You're hungry, don't worry we have 500 options for your stomach.
This is why we're sick.
#consumerism and #capitalism at their finest!
I mean...yes, people do produce food in order that others (and themselves) may consume it.
"The chemicals designed to trick your brain"? As in, sugar and fat?
Well, there are such thing all over the world, different in different places, of course. For what it's worth, MSG is naturally occurring; it's coupled with the "umami" flavor profile.
But yes, people do put a lot of effort into making things tasty, even at the cost of health. But is that really so odd? For a birthday party, would you rather I make you a cake or a kale salad?
Which is fine...and also the result of processing. Flour, refined sugar, these things do not occur naturally. If you prefer a chocolate franzbrötchen, as all sane people do, the chocolate itself involves a fair bit of fermentation, milling, etc. It just seems kind of arbitrary. Even artificial or synthetic ingredients are really just the result of people taking naturally occurring materials and sending them through various processes, as a miller grinds grain to get flour.
Most things we eat are not necessary to our bodies. It's not a necessity to eat franzbrötchen, or any pastry really. It's a mistake to point to "necessity" as a legitimate metric in most contexts. Thankfully, and in no small part thanks to capitalism, we have moved far, FAR beyond the point where we only satisfy basic necessities.
There are plenty of people who would prefer to raise all their own food. A handful of them even do. But different people have different priorities, and I don't see anything wrong with that.
I think there are many reasons people are ill, but I think it's a mistake to point to capitalism as the cause, even indirectly. If the worst thing it ever does is produce too much abundance, that's a small price to pay.
A lot of these issues are not the fault of capitalism. Take corn, for example. It's in about half the food products available, and most doctors think that's bad. Why is it in so many products? Not because people demand that; it's because corn is super cheap (well, kind of). Why is it so cheap? The government HEAVILY subsidizes it, AKA violates the free market principles of capitalism.