Posted on 01/09/2015 9:40:51 AM PST by Kaslin
Lets Move, the First Ladys initiative to help kids fight obesity by giving them crummy school lunches, now has a new Executive Director. Debra Eschmeyer, a self-described food justice activist, will soon be in charge of the Lets Move campaign and other nutritional policies. Whats that?… Oh, you would like to know what food justice means? Well, brace yourself:
Deb was asked in an interview in 2011 about the term, and the result was kinda like watching Karl Marx host a Food Network program. According to the Free Beacon:
I was an editor of Food Justice (the new book by Robert Gottlieb and Anupama Joshi) so I spent several years thinking about the definition, she said. Food justice seeks to ensure that the benefits and risks of where, what, and how food is grown, produced, transported, distributed, accessed, and eaten are shared fairly.
Well, she definitely does sound like an Obama acolyte. Of course, the best was yet to come:
It represents a transformation of the current food system, including but not limited to eliminating disparities and inequities, Eschmeyer added.
Oh, I get it: Tabletop socialism. (Or meal-time Marxism. Or produce progressivism. Or culinary communism. Or…)
Thats right: Even your green beans arent safe from the long arm of progressive pet-projects. The food justice movement incorporates the quintessential elements of todays Democrat progressives: Class warfare, government regulation, and globesity. (Yes… That is an actual word used in the movement.)
Eschmeyer said during the interview she focuses on everything from food policy, Farm to School, school gardens, school food, rural sociology, obesity, dairy policy, commodity policy, food justice … basically from seed to stomach. The whole gamut.
Yeah. I mean, why stop at regulating producers, grocery store chains, and preparation methods? Cradle to grave Seed to stomach oversight of our food… What could possibly go wrong?
Of course, by itself this is nothing more than mildly entertaining… But lets put things into context here: Were talking about an America where the government dictates what kind of health insurance is acceptable; and then they tax non-compliance. Its not that unreasonable to worry that food justice might soon find itself embedded in the regulatory web of Americas dietary reality.
People can chose to be gluten free, vegetarian, local-organic nuts, vegan, GMO-free, or food justice activists… But when we start embedding these folks into the political machinery that impacts policy, you should brace yourself for a little more arbitrarily enforced awareness in your daily life.
After all, Debbie will not only be a Lets Move director, but also a Senior Policy Advisor for Nutrition Policy (redundant) with the ability to advise on food and nutrition issues beyond Lets Move. So, next time you buy non-organic steak tartare, or an 8 count meal from Chick-fil-a, you might just be pressured by the Obama Administration to consider your food justice awareness level… Heaven forbid you be allowed to grocery-shop without a little politicization.
Some people really, really, really need real jobs in the real world.
Eat your Arugula....
This means poor people are going to starve.
” Food Justice
Give peas a chance..
Some people are really, really, really incapable of performing real jobs in the real world. So they get government jobs or secure political appointments.
I like this headline better:
“Texas declares amnesty for school cupcakes!”
http://eagnews.org/texas-declares-amnesty-for-cupcakes/
The price of arugula is too d**n high.
A few years ago, the people we work for baked some gluten free brownies and left them on our doorstep. The 6 year old I was caring for grabbed them, ran in the house and began eating. She quickly spit one out and told me that the people building the house next door were trying to poison us.
I know how she feels. Yuck.
"...those kids should be behind a scatter shield"
In other words they want to make sure everyone gets food, no matter how lazy and worthless they are.
LOL.
Gluten free baking is a bit tricky. I experimented once with a chocolate cake. The result was ok, and with practice would probably be better, but there’s no question that gluten is very useful in making bread. The work-arounds are a nuisance.
I laughed so hard when the grocery store Michelle Obama made an appearance at in Marrero, in a food desert a mile away from a Wal-mart, closed in only a year.
Somebody seriously needs to tell these folks that 1984 was a cautionary tale and not a d@mned roadmap...
lol.
Brownies left on doorstep these days, no way
Food justice seeks to ensure that the benefits and risks of where, what, and how food is grown, produced, transported, distributed, accessed, and eaten are shared fairly.
In other words, reduce all food down to a combination green wafer! Soylent Green!
No Arugala - No Justice!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.