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The money saved by corporations from producing food on cheap foreign lands, with cheap labor, and with pesticides banned for use in this country, is not passed along to the consumer. It simply serves to increase the profits of the corporations.
By Cary FowlerDecember 1978The world’s hungry people are being thrown into ever more direct competition with the well-fed and the over-fed. The fact that something is grown near your home in abundance, or that your country’s natural and financial resources were consumed in producing it, or even that you yourself toiled to grow it will no longer mean that you will be likely to eat it.
By Alice Ammerman, Frances Moore Lappé, Joseph Collins, Cary FowlerAugust 1978Does THE SUN have a future? The question is not rhetorical. THE SUN may not have a future. That’s something I don’t like to contemplate, but no one likes to think about the death of someone, or something, he loves.
By Sy SafranskyJuly 1978The rising lust for smoking tobacco made Durham and Duke. In 1870, a year after it was incorporated, the one-square mile village had a population of 256. There were 3,000 residents by 1884, 6,679 by 1900, and an estimated 18,000 by 1907.
By Barry JacobsJuly 1978Counting houses, losing a dime, joining a commune
By Our ReadersMarch 1978In the future “work” as is now known will exist for only a few technicians. Most citizens will be supported by a welfare state which is fully automated. This will be achieved in each home by a device that looks much like an electric chair.
By C.A. TaorminaOctober 1977The cartoons in this selection are available as a PDF only. Click here to download.
By David TerrenoireOctober 1977Initial decisions about what we will eat are made by the supermarket chains when they divvy up their shelf space. And these decisions are based on different values than we would apply. More often than not, the result is one row of fresh fruits and vegetables and ten or twelve rows of boxes and cans.
By Cary FowlerOctober 1977Personal, political, provocative writing delivered to your doorstep every month—without a single ad.
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