Welcome to Incremental Social! Learn more about this project here!
Check out lemmyverse to find more communities to join from here!

HiddenLayer5 ,
@HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

Fuck organic food where can I buy some silicon based food?

GregorGizeh ,

buy food without any kind of preservative

spoils in a day or two

shocked pikachu face

iAmTheTot ,

"Organic" and "nonGMO" are two things that will actively make me avoid your product.

Lodra ,
@Lodra@programming.dev avatar

Huh. Why??

kameecoding ,

Because I doubt there is anything we eat that's non gmo, we have been influencing the genetics of plants around us for centuries.

For example saying you only eat organic watermelon is fucking stupid, look at how it looked 2000 years ago and how it looks now.

lobut ,

Stupid question, what's wrong with organic?

azertyfun ,

Nothing inherently, you can go ahead and eat apples from your apple tree.

The main issue with "organic" foods is that the term is usually very badly regulated. Sometimes there is no difference between "organic" and "non organic"... besides price. Sometimes "organic" foods use very ecologically unfriendly techniques, or are grown/processed in countries where supply chains are not inspected anyway.

Then there's the fact that if something is different, it may not always be an environmental or health win. Growing your food in 30cm of water may be one organic and traditional way to avoid using pesticides (see: rice), but doing that with corn in the middle of Arizona would obviously be a terrible idea!

Anyway, overall I don't think organic foods are worse if you're well off enough that the price is not an issue. But you shouldn't feel personal guilt for buying whatever's cheaper, because quite often the alternative does not justify the price anyway. Eating truly "organic" food unfortunately requires a lot more involvement than picking the green package at a national supermarket chain.

ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

Sometimes there is no difference between “organic” and “non organic”

Probably the most amusing example is strawberries: it's essentially impossible to grow them without using non-organic pesticides (and there are such things as organic pesticides despite the near-universal but incorrect belief that "organic" means "no pesticides") so the USDA allows them to be labelled "organic" if they're grown with non-organic methods but then replanted and treated organically for a few days before being harvested and shipped to market.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • memes@lemmy.ml
  • random
  • incremental_games
  • meta
  • All magazines