Username: GeoBear
PersonId: 2989
Created: Sat Aug 25, 2007 at 09:02
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"Home" - A beautiful and urgent case for cooperativism

by: GeoBear

Sun Jun 21, 2009 at 22:01

June 21, 2009

Take a slo-mo aerial tour of Earth. Released on June 5th, over two and a half million people have already watched Home. The message is potent: it is too late for pessimism. We can redirect our use of energy, of farming, of transportation. We can and must live a different paradigm.

Read more ยป http://snipurl.com/km0se

Permission is granted to repost in full or in part, with a link back to my blog. The film is free. The link is in my review.  Enjoy ;-)

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'FOOD, Inc.' Exposes Horrors of the U.S. Centralized Food System

by: GeoBear

Mon Jun 15, 2009 at 13:15

By Rady Ananda
June 14, 2009

Factory food sickens humans, livestock and the environment

What we eat has changed more in the last 50 years than in the last 10,000. So asserts Robert Kenner's new film, FOOD, Inc., which opens nationwide June 19th.  The vast bulk of food production is now controlled by just a few mega-corporations with one value: profit. Relying on genetic engineering, pesticides and antibiotics, factory food is cheap, requiring little land. But the external costs to our health, the environment and the natural food industry are enormous.

Director: Robert Kenner
Producers: Robert Kenner and Elise Pearlstein
Co-Producer: Eric Schlosser
Released by Magnolia Pictures, with Participant Media and River Road Entertainment
93 minutes

FOOD, Inc. is the single most important film of the decade. Transcending hype and industry muzzling, the film exposes some of the cruel and unnatural aspects of industrial farms and food processing. It links epidemic rates of US obesity and diabetes with our intake of genetically engineered food.

NPR called it this summer's "suspense thriller."  

The film condemns how workers and animals are abused. Illegal immigrants, who cannot complain about working conditions, comprise most of the workers at industrial food plants. They are vulnerable to raids and deportation. No corporate executives are arrested.

Well researched and well scored, the film debunks the pastoral fantasy spin. Industrial food is not grown, raised or processed on a farm. The animals see no sunshine, are kept immobile in cages, and are genetically or chemically modified. Those that are somewhat mobile are bioengineered to plump their bodies faster than their bones and muscles can support. They flop helplessly to the floor when trying to move.

Read the full review, with images, at http://snipurl.com/k4s6d  

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