If you haven't seen Food, Inc., you need to
Literally it's insane. It's on Netflix if you have that and it's probs on Amazon Prime but please it addresses so many current problems and shows how they relate to the food industry Of the entire documentary the most important line was regarding the affordable-ness of food. "Would you buy the cheapest car?" Like would you? In the long run, it's gonna break down, get less gas mileage, and repairs will cost more money. It's the same with mass-production food; the problem is just masked and no one knows about it. The animals are treated cruelly, which is probably my biggest issue but that's me (there's plenty of other ones if animal cruelty doesn't bother you). Cows stand in their own manure, baby chicks are literally put on conveyor belts and stamped, chickens grow so quickly that their bodies shut down and they can't function, and the method used to kill pigs is throwing them down a conveyor belt into some sort of chamber and I don't know if they're crushed or killed with a poison gas because I missed that part but literally I have seen crime shows with sadists using the same method on their victims and if animals are not victims then idk.













