that was the intro.
A lot of this like false nostalgia
and the problem with America is
that we don't have a culture of food.
So part one, the first meal that he's gonna walk us through
is like the industrial meal.
So we're eventually going to work our way up
to a McDonald's meal and he's gonna walk us through the way
that like the industrial factory farm system in America works.
This is by far the best part of the book.
A lot of his diagnosis of what is wrong with the American food system, especially like large
scale industrial farms, is like basically accurate.
So he basically starts out with this thing that, you know, corn is in everything, right?
You go into the grocery store and there's like highuctose corn syrup in bread, in tomato sauce.
Pick up any product from the shelf and it will have some derivative of corn in it.
Most of what we grow in America is corn and soybeans because corn is the most efficient way to get carbohydrates.
And soy is the most efficient way to get protein.
These are true crops that you can grow in like massive quantities,
and then you can break them down into all these constituent parts,
and then you can use them, you can put them in everything.
Mm-hmm.
There's three reasons how corn took over the American food supply.
The first is, in the 1920s, they started developing seeds that are higher yields.
Basically, you can now plant stocks of corn like mere inches away from each other,
and it used to be like two feet
because they've been bred to have much stronger stocks
so they grow straight up.
And it used to be that they would start to like bend over
and the sun and they would flop over on each other.
And pretty soon they're like tangled up
and like nobody gets the sunlight that they need.
Whereas now they just grow ramrod straits.
You can just plant them every couple inches
and you can harvest them with a tractor.
Sure.
And like significant change. You can just plant them every couple inches and you can harvest them with a tractor. Sure.
And like significant change.
Yeah, so in 1920, you would get about 20 bushels of corn per acre
and now you get 180 bushels of corn per acre.
That's big.
Honestly, again, you don't want to discount this stuff.
Like, this is part of how we feed the world.
Like, this is why starvation is a much smaller problem
at the world scale than it used to be.
The second big turning point was synthetic fertilizers.
This is nuts.
After World War II, they were making a bunch of ammonium nitrate, which is an ingredient
in explosives for the war.
And you know, with crops, you have to rotate crops to put nitrogen back in the soil.
So ammonium nitrate is a great source of nitrogen.
This is like why you put fertilizer into soil.
So there's all these munitions plants
that are making ammonium nitrate.
And at the end of the war, the government is like,
why don't you guys just like keep making it?
And we're just gonna give it to all the farmers.
But the problem with these fertilizers
is that they're essentially fossil fuel products.
So yikes.
Because the way to make them is you take hydrogen gas
and nitrogen gas, and you crush them together
under really high pressure and under really high heat.
And the only way to do that is with fossil fuels, right?
You just like burn fucking coal,
and you get these things really hot,
and then that's how you make the fertilizers.
So what Michael Paulin says in his book is that,
like, for every calorie of corn,
you're burning like nine calories of oil. Gotcha. And then the third thing that put corn into our that, for every calorie of corn, you're burning nine calories of oil.
Gotcha.
And then the third thing that put corn into our entire food supply
is of course subsidies, which is the story
that everybody kind of knows.
The way that Michael Pollan describes it is that
agriculture has never operated on any basic capitalist principles
of supply and demand, because farmers are responsible
for feeding the country, right?
So it's like, in low yield years,
you have a risk of like your population not having enough food
or you have to import food.
It's like it's like an actual government project
that needs to happen.
But then also if they have a really good year
and they grow too much or they have like a ton of corn
that's coming out of the fields, the price of it crashes.
Whoa.
And then farmers are basically destitute because all of a sudden they're not making as much
from their harvest as they had expected.
And then it fucks up the prices next year
and they can't pay off their seeds, blah, blah, blah.
So it's like, you can't just have the free market
do agriculture.
Yeah.
So essentially, as early as we've had
like government agriculture policy,
we've always been subsidizing
to try to like smooth these things out, to try to
give people some sort of expected return so that they have a reason to grow crops and they're not
just in this like horrific cycle of poverty, or they stop growing crops altogether and like we
don't have enough food. Yeah, and it is bone-crushingly hard work. It's so hard work, I know. I have a good
friend who's a farmer and like tells me about his day and I get tired every time.
He's a farmer and he has three kids.
And I'm like, I don't have any of those things
and I'm already tired, I don't understand.
But then, I mean, this is also like,
this is also a version of this argument
that I'm sure you've heard too,
that basically because we're growing so much corn
in the 70s, 80s, we started putting corn in everything.
So this is when we started getting corn and pop-tards,
corn and bread, they developed high fructose corn syrup
as this cheaper form of sweetening,
so now we're sweetening everything with corn.
So basically, we became like a monocrop country,
then it's like, well, the corn has to go somewhere,
and that's where we started getting this like,
avalanche of processed foods.
That's essentially the argument.
Okay, is that true?
It is actually true and quite easy to measure that we're producing more corn because
there's like agricultural statistics.
Sure.
Then 60% of America's corn is fed to livestock, which Michael Pollan describes in great
detail. So it's not necessarily that all of the corn went to human consumption. A lot
of that corn went to like, we're now eating more meat than we used to. And we also export
a ton of corn. And we also like corn goes into like biofuels and stuff that is not food.
I listen to a really good talk by Julie Guthman, who's an academic, who has written various
critiques of Michael Pollan.
What she says is, you can't say with any certainty that Americans are eating more now
than they used to simply because it's all based on this like self-report data.
Yeah, totally.
We've talked on the show before about how there's only really two ways to measure people's food consumption.
You do these 24 hour diaries or you ask people what they're eating in general
and they're both like fundamentally very flawed.
Yeah.
It's really hard to figure out how many calories people are eating.
And so, her thing is like, well, maybe it sounds fairly plausible, like in a common sense way that we're eating more,
like I don't know, but like you really can't actually say
with any certainty that we're eating more than we used to.
I would like to submit this as a new entry
for that's what I call maintenance phase.
Is this sort of like assumes facts not in evidence?
Oh, that's a good way to put it.
The way that you sort of identify a moral panic
is you look at what we don't need evidence to believe, right?
Or that's at least part of it.
You can just sort of say, we eat more now
than we used to and people will be like,
that seems right.
And folks won't necessarily like fact check it
and be like, wait, how are you measuring that?
Because it seems really pedantic
and it seems sort of like nitpicky,
but like it really matters.
Like if that's a foundational assumption of your work.
Exactly.
And you know, Julie Guthrman points out other things
that he often focuses on like the domestic reasons
why we're all eating more and corn has become
the central thing.
But what she says is like the market of food
is so global now, right?
Like we're getting blueberries from Chile
and the idea that like America is overproducing corn,
therefore Americans are eating more corn,
doesn't really take into account the fact that we're shipping
that stuff overseas for then it to get processed
and then shipped back to us.
And we're also importing a ton of food or exporting a ton of food.
The changes that have brought us to the problems with their food system
are much more global than they are domestic.
Another thing that Julie Guthwin points out in her book, the fact that corn is subsidized is not
actually the reason why it's like cheaper in the stores, like fruits and vegetables are more expensive.
And Julie Guthwin points out that corn is very easy to dry and very easy to store and ship,
whereas if you're talking about like peaches, you have to pick the peaches off of trees, you can't do it with any kind of machine, and then you have to get
it to wherever it's going to be.
I think they have to be refrigerated or some other crops have to be refrigerated.
Many crops you have to wash before you sell them.
It's just more expensive to produce a lot of fruits and vegetables.
Yeah, Holland kind of implies that it's like, if we can just get rid of the corn subsidies,
all the fruits and vegetables will be cheaper or whatever.
And it's like, it's actually just a lot more complicated
than that.
That makes a ton of sense to me.
That's not a critique that I had heard.
And it totally makes sense to me.
Well, also another thing that has always bugged me
about the subsidies thing is that it's true
that the corn subsidies, like I agree with Michael Poland's
like diagnosis
of part of the problem,
but then if you started heavily subsidizing, say broccoli,
they would just start growing broccoli and massive quantities
and they do high fructose broccoli syrup.
Yeah, I just want to bookmark a thing.
I'm going to predict a thing.
Ooh, okay, okay.
I'm going to predict a response that I'm gonna have
to whatever his prescriptions are.
My response is gonna be,
that's an individual proposed solution
to a systemic problem.
We found it, we're doing it.
That's what I call maintenance phase.
Is it just, you just need to buy
and eat the right kinds of foods,
not to be able to reorganize our food system?
Here's boiling the episode already.
Cool fun. Yes, I'm saving reorganize our food system. Here's boiling the episode already. Cool, fun.
It's found it.
Yes.
I'm saving all the little sounds I wanna make.
Oh, I've choice.
You're predicting this.
I'm not doing it.
I'm very into this, like I wanna predict that thing.
It's very satisfying.
I find it very satisfying.
You love ruining my episodes.
Like, this is where Mike is taking me.
Comments, ruination.
But then, okay.
But before we get to the prescriptions,
which we will obviously get to in great detail,
we have to talk about his fast food safari to McDonald's.
Oh, no.
I feel like this was also a genre of journalism
in the early 2000s,
where like a wealthy writer from New York or DC or wherever would go to some like Iowa
McDonald's and they would like describe it, you know, in this like zoo kind of way.
It's so gross. It's so gross. In his defense, Michael Pollan's McDonald Safari is like not as bad
as others. I have read. Sure. The description is, you know, he's all building this around like a meal,
right? So like he and his family go into a McDonald's in the Midwest somewhere and his son gets an order of
McNuggets. So he describes like all of the weird ingredients in McNuggets, which like fine fair enough.
And then he himself orders a cheeseburger. And the problem with a cheeseburger for the argument that
he's making is that if you go on the McDonald's website, in McDonald's cheeseburger is 100% beef.
And he has to sort of almost begrudgingly
in the text, mentioned that in McDonald's cheeseburger
only has six ingredients.
If you don't count like all the ingredients in the bun.
Right, so he can't level the also very popular
at this time argument that it's like a franken food.
Exactly, it's like, it's like just a really straightforward food.
It's like pickles and onions and cheese and beef and a bun.
It's like really basic.
But then he says,
in truth, my cheeseburger's relationship to beef
seemed nearly as metaphorical
as the nuggets relationship to a chicken.
Nope, I'm like how?
It's ground beef. It's a beef patty.
They took beef and then they ground it up.
It's identical to something that you would get at the grocery store.
And frankly, it's identical to something you'd get if you went to like a fancy restaurant.
They're getting their beef from the same place.
Right.
So, I'm going to send you a little excerpt from this part.
Ooh.
Alright, here we go.
What is it about fast food?
Not only is it served in a flash, but more often than not, it's eaten that way too.
We finished our meal in under 10 minutes. Since we were in the convertible in the sunwushining, I can't blame the McDonald's
ambiance. Perhaps the reason you eat this food quickly is because it doesn't bear savoring.
Bookmark, disagree. It tastes fucking good, Michael. It's fine. I didn't even like it. This is,
you know what this is? This is the food equivalent of like, I don't even own a TV. I don't even, McDonald's doesn't even taste good to me.
What do you mean TV?
Okay.
Okay.
Okay, sorry, I'll get back to the quote.
Quote, the more you concentrate on how it tastes,
the less like anything it tastes.
I said before that McDonald serves a kind of comfort food,
but after a few bites, I'm more inclined to think that they're selling something more schematic than that.
Something more like a signifier of comfort food.
So you eat more and more quickly, hoping somehow to catch up to the original idea of a cheeseburger or french fry as it retreats over the horizon.
And so it goes, bite after bite, until you feel not satisfied exactly, but simply regrettably full.
You're eating food.
Michael, you're describing eating food.
But he's describing the on-wee of eating industrialized food, Michael.
You're having a perfectly pleasant meal with your family,
and you're like trying to pull something shitty out of it.
Well, and also, like, listen, man, not every meal is a satisfying experience.
There are times when you're just hungry and you just need to eat some food, and that's
also okay.
Yes.
I've also had fancy meals that I've eaten quickly.
Yeah.
And that don't bear savering.
Exactly.
I've also had, like, really good subs from quiznos that I've absolutely savered.
Are you going to talk about the honey mustard chicken?
Because that's why I was talking about that thing,
which is great.
I think it's so good.
I'm like,
just this idea that it's like,
it's fundamentally an industrial experience
to eat at McDonald's and you can't eat slowly
and you can't sit for an hour with your family
at McDonald's and like have a nice talk
as you're all eating your McDonald's food.
It's like, that's just straight up bullshit.
Yeah, we were not a McDonald's food. It's like, that's just straight up bullshit. Yeah.
We were not a McDonald's family growing up,
but when we did fast food, we would go to dairy queen.
And I will say, I have like a plenty of fond memories.
Yeah. Like good quality family time
getting a dipped cone at dairy queen.
Like that's fine.
It's fine.
To be fair, you know my whole thing
that like I think it's really important to be fair to people.
So far, this book is like mostly fine, right? We're like 200 pages into it. Most of it has been
about the history of corn and corn subsidies, which is actually really interesting and really cool.
And like maybe he didn't represent the full picture. There's quibbles to be had. But if the whole
book was like this, there would there wouldn't be a whole lot of like dunk festing. But then part two
There wouldn't be a whole lot of like dunk-festing. But then part two is called Pastoral Grass.
And this is him having like a grass-fed meal.
Okay.
This is the section where we get to the first big twist of the book
that Michael Paulin fucking hates organic farms.
What?
And he hates whole foods.
Like the- the store whole foods?
He fucking hates it.
Listen, okay, we've talked a lot so far about
fucked McDonald's for real fuck whole foods.
Truly fuck whole foods.
Go look up the views of that CEO,
go look up their responses to employees speaking Spanish
in their stores to customers who speak Spanish,
go look up their labor laws,
go look up their BMI bonus.
God, they're terrible.
So the next thing that I'm gonna send you
is an excerpt from this section.
We're excited to rip into Whole Foods.
He hates it so much.
Quote, with the growth of organics
and mounting concerns about the wholesomeness
of industrial food, storied food is showing up in supermarkets everywhere these days, but it is whole foods
that consistently delivers the most cutting-edge grocery lit.
On a recent visit, I filled my shopping cart with eggs, quote, from cage-free vegetarian
hens, milk from cows that live, quote, free from unnecessary fear and distress.
Wild Sam and caught by Native Americans in Yakutat, Alaska, population 833,
and heirloom tomatoes from Kapay Farm, quote, one of the early pioneers of the organic movement.
The organic broiler I picked up even had a name, Rosie,
who turned out to be a sustainably farmed, free-range chicken
from Petaluma poultry, a company whose, quote, farming methods strive to create harmonious
relationships in nature, sustaining the health of all creatures and the natural world.
This is what bugs me about Whole Foods too.
Is it everything has a little label on the back, where it's like a story?
Sure.
It's like Stony Manchin's Farms was founded in 1802, and then you go to the front, it's like a story. Sure. It's like Stony Manchin's Pharmes was founded in 1802
and then you go to the front,
it's like a $9 thing of yogurt.
It's a place that I really try hard not to shop
because every time I get a glimpse into
what their actual business model is,
it's like a horror show.
It's funny how we're going harder on Whole Foods
than McDonald's.
I feel harder about Whole Foods than I do about McDonald's.
Absolutely, absolutely. So basically, Michael Poland feels about Whole Foods than I do about McDonald. Absolutely.
Absolutely.
So basically, Michael Pollan feels about Whole Foods
the same way that we do, which is very rosty.
This leads into his critique of the organic farming movement
that organic farms are basically just another way
of saying industrial farms.
So he then, after his Whole Foods Safari, he goes to an actual
working organic farm in California, and he describes it with like so much contempt. It's fascinating.
Here, this is, I mean, listen to another excerpt.
Quote, in many respects, the same factory model is at work in both fields, but for every
chemical input used in the farm's conventional methods, a more benign
organic input has been substituted in the organic ones. So in place of petrochemical fertilizers,
greenways organic acres are nourished by compost, made by the tonne at a horse farm nearby,
and by poultry manure. Instead of toxic pesticides, insects are controlled by spraying approved organic agents, most of them derived from plants,
and by introducing beneficial insects like lace wings.
Perhaps the greatest challenge to farming organically on an industrial scale is controlling weeds without the use of chemical herbicides.
Greenways tackles its weeds with frequent and carefully timed tilling.
Even before the crops are planted, the fields are irrigated to germinate the weed seeds
present in the soil,
a tractor then tilts the field to kill them.
The first of several passes it will make
over the course of the growing season.
When the crops stand too high to drive a tractor over,
farm workers wielding propane torches
will spot kill the biggest weeds by hand.
What do you think?
I mean, I think he's describing like a big farm.
Yeah.
If this doesn't feel like a smoking gun to me.
Exactly at all.
This whole section of the book, he is presenting exactly what you just read as a smoking gun.
Weird.
He wants us to like marvel at like, oh, look how industrial it is.
But I'm like, dude, you just spent 150 pages
complaining about all the fossil fuels
that are going into corn production.
You're now describing a farm
that is using significantly less fossil fuels
and is actually growing something in a way
that sounds to me a lot more sustainable.
But it's like he describes all of this stuff
as if we're supposed to be disgusted by it.
And it's like, no man, they're not using pesticides or chemical fertilizers.
And like this whole section is like, what do you want, Michael?
This sounds like they're doing the thing that you're asking them to do.
Yeah, I was going to say, it feels like this is not out of line with the expectations
that I would think that most organic shoppers would have.
Yeah. I would think that most organic shoppers would have. Yeah, this is also like a thing that wrinkles me
about this era of food system critiques,
is that all of them seem to be organized around this idea
that like you don't even know what you're putting
in your body.
I know.
The worst thing that's happening here
is you're eating foods that you don't know what they are.
Not the worst thing that's happening here
is that we're paying people less than minimum wage to pick the foods that you don't know what they are. Not the worst thing that's happening here is that we're paying people less than minimum wage
to pick the foods that you eat.
My main concern about this sort of stuff
is less about like what are the unknown chemicals
that are coming into my body?
And who needs to be around those chemicals all day?
Yeah.
There are real critiques to be had here
that transcend just the idea of like, there's a chemical
on your food and you don't know what it is.
This is the only place in the book where he mentions farm workers.
What?
This is like the only, the only mention.
Even in the industrial farm stuff, he barely mentions it, which is fascinating to me.
But then, but this is kind of where he's leading us to because he's trying to make organic look as bad as possible
And then he says, you know, the time for organic is over. We tried organic. It's clearly it's become this industrial monster
Just like the other factory farms and it's now time to he says move beyond organic. This is like where he's leading us
Here's what farms should look like so a huge chunk of the book, for the next 150 pages,
he spends on polyface farm, which is in Virginia,
and it's run by a guy named Joel Salaton.
And a lot of this book is like a profile
of this single farmer guy who's running like a local,
sustainable, artisanal farm, like a farmer's market
farm. There's a lot of like metaphorical stuff in this section. We like meet Michael Paulin as he's
like standing in a meadow and like looking at the cows and it's like sunset. There's a lot of
just like weird aesthetic stuff going on where he's describing this like small family farm.
Do you know what it is? He's describing the O'Lestra ad about a farmer.
It's at 100% the O'Lestra ad.
Right?
Right.
This is like a Republican campaign ad in Pennsylvania.
Listen, listen to this, this is insufferable.
This is Joel Salaton's entrance.
He talks about like Joel Salaton like walking toward him from across a meadow or something
And he's wearing like overalls and like a hat or whatever and then Michael Paulin describes the hat
So he says
Salatins broad brim straw hat did more than protect his neck and face from the Virginia Sun
It declared a political and aesthetic stance one descended from Virgil Jefferson, with a detour through the 60s
counterculture. Whereas a feed company cab blazoned with the logo of an agribusiness giant would have
said labor would have implied in more ways than one a debt to the industrial. Salaton's bespoke independence, sufficiency, even ease. The cartoon version of me is named John T. Shapo.
No, it just like to say that.
Oh, God.
So he's describing this guy like fucking Gaston
from Beauty and the Beast, right?
He's just like, man of the people, salt of the earth.
Sure, it's part of this romanticism.
And he loves the fact that this guy
describes himself as a grass farmer.
So he doesn't grow crops, he grows grass,
and then his cattle and his chickens graze on the grass.
All he's doing is reproducing the conditions
of the planet naturally.
And like this is how cows and chickens are supposed to live.
And so this produces like a much more like
an ecosystem approach rather than this horrific
monoculture approach where it's like you're blasting up the chemicals and you're spraying
it and you're tractoring it.
This is just like a dude out in nature, cows eat and grass.
So I'm going to send you another excerpt.
He unleashes portable chicken yards known among small-scale farmers as chicken tractors.
On fields, after cows have finished grazing there, the chickens peck at the remaining grass,
sterilize the cow manure of worms, and leave their own manure behind.
All of this prepares the pasture for the next planting of grass without a bit of off-farm fertilizer.
Cows eating grasses that had themselves eaten the sun,
the food chain at work in this pasture
could not be any shorter or simpler.
The farm and the family comprised a remarkably self-contained world.
In the way, I imagined all American farm life once did.
I imagined doing some heavy lifting there.
I know.
But the agrarian self-sufficiency that Thomas Jefferson celebrated used to be a matter
of course, and a product of necessity.
Nowadays that sort of independence constitutes a way of life both deliberate and hard one,
and achievement.
Ugh.
We're Jefferson to return today.
He would no doubt be gratified to learn
that there were still farmers down the road
from Monticello as Jeffersonian as Joel Salaton.
I hate this.
You see what he's doing here.
Boy, boy, lifting up Thomas Jefferson as your example.
I know.
It feels reminiscent to me of Jared being the like,
weight loss success story in Super Size Me.
We are not lifting up Thomas Jefferson, like a famed sexual assalter.
Thomas, like what?
Also, are we lionizing like the farming practices of someone who owned slaves?
Right.
Like every part of this.
You can't just evoke the farm of Thomas Jefferson
without unpacking or at least acknowledging
like some stuff we probably wouldn't wanna do today.
But I mean pick a different white dude.
I don't know.
There's a lot of farmers out there.
Find one that didn't own people.
And then sexually assault those people.
So, I mean, maybe this is foreshadowing,
but he spends a lot of time with this Joel Salatin guy
who describes himself as a Christian libertarian
environmentalist.
What?
Which is like, should give you a sense of like
the kinds of beliefs he has.
So Michael Pollan regularly just parrots this guy,
saying the most deranged anti-government,
like people don't wanna work anymore.
The problem in America's that like the government is tyranny.
And that's true.
Pollan presents it over and over again
as this like kind of quirk of his character.
He'll be like, oh, he loves talking about anti-government
stuff at the breakfast table. Like, guess I'm gonna getirk of his character. He'll be like, oh, he loves talking about anti-government stuff at the breakfast table.
Like, guess I'm gonna get one of his lectures.
He wants me to come to a meeting of the three percenters
with him. That seems good.
We now understand this is like a huge red flag.
And I realize that like political everything
was different back then.
But it's like you do get the sense that he's kind of soft
pedaling some of this guy's actual beliefs.
And what we later find out, so Joel Salatin is still around, he kind of became a celebrity
after this book came out.
He became like an influencer because he owns his farm and he would give advice to people.
He's now in like the least twisty twist ever.
He's now like a COVID denier guy.
He held a bunch of meetings during the pandemic,
where he like wouldn't let people wear masks, and he made people turn off their cell phones,
because COVID is caused by 5G. He's written all these like how-to guides to being the kind of
farmer that he is, and like I guess one of them in 2005 had a long-screed against abortion doctors.
Oh, okay.
I don't know how you get this in a book about farming,
but it's really obvious this guy has some really ugly beliefs
and not cute Robert Nosek, Night Watchman,
State Libertarian beliefs, but weird, conspiratorial beliefs.
And Michael Pollan just doesn't touch it at all.
It's very fun to me that you describe libertarianism as cute.
Like, oh, look at them. Look at those guys.
The thing that drives me so nuts about this is that even as he presents Joel Salatin's beliefs as like kind of kooky,
like another one of his anti-government rants, he kind of like half endorses a lot
of these completely bananas ideas that this guy has that end up in Michael Paulins best-selling
book. So this is a section where Joel Salatin like lays out his like theory of change.
Quote, you can't regulate integrity, Joel is fond of saying, the only genuine accountability comes from a producer's relationship with his or her customers,
and their freedom to, quote, come out to the farm, poke around, sniff around.
If after seeing how we do things, they want to buy food from us, that should be none of the government's business.
Like fresh air and sunshine, Joel believes transparency is a more powerful disinfectant
than any regulation or technology.
Woo, I bet he does.
It is a compelling idea.
Is it?
Imagine if the walls of every slaughterhouse and animal factory were as transparent as polyfaces.
So much of what happens behind those walls, the cruelty, the carelessness, the filth would
simply have to stop.
We don't need a law against McDonald's
or a law against slaughterhouse abuse, Salton says.
We ask for too much salvation by legislation.
All we need to do is empower individuals
with the right philosophy and the right information
to opt out and mass.
What do you think?
Whoa.
I mean, so listen, one of the things that I would sometimes do in my old line of work,
which was organizing, like I'm a white lady, I could cover up tattoos.
My hair was long enough that I didn't breed as queer necessarily to folks.
I'd be the person who would go to, like, far-right garbage meetings.
And this sounds like really not different from what I would hear at those far-right garbage meetings. And this sounds like really not different
from what I would hear at those far-right opposition meetings.
Oh, really?
Absolutely.
Like, we're just waiting on the government to save us.
We just need to empower there good people
who want to do good work.
We just need to empower them to do that work.
And it's wild to read him, be swayed by it.
That's what's so weird to me to present it without comment
and kind of like, well, it's an interesting idea.
Like, transparency, we can all,
he has this long section about his techniques
for slaughtering animals and how like the customers
of his farm can like come and see their chicken get slaughtered
and like then buy the chicken afterwards
and how that's the only way to ensure like good hygiene
or whatever.
And it's like, this farm is a three-hour drive from Washington, DC, where most of its customers are.
So am I supposed to spend a whole fucking day driving out to a farm and with my zero experience
in inspections and my zero knowledge about what a farm is supposed to look like?
experience in inspections and my zero knowledge about what a farm is supposed to look like.
Yeah.
This is not a solution.
It's not that he even presents this as like,
imagine this.
It's like, yeah, it fucking sucks.
Yeah, and also like, hey, you know what you need
in order to like go out and see a farm is a car
or someone who can drive you.
Exactly.
Time in the day when the farm is open
and accepting visitors and staff is working,
but you're not working.
Yes.
You need disposable income and so much time
to do what he's describing here.
Yes.
Like, oh, this might not be a thing that everyone can,
or even just wants to do.
I actually think that like going out and visiting a farm
would be really cool.
It's fun.
If I had kids and if that was available,
I would like absolutely take them on like a farm weekend
or whatever and see what it's like,
see what the conditions are like,
like meet the animals.
On the most surface level,
I think the idea of like understanding
where our food comes from is like, yeah, great.
Totally.
But also like, it's not a substitute
for like government inspectors who know what they're doing.
As I've mentioned in the show so many times,
I worked in human rights for 11 years.
I worked on almost all my career
was dedicated to the human rights impacts of businesses.
So I know people who inspect factories,
they have checklists of like 140 items,
they spend days doing this.
They know how to spot a fake ID in like Guatemala
because people will oftentimes get fake IDs
so they can work when they're not 18 yet.
It's like you need technical skills
to inspect a farm or a workplace for like hygiene violations.
Like okay, what temperature
are they like keeping the meat storage at?
It's like this is a really hard job
and like a technical skill to inspect things.
I don't wanna do that.
Yeah, it feels like the advice that he's giving here is like,
when you have a lot of wealth and time
and ability to dig into this,
here's how you navigate a fucked up food system.
Yeah.
Not, here's how we fix the food system, right?
Like that's not actually,
it seems what he's arguing here.
It seems like what he's arguing is like,
you just need to make better choices
within the sea of garbage choices that I think we have.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, goddamn.
It's this weird fetishization of small farms too.
There's nothing constitutionally that says that a smaller farm would have better working
practices.
There's nothing that says they actually might be worse because small farms are exempt
from a lot of the labor laws that govern farm workers
I mean nobody follows the fucking labor laws for farm workers anyway, so it's kind of a moot point
There's different animal welfare rules the idea that small farms just inherently have better
production is like why no?
Like this is what I just don't get about Michael Paulins thing
He he explicitly says that like he hates organic certification, right?
He hates like the sticker,
but it's like, at least the sticker has like an actual set
of like, clearly defined rules.
Right.
He says that like, you know,
what Joel Salatin is doing is like,
beyond organic and it's so much more sophisticated
than organic, okay, I mean,
maybe that's true in Joel Salatin's case,
but considering you can charge two to three times more
for meat and produce that is produced under conditions like this, I wouldn't be
just fucking lie about it.
Without a mechanism of accountability, this is not a real alternative to factory farming,
it's just producing the same problems potentially.
I do think that there's value in smaller farmers, it gives us more diversity.
You know what I mean?
I do think that there's a thing here about balance of power between major farming entities and smaller farmers, it gives us more diversity. You know what I mean? I do think that there's a thing here
about balance of power between major farming
entities and smaller farmers.
Yeah, totally agreed.
Smaller farmers can still lie about their conditions
and that sort of stuff.
I think there are benefits to that.
It doesn't sound like those are the benefits
that he's talking about.
It seems like part of what he's arguing here
is that smaller farmers are producing better food.
I would believe you if you told me that was true
and I would believe you told me that it wasn was true and I would believe you if you told me
that it wasn't my guess is that it's somewhere in between.
What's frustrating is he keeps mixing up
like the potential to make better food
and like they are producing better food.
Because again, without any certification system
or any system of inspections,
well how do I know that the local farmer
isn't using pesticides and like some better fertilizers?
Sure, sure, sure.
The worst boss I've ever had was like a mom
and pop video store owner.
He's just like a total fucking dirt bag.
And like the worst landlord I've ever had
was like a mom and pop landlord.
I don't actually think that like small is worse than big.
I think that it's really silly to make that argument
that like, oh, we should have more big corporations
in America that would fix our problem
like that's fucking deranged.
But also like there's nothing inherent
about small businesses that makes them better.
You do in a large country with millions of people,
you need to have control mechanisms,
especially when there's huge economic incentives involved.
Yeah, I mean, again, this all feels like
it's like one step above an individual solution
to a systemic problem.
Yes, if you want to establish a floor for a set of practices,
or if you want to raise that floor,
the mechanism that we have for that is regulation.
Feel however you want to feel about that,
but that's the pathway that we have currently.
So like, I don't know what to tell you.
I'm not going out to a farm.
Yeah.
I'm not going to visit Joel Salaton and hear him tell me about, you know, people really have misunderstand those keepers. Like, I don not going out to a farm. Yeah, I'm not going to visit Joel Salatin and hear him tell me about, you know, people
really have misunderstood those keepers.
Like, I don't need that.
But then what's also what's so interesting to me too is that this vision of like over
regulation, like Joel Salatin complains about over regulation and like the tyranny
of government control constantly and Michael Pollan kind of parrots this.
But then actual smallhold farmers have written quite a bit
in the ensuing years since this book came out
about how over-regulation is not really the problem.
It is actually true that a lot of rules for the USDA
are geared toward large slaughterhouses.
It can be a little bit too stringent
for smaller producers.
That's an actual problem
and the regulations need to be better on that.
Sure.
The real issue is that Joel Salatin
is selling people this vision of like if the regulators
would get out of the way, all of these small farms would flourish.
And like it's just not true partially because Joel Salatin inherited his farm from his father.
Mm-hmm.
So plenty of other people have written about like, yeah, this stuff works and is profitable
if you don't have like any land mortgage rents to pay.
And he also uses free labor on his farm.
Michael Pollan talks about his interns.
What?
He has interns like doing chores.
Okay, that just sounds like free labor to me.
It does to me too and I will say,
hot take, I feel that way about every single
unpaid internship in the lot.
Yeah, it's not work.
Yes.
And like, a far more internship is like, that's, that is dark.
And there's websites where like, former interns have posted about like, bad living conditions
and like, getting weird food poisoning and stuff.
Like, sure.
People have actually kind of come forward about this stuff.
Yeah.
But then, there's been some really interesting pushback to this.
There's a guy named Chris Newman,
who is like a person of color who like did this.
He like left the rat race and like bought a farm
and tried to make it work.
And he has a medium, it's like really good.
And he's pushed back on this like all of Joel Salton's
like weird, right wing libertarian bullshit about like getting government regulators out of the way.
So I'm going to send you an excerpt from a blog post by Chris Newman.
I recently found myself with the free time to do some simple math.
One of the larger farmers markets I participate in has about a hundred vendors.
I'm one of the mid-sized operations that sells there and and I'm paying about $1,000 a year in fees to participate.
I'm also devoting about 250 hours a year in staffing and prep time, and about $650 in
fuel getting to and from the market.
Altogether, then, I'm paying roughly $5,000 to participate in a large farmers market.
It's pretty safe to assume that the costs of the other 99 vendors are similar. We're shelling out a combined $500,000 to participate in just one market.
Most of us participate in at least two markets, so let's double the figure to a million.
A million dollars annual operating budget could comfortably lease service and staff a large
urban brick and mortar market that's opened 12 hours a day, seven days a week, year round. Instead, we spend it on a pop-up market that's open just half the year for two days a week,
four hours at a time, and it's probably outdoors where rain, excessive heat, or cold snap will
effectively ruin the day. Yeah, this is a thing that I have talked to farmer friend about,
that he's like, farmers markets are like so deeply not worth it.
This whole vision of like local farms
are the way out of factory farming.
And like they're the way to break America's addiction
to corn and fossil fuels, blah, blah, blah.
It doesn't really make sense for consumers,
and it doesn't really make sense for farmers either.
Like you don't really make a lot of money doing this.
It's wildly inefficient.
And like no one's really benefiting from this.
Like what you actually need is like government subsidies
for these people to like get their produce
into supermarkets.
Or restaurants or whatever.
Yeah, yes.
I mean, like community supports and something Chris Newman
has written a lot about is that we have this idea
of like the sort of the family farm.
And it's based on this idea, like the nuclear family,
and that you own your own land.
It's all wrapped up in this weird, white 1950s
picket fence bullshit.
And if that's not your model,
then there isn't really any help for you,
and you're not part of the national conversation
about farmers.
It's not that government regulation is choking farmers.
It's that there aren't enough government supports
to incentivize people to do this.
There are ways to just get the outcomes that we want
without these weird workarounds.
Yeah, I mean, I think the hard thing here,
the thing that I'm struggling with,
the tension that I'm struggling with in response to all of this,
is it feels like what we need is a a wholesale, like, audit of the food system
and then like a reconfiguring of how a bunch of things work. But the challenge is, if
and when we do that, we have to be able to do it in a way that centers the needs and experiences
of like poor people and disabled people and people who are working multiple jobs and people
who are on food stamps and others are like assistance programs
and like make sure that it actually works
for more than like me and Michael Pollan.
Yeah, exactly.
It is aimed squarely at us
and what it feels like none of these critiques
particularly from this era really tangle with
is just like what does that mean for anybody else?
And like there's nothing,
there's nothing in Michael Pollan's book like for those people.
At all. Like, there's no message to like, poor people at all.
There's no message to anyone who's not also basically Michael Paulin.
Exactly. Yes. Also, a little epilogue to this story. This guy, Chris Newman,
after he writes his blog post being like, uh, I'm doing all this local farming stuff and it's like really not working for me.
In which he doesn't mention Joel Salatin at all.
Joel Salatin then writes a blog post
where he's like, I disagree with Chris,
but I can't even talk about that
because then you'd call me racist.
What?
I don't know why you're saying that.
And then there's like a whole back and forth in Seuss
and this culminates with him saying,
I would suggest that black indigenous and people of color
who feel America offers them no opportunity
should give up all modern conveniences
and return to their tribal locations and domicile.
Fully go back to Africa.
And then he also said that 75% of black boys
grow up without a father, which is not true.
And I was like, that sounds fucked up.
And then I looked it up and it's like,
I guess this is like a thing that goes around
like right wing internet.
Oh yeah, it absolutely does.
Yes.
I mean, that's obviously where all the stuff was gonna go, right?
This feels unsurprising.
Yeah, it's never like this libertarian COVID-denier 5G guy
also has really good racial politics.
You know what?
He's really thoughtful on immigration.
You'd be surprised.
Actually, no one's stuff.
Yeah.
So, okay, that was, that was meal two.
He then has like a grass bed meal,
but like, it's not that interesting.
It's just like he eats grass bed beef and it's good.
And then we get to part three, the forest.
The whole conceit of this section is he wants to make a meal
where everything is like,
hundred or gathered by Michael Pollan.
There's not that much to say here.
I mean, this section is like kind of fine.
It's him learning how to hunt and he kills a wild boar.
And there's this like pretty cool sounding dude
who shows him how to
forage and he looks around he finds like weird mushrooms and he has them
like analyzed before he eats them and it's all kind of fine. Like it doesn't
really say anything about the American food system and it like doesn't really
try to. I'm gonna send you the final paragraph.
Woo! Of the entire book.
Of the entire book where he kind of of lays out his theory of change.
Right on.
So he's like sitting there at the end of this beautiful,
wonderful meal that he spent months preparing, basically.
And he's like sitting there and contemplating.
This is not the way I want to eat every day.
I like to be able to open a can of stock,
and I like to talk about politics or the movies
at the dinner table sometimes instead of food.
But imagine for a moment, if we once again knew what it is we're eating, where it came
from, how it found its way to our table, and what, in a true accounting, it really cost.
We could then talk about some other things at dinner.
For we would no longer need any reminding that, however we choose to feed ourselves, we
eat by the grace of nature, not industry.
And what we're eating is never anything more or less
than the body of the world.
Whoa.
He's doing metaphorical stuff again.
This feels like an imagined reality.
I mean, it is, he's saying it.
If we knew where our food came from,
we would never talk about it.
And my experience is, as soon as I know where food comes from,
it's all I wanna talk about.
Yeah, it's like, I don't know how much time you spent
in Seattle or Portland, but the idea that people stop
talking about food once they know where it's from,
does not match my experience.
Truly.
Truly.
It's linked into this sort of set of ideas about social change
that is just like, people just need to know
and then things will be different.
And if you talk to people who work in social change movements,
if you talk to people who work in policy or public health
or any of the folks who are sort of like tasked
with creating and managing that change,
knowledge doesn't actually do it.
Now people knowing things doesn't necessarily change their behavior because there are other
constraints in our lives and because not everybody has the same priorities, my guy.
What's frustrating to me about the book is that he applies all this stuff to food.
It's like our connection to our natural world and he makes all these kind of metaphorical
connections.
But then you can make all the same connection to like our clothing, right?
It's like we would die without clothing in the winter,
and what can be more important than the cloth we put on our backs, right?
And most of us know the conditions that our clothing is produced under are not good.
Right, we don't know the particulars, but we know it's real bad.
Yeah, and it's not changing.
So the theory of change, if we knew knew we would behave differently, like, I've
actually read up on public information campaigns for like various podcasts over the years, and
like there's a really narrow range of issues on which just delivering people information
is going to actually change things. And it's mostly things where like people have the power
to do something, they just lack the information and it's like something that benefits them.
The idea that it's like,
we all just have to buy food that's way more expensive,
buy choice because it's like better for the planet
or whatever, like that's never gonna work
because people wanna spend their money on other things.
Well, and in that way, it makes sense
that he's foregrounding Joel Salatin for all of this
because what he's proposing is a deeply libertarian solution,
right?
He's not proposing big overhalls of the food system.
He's not proposing anything actually
that would lead to meaningful accountability
for agribusiness, if that's his wheelhouse
and if that's the bee in his bonnet,
like none of this, like a bunch of people electing
to go out to smaller farms and buying from those smaller farms.
Like, let's say you scale that and it gets huge.
Even if it gets huge, that's taking a tiny bite
out of the markets of these massive, massive farms.
It would be great for those small farms
to get more business and all that kind of stuff.
Like, great, absolutely.
But like, in terms of like a transformational force
in the food system, no.
No, no, no.
His whole program is ways to opt out of our shitty system.
It's like charter schools but for food.
Exactly, and it's not even just that they're opting out.
He's literally telling them that this is a political act.
Shopping at the farmer's market is a political act.
Damn it.
And he keeps describing what he's proposing as a food movement. But he
never defines what this movement should actually want. What I kept shouting at this book
is like, you're up. You just completely gives up on the idea of like regulating like large
farms. But the minute you start digging into this, there's 72 pesticides that are legal in
America and illegal in the EU.
It's one quarter of America's pesticide use is pesticides that you can't use in the EU.
He describes all of these factory farms, or 150 pages, and then he's just like, well,
all we can do is go to the farmers market, and it's like, there's actually lots of models for countries that regulate factory
farms and have far better factory farm conditions than America does.
Yeah, totally.
I read a really interesting article by Heidi Zimmerman called Caring for the Middle-class Soul,
ambivalent, ethical eating, and the Michael Pollan phenomenon.
She talks about this book and the rest of his work as like what it really is
is lifestyle instruction. It's sort of masquerading as social and political analysis, but it's telling
you how to live. And this article actually gave me a lot more sympathy for Michael Pollan and like
these arguments in that it is really upsetting to be confronted with the fact that we live in a world
where we're complicit with a lot of really awful shit.
Yeah.
You read about this stuff and you're like,
oh my god, like everything I'm eating
was picked by somebody who's working under terrible conditions
and everything I'm wearing, the car that I drive
is polluting the environment.
And it's not clear what we should do with that
or what we should do about that.
And a lot of us just carry around a lot of anxiety
because we're powerless, right?
You have your one vote that you do every four years
or whatever, but other than that,
even like a local political action or something,
it's very hard to sort of see change from that,
it's pretty difficult.
And so you've got this massive population,
especially of like upper class,
white, fairly privileged people who are like kind of aware of
their own, our own
complicit in all of these systems, right? Because we're the people that are doing most of the consuming in America, right?
And so there's this constant need for
exoneration. Yeah. Tell me that I'm not as bad as I feel about all this. Yeah, and a lot of the instruction
That Michael Paulin is offering people and I don't think that he's doing this deliberately
I don't think he's an evil guy. I don't think that any of this is deliberate
But I think what he's offering people is some
Some ab solution and like some way of opting out and being like well factory farms are terrible
But you know what I get most of my stuff at the farmer's market. Yeah, I'm actually not part of the problem, right?
He's offering you this way of feeling okay
with not only opting out of these factory farm systems,
but also of like paying a lot of money to do so.
So much of this is like, it's basically a luxury product,
right?
Michael Pollan also talks a lot about how the food
on Joel Salad and his farm like it tastes better and the yolks of the eggs are yellower and the chicken tastes chickenier
and it's just so much better. And it's like, yeah, man, you're just describing like a rich
people product. Like rich people are willing to pay more for like fucking Manuka honey and these
high-end goods. So you're selling these choices back to them as like,
no, no, this is your civic duty.
You're voting with your fork.
Yeah.
And I mean, it also feels like, I don't know.
That sort of phenomenon that you're talking about,
about like we're sort of like broadly aware,
but tried to remain specifically unaware
of the impacts of our sort of consumer behaviors
and what that leads to and what we're supporting
and all that kind of stuff.
And with you, I don't think Michael Pollan
is doing this intentionally.
It doesn't seem that way to me,
but it is quietly a very, very troubling approach
to just be the critiques of the food system,
just give rich people a way out of feeling
they're part of something that's like morally conflicted.
And then everybody else is just like on their own, good luck, bye.
Yeah, I fucking love the farmer's market.
Yeah, I love getting my shit at the farmer's market, but like, there's no civic duty.
Like that's not me engaging as a political actor.
That's not systems change in like a meaningful way.
Exactly. That's not like large scale systems change.
Yes, I agree.
Yeah, like it's tough. Like this seems like tough talk time, but also like it's way. Exactly. That's not large scale systems change. Yes, I agree. It's tough.
This seems tough talk time, but also it's true.
If you really want to look at this stuff and what it would take to fix it, it gets really
big and really explicitly political, really fast.
If you want to fix the food system, hello, that requires you to align yourself with and advocate for immigrants
and migrant workers. Yeah. There's a bunch of like worker stuff that gets really quickly into
union territory and what labor laws ought to look like. Great. Yeah. If you want to do this stuff,
you have to think really globally. You have to think outside of the US and you have to think outside of individual behaviors.
Yeah.
I'm tired.
I know.
I'm tired.
Slight epilogue.
Who tell me?
I mean, this really clicked in my brain when I read Heidi Zimmerman's article about this
being lifestyle instruction.
Because effectively, what Michael Pollan has done since this book came out is he became
like a diet guru.
Right? what Michael Pollan has done since this book came out is he became like a diet guru, right? He then publishes three books about like how to eat and it's very
Telling to me that this book that is like kind of
ostensibly about politics, right? It's like corn subsidies and like the creation of fertilizer and stuff
People read this book and and he says the question he gets the most is how should I eat?
How should I eat?
People want these like individual lifestyle choices from this book, and so that's what
he's given them, which fair enough, whatever. But it's like, I think that reveals like the
nature of the project all along, or at least the nature of like what it was always going to
be used for. Is it people just wanted to know like, should I eat this or that? So, you know,
by the time he shows up on Oprah in 2010,
he's basically just like any other diet influencer
that she has on.
This is part of the sort of like wave
of food system criticisms that also ushered in an era
of, quote unquote, clean eating.
This is an era that really supercharged, moralizing
around specific foods.
Like, what's the source of your food?
What's the nutrient profile of your food?
Who grew it?
What did it bubble that?
All that kind of stuff.
And that's also what led us to a heightened cultural
conversation about orthorexia,
which is this emerging framework for talking about
a kind of disordered eating that is about eating
particular foods or about eating particular foods
or not eating particular foods.
Often based on this idea of like,
is it good for you or is it bad for you?
Is it clean or is it dirty?
This feels like a real story of like,
here's what happens when you write something
that's personally meaningful for you
and then just don't really think about
how it plays out more broadly
or don't want to think about how it plays out more broadly.
To his credit, Michael Pollan now speaks much more openly
about the need for politics.
I found a, I think it was 2018 interview with him
where he basically admits that the food movement
such as it is has been a total failure.
No one really tried to direct all of this energy.
I think there was actually like an opportunity
for change there and there were a lot of people
who were really fired up about the food system
being terrible.
But then instead of going into anything,
we've just created like a pretty robust,
alternative economy for food,
like a high-end economy for food.
I mean, I guess, I feel sad now
in a way that I sometimes feel sad at the end of our episodes.
I feel like a little despondent.
So that I did this to you again.
But you know, I know what I gotta do and that's go visit a right wing farm.
Bye! Thank you.
you