Posted on 04/29/2014 8:03:41 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I have no quarrel with Whole Foods. At least there is competition, and I purchase from both Whole Foods and the competition depending upon my whims.
Methinks we should direct our ire at pure unadulterated scientific incompetance. The EPA is a good start. If one were to sum the entire IQ of that squalid organization, we’d probably still be to the right of the decimal point.
And - of course - the congress that caused this collection of cretins to come into existance is even lower on the intelligence scale. (Statement of the obvious, obviously.)
Even more overpriced than their stock is their merchandise. Seems that if you slap an organic sticker on something that gives you the right to double or triple the price. There is no proof that organic foods are healthier than non-organic foods.
In our area Whole Foods seem no diffrent than Democrat Party HQ. All the Priuses with BHO bumperstickers in the parking lot. A huge gathering spot for all of the local liberals and environmental extremists.
I don’t know if it’s the chain or just the local franchisee, but Whole Foods here in Virginia took a lot of flack for standing up for pro-life politicians.
But I don’t shop there anyway. Waaaayyyy to expensive.
I like that they try and use local produce, in our store the organic is only about 10% more.
And merchandise? Why would you buy that at a market?
Their customer base leans very left, and it’s almost a religion for them. But the owner doesn’t appear down with the agenda. He fought obamacare hard and has rumbled with the unions as well.
They are by far the expensive market in our area. You can save much more shopping at Wal-Mart.
I like the founder. It’s his customers and employees who are way out there.
The beauty of the free market:
If you don’t like it, or their policies, don’t shop there.
Some of us are blessed enough to have the resources to be nearly infinitely picky about what goes into or on our bodies; others don’t care.
the author is free to think ‘silly’ what they want to, just as I am free to pretty much only eat locally grown, organic food from within a 25 mile radius and use personal care products that cost as much as a tank of gas for my Chevy V8 :-). For my body, nothing goes into it that I don’t know ever last detail of how and where it was made, other people are perfectly happy eating any old crap and spend as much on things like kids, TV, cell phones or movies as I do on gourmet cooking :-) But no kids, no debts and two houses paid for, Whole Paycheck, as I call it, is pretty much the only place I shop besides the farmer’s markets and the CSA boxes (Community Supported Agriculture).
Freedom is wonderful
“In our area Whole Foods seem no diffrent than Democrat Party HQ. All the Priuses with BHO bumperstickers in the parking lot. A huge gathering spot for all of the local liberals and environmental extremists.”
Sounds like the Whole Pay Check in our area.
We shop at some of the stores around Whole Pay Check, and enviral whacko warriors are all ways around Whole Pay Check trying get signatures for some enviral whacko program.
One day there were 3 of them, and they were aggressive. I told them I never sign petitions on sidewalks as they end up costing me tax $’s.
One of the thugs got upset, and challenged me. I asked him why in Californiacator land did they need any enviral petitions, when they had Moonbeam as governor, both legislative bodies in Sacaremento and the president in their pockets. He actually grinned and stepped away.
LOL!
One of my dear little students gave me a $15.00 gift card to Whole Foods.
I was able to but a pint of feta cheese and some crackers and had to make up the difference in cash.
It was quite tasty, but, come on!
A certain segment of the population seems to be attracted to an “elite shopping experience” with all its extra costs. There’s a sense of heightened superiority associated with being able to partake of an indulgence and enjoy one’s ability to spend more for perceived quality.
In short, there’s a huge psychological component to a lot of our shopping habits. Upscale stores understand and exploit this concept very well.
What a pathetic mix of untruths this article contains. Of course there’s a difference between, say, natural and artificial blueberry flavoring.
That broad consensus on GMOs is about as uniform as the agreement on climate change. There haven’t been any long-term tests, but it is known that GMOs cause significant health problems in laboratory animals.
That study on the merits of organic foods was bogus too, since it only addressed differences in nutrients, not the differences in pesticide and herbicide exposure.
Probiotics are gaining respect in the medical world, and they are of significant value once a course of antibiotics has disrupted the healthy yeasts and bacteria in the digestive system.
Sure, there are some products that Whole Foods and other health food stores sell that will likely ultimately be proven to be of no benefit for various health conditions—just as some traditional medicines will likely be discredited.
But if people want to buy organic, non-GMO and other specific foods, this is a free country and WF ought to be free to sell what the customer would like to buy.
What a sorry article!
“Waaaayyyy to expensive.”
___________________
There’s a reason Whole Foods is often sarcastically referred to as ‘Whole Paycheck’. I have a friend who works for one up near Portland, and she openly told me, “It’s for rich people who want to think they’re doing something good and show off their Prius or their fixie bike in the parking lot. Hipster central.”
LOL.
Exactly.
We call it WHole Check instead of Whole Food
Yep, that too.
I live in CA. I know what you mean.
These bastards now force us to carry around shopping bags in our car. They make you pay for them now if you forget. And they started this crap at Whole Foods before they started putting it into effect (by force of law) in other supermarkets as well.
I believe in the free market, but also in caveat emptor. I won't dispute or agree with the arguments that organic foods are healthier than non-organic. However, I have observed that there are fewer obese people in the Whole Foods, Sprouts, and Trader Joes than in the Albertsons and Wal-Marts.
Many times the “organic” produce is cheaper than non-organic at the HEB Stores in Houston.
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