Staff Box
Book tells evils of fast food
By Jessy Bradish
Fast Food Nation, by Eric Schlosser (HarperCollins, 2002), gives the
reader a repulsive, and real, overview of the fast food industry, from its conception as a novelty
in the 1950s to its current integrated status in our nation. Feeding off of urban sprawl and increased
car travel, drive-thru and take-out have become canonized words in todays
fast-paced society. The Dark Side of the All-American Meal is what Schlosser aimed
to unveil in this nearly 400-page book, from the fascist political beliefs of Ray Kroc (McDonalds
founding father), to workers rights issues facing fast-food employees and the slow mechanization
of every aspect of a modern fast food kitchen, from the fries to the shakes to the burgers.
Schlosser ends the first chapter with a summation of the fast food industrys
mentality: there must always be gains. It must be faster, cheaper, easier, bigger. There should
be more profit, lower wages, universal products and no corporate responsibility. The conservative
beginnings of many fast food chains have spawned corporations that are against unions, minimum
wage, taxation and freedom of speech among other things. As Schlosser shows time and again, these
companies do not draw moral lines for themselves in the sand about who and where they will advertise
if its a demographic, theyre probably there before you are, as demonstrated
by McDonalds recent foray into satellite imaging as a way to predict urban sprawl when planning
new restaurant locations.
One new development in corporate power involves our nations vastly under-funded
educational systems. The spiraling cost of textbooks has led thousands of American school
districts to use corporate-sponsored reading materials. A 1998 study found that 80 percent were
biased, providing students with incomplete or slanted information that favored the sponsors
products and views, Schlosser tells us including Exxons statement that fossil
fuels created few environmental problems, and the American Coal Foundations claim that the
Earth could benefit rather than be harmed from increased carbon dioxide. In addition, the
money that companies spend on these textbooks are write-offs on their taxes, which means the American
people put the same amount of money into the system and end up with false information.
The government administrations that made this amoral corporatism possible have
also rolled back laws prohibiting monopolies some federally appointed overseers belong to
the groups they were policing. And constant lawsuits over fixed meat prices are being
filed against the fast food giants who are buying most of the meat in this country. In addition
to the industrys control over its farmers and food prices, they also currently have more
power to force meatpackers to test the meat for dangerous bacteria such as E. coli, which has been
revoked from the government through the deregulation of the food industry by the same administrations.
But the fast food corporations and disenfranchised workers are forgotten when
Schlosser tears apart his last target the meatpacking plants, where over 80 percent of our
meat is being slaughtered these days. With most of the workers in these plants unable to speak
English, and one-third unable to read or write in any language, the hygiene is notably substandard
and the working conditions literally kill people. Working with sharp knives, shoulder to shoulder,
the workers often cut themselves and each other in an attempt to keep up with the fast pace of
the assembly line. Each worker performs one task hundreds of times each day and cumulative stress
injuries are frequent, along with more serious accidents that require amputations and occasional
fatalities.
The danger to workers in these unsanitary and unsafe slaughterhouses ties into
Americas health: bacteria such as E. coli are transmitted from these factories to stores
and restaurants nation-wide. With current techniques for making ground beef, one infected cow can
contaminate 32,000 pounds of the disease. Strong cattle and restaurant lobbies fight government
regulation on these issues and as of now, the government has no jurisdiction to recall fatally
tainted meat.
Schlosser closes with some proactive ideas, my favorite being that restaurant
businessmen will sell free-range, organic, grass-fed hamburgers if you demand it. They will
sell whatever sells at a profit. There are a lot of reasons why we shouldnt eat beef,
I came to realize, or patronize the fast food industry, but no one can say it like he does. So
next time youre bored or trying to cut the red meat out of your meal, I would highly recommend
it.
Recycled Paper at Oberlin? The choice is yours
By Rob Stenger
This past year at Oberlin, there has been an alarming development with respect
to waste reduction and recycling efforts on campus. I am referring to the dramatic (though perhaps
unnoticed by many) shift to virgin-fiber based paper used by campus printing and copier machines.
This change in purchasing policy has been enacted due to the recent budgetary constraints of the
Administration and the shrinkage of the endowment due to the downturn of the stock market. Costs
have been cut in many sectors, and environmental stewardship in the form of recycled paper has
been yet another victim.
While the Recyclers understand the financial difficulties imposed by the current
economic situation of the College, the choice of recycled paper as a sacrifice is a poor one. We
are sponsoring a question in the upcoming Senate referendum asking students to reverse this policy
by funding the difference in cost between recycled and virgin paper, in hopes that the student
body of Oberlin College will step up and bear the responsibility of a sustainable lifestyle that
the Administration is unwilling/unable to do at this point in time. Towards that end, we would
like to provide a brief discussion of why such an action should be taken and the positive effects
of buying recycled paper.
The benefits of recycled paper are many, while the advantages of virgin-fiber
based paper are solely financial and tenuous at best. Creating one ton of paper from virgin-fibers
requires an average of 3.5 tons of trees, while the ratio for using recycled fibers is roughly
one to one. Recycling paper thus reduces the amount of paper which enters the waste stream, but
the amount of landfill space saved is less important than the reduction in acreage necessary to
support the paper demands of consumers. This can lessen the pressure on paper manufacturers to
convert natural forests to tree plantations, which, though sustainable, can reduce
the biodiversity and damage the ecosystem of an area severely.
Recycled paper can also help to reduce the effects of global warming. By reducing
the amount of landfill waste generated by consumers, recycled paper helps to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions in the form of methane, which are generated when waste decomposes. Paper makes up
over a third of the U.S. waste stream, and one pound of methane produced by landfill decomposition
is equivalent to 69 pounds of carbon dioxide, the main gas contributing to climate change.
Post-consumer waste content means that the material being used in recycling has already served
its end-purpose and if not recycled would be landfilled. Purchasing paper with a high PCW content
directly stimulates community and business recycling programs by increasing demand. This stimulated
demand can help to create economies of scale which will lower the cost difference between recycled
paper and virgin paper. The process of producing recycled paper is not inherently more expensive
(and is less expensive by far when the discounted ecological costs of virgin paper production are
taken into account), but needs increased consumer demand to make it more cost-effective. Most pre-consumer
material such as wood chips is already reused by industry and so an increase in this type of recycled
content does not increase the demand for recycling initiatives or divert waste from landfills.
One myth regarding recycled paper is that it does not perform as well as virgin
papers. However, according to a comprehensive study by the Paper Task Force, the age, capabilities
and operation of papermaking equipment have a greater impact on the properties of the finished
paper than its recycled or virgin content. Recycled paper grades are of equal quality to
virgin paper grades thus, neither quality nor performance are issues in paper selection.
Last semester at Oberlin, Domtar brand paper, which contained 30 percent post-consumer
waste (PCW) content, was phased out while Hammermill Copy Plus, which contains zero percent recycled
fibers, was phased in. While a return to 30 percent PCW paper would be preferable to nothing, 100
percent PCW is ideal and fully feasible. In an ongoing research project, the Recyclers have selected
Badger Envirographic 100 as a suitable candidate brand of paper to fill this role. It is qualified
by the U.S. Government Printing Office for use in federal agency printing and copying machines,
and has also been tested and approved by the Oberlin CIT for use in campus printers. Badger Envirographic
contains 100 percent PCW. Furthermore, it is processed chlorine free (PCF), meaning that the paper
fibers are not re-bleached with chlorine (a by-product of the chlorine bleaching process is dioxin,
a potent carcinogen in the same class of chemicals as DDT).
The price difference between 1000 pages (a print quota) of virgin paper and
100 percent PCW recycled paper is $4.60. By funding this purchase, the students of the college
have a chance to make a difference. Not only will a recycled paper fund allow an end to our funding
of the ecological destruction and waste associated with virgin paper production, but it will also
stimulate the growth of the recycled paper industry, both directly, through financial incentives
and indirectly, through the influence Oberlin exerts as a progressive institution of higher learning
in society and in academia.
For more information, contact the Recyclers:
recycle@oberlin.edu
www.oberlin.edu/recycle
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