https://youtu.be/vwoI-1z_edo

'In 2001, Eric Schlosser published Fast Food Nation: an investigation into the toxic depths of America’s food industry. Twenty five years later, the book remains an urgent intervention, as much for what it says about workers’ rights as for our agricultural systems and dietary health.

On Downstream this week, #AshSarkar talks to #EricSchlosser about what’s changed since 2001, and what remains unreformed. How have we developed one food system for the rich and another for everyone else? Could the food industry operate – and America eat – without migrant workers? And did Eric foresee that marijuana edibles would become the new fast food?

02:39 The Origins of Fast Food Nation
06:52 Putting Workers Rights at the Centre
08:55 Should We Still Be Marxists?
12:37 Updating #Marxism
15:47 Social Justice Isn’t Inevitable
18:56 The History of Food Industry Strikes
24:54 Racism in America Today
28:04 A Day With Bernie Sanders
31:22 Meat Packing During the Pandemic
34:00 RFK and ‘Make America Healthy Again’
38:44 Is Healthy Food Only for the Rich?
45:34 How Corn Subsidies Are Destroying America
47:40 The Power of Boycotts
52:23 The Legalisation of Weed
57:59 Cannabis: The New Fast Food
1:01:30 On Pornography
1:06:39 America Is Nothing Without Migrants

#NovaraMedia #Video

RFK, Ultra-Processed Food & the Corporate Capture of The State | Ash Sarkar Meets Eric Schlosser

YouTube

Today in Labor History January 24, 1961: A B-52 bomber, carrying three 4-megaton Mark 39 nuclear bombs, broke up in mid-air, dropping its nuclear payload over North Carolina. Five crewmen successfully bailed out of the aircraft and landed safely. Another ejected, but did not survive the landing. Two others died in the crash. Each of the bombs had more than 250 times the destructive power of the Hiroshima bomb. Each one was large enough to create a 100% kill zone within an 8.5 miles radius. A supervisor of nuclear safety at Sandia National Laboratories said that "one simple, dynamo-technology, low voltage switch stood between the United States and a major catastrophe." However, there is evidence that the switch of at least one of the bombs was set to ARM. No one knows why none of them exploded. And while the authorities were able to recover the uranium core from two of the bombs, one of them is still lost somewhere in North Carolina.

For a truly terrifying look at just how many times we were just a hair trigger away from a major nuclear accident, read Eric Schlosser’s “Command and Control.” Also consider that we are currently in a massive resurgence of the nuclear arms race, with potential flashpoints in Ukraine, Israel, China, and Iran.

#nuclear #atomic #bomb #NorthCarolina #missile #coldwar #hiroshima #EricSchlosser #nonfiction #books #author #writer #russia #ukraine #china #israel #iran #palestine @bookstadon

Today in Labor History January 24, 1961: A B-52 bomber, carrying three 4-megaton Mark 39 nuclear bombs, broke up in mid-air, dropping its nuclear payload over North Carolina. Five crewmen successfully bailed out of the aircraft and landed safely. Another ejected, but did not survive the landing. Two others died in the crash. Each of the bombs had more than 250 times the destructive power of the Hiroshima bomb. Each one was large enough to create a 100% kill zone within an 8.5 miles radius. A supervisor of nuclear safety at Sandia National Laboratories said that "one simple, dynamo-technology, low voltage switch stood between the United States and a major catastrophe." However, there is evidence that the switch of at least one of the bombs was set to ARM. No one knows why none of them exploded. And while the authorities were able to recover the uranium core from two of the bombs, one of them is still lost somewhere in North Carolina.

For a truly terrifying look at just how many times we were just a hair trigger away from a major nuclear accident, read Eric Schlosser’s “Command and Control.” Also consider that we are currently in a massive resurgence of the nuclear arms race, with potential flashpoints in Ukraine, Israel, China, and Iran.

#nuclear #atomic #bomb #NorthCarolina #missile #coldwar #hiroshima #EricSchlosser #nonfiction #books #author #writer #russia #ukraine #china #israel #iran #palestine @bookstadon

Bill Maher Gets Word On The Potential Next Pandemic From ‘Fast Food Nation’ Author Eric Schlosser

There's trouble brewing in Texas, said 'Real Time' guest Eric Schlosser,

Deadline

Today in Labor History January 24, 1961: A B-52 bomber, carrying three 4-megaton Mark 39 nuclear bombs, broke up in mid-air, dropping its nuclear payload over North Carolina. Five crewmen successfully bailed out of the aircraft and landed safely. Another ejected, but did not survive the landing. Two others died in the crash. Each of the bombs had more than 250 times the destructive power of the Hiroshima bomb. Each one was large enough to create a 100% kill zone within an 8.5 miles radius. A supervisor of nuclear safety at Sandia National Laboratories said that "one simple, dynamo-technology, low voltage switch stood between the United States and a major catastrophe." However, there is evidence that the switch of at least one of the bombs was set to ARM. No one knows why none of them exploded. And while the authorities were able to recover the uranium core from two of the bombs, one of them is still lost somewhere in North Carolina.

For a truly terrifying look at just how many times we were just a hair trigger away from a major nuclear accident, read Eric Schlosser’s “Command and Control.”

#nuclear #atomic #bomb #NorthCarolina #missile #coldwar #hiroshima #EricSchlosser #nonfiction #books #author #writer @bookstadon

'Food, Inc. 2' Review: Lacks the First Film's Revelatory Insights

“Food, Inc. 2” has some vital if mostly familiar things to say about the crisis state of the American food system. But it’s a far less sure-footed and authoritative documentary than &#8…

Variety
‘Food, Inc. 2’ Review: A Thoughtful Balance of Heartening and Dire

Following up on the 2008 documentary, part two tracks promising breakthroughs and deepening problems in American agriculture and the multinational food industry.

The Hollywood Reporter

@CharredStencil
> All I've heard is that the economies of scale are powerful, and small farms are disappearing.

That's the agri-corporate PR line, yes. From what I've read (eg #JohnRobbins, #MichaelPollan, #EricSchlosser, #RichardHeinberg) in the US it's less to do with economies of scale, and more to do with massive federal and state government subsidies to industrial monocrops and their associated businesses (poisons, biotech etc), and a regulatory environment heavily slanted in their favour