• @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    This is too narrow. Why do we subsidize food at all? America is supposed to be free market capitalists, right? Subsidies don’t fit that definition?

    (in reality, farmers need some sort of support system, I believe, as do we all, but subsidies don’t fit the free market capitalism narrative.)

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      We’ll you’re pointing out how ridiculous it is to believe in a free market. Because one has never existed. What ought we subsidize though? Obviously foods that are better for our environment, climate, health, economy and for animal welfare.

      Dairy, meat and egg coalitions have known for years that subsidies and marketing are things they need to pursue for greater success, they’ve used tactics similar to tobacco companies with their marketing and they’ve used lobbying tactics similar to oil and gas giants as well. It’s clear we need to stop subsidizing them.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        We’ll you’re pointing out how ridiculous it is to believe in a free market.

        Yep! That was my point.

        What ought we subsidize though? Obviously foods that are better for our environment, climate, health, economy and for animal welfare.

        Yeah, if we must subsidize something, then sure, those sound good.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Subsidies only benefit the big “farms” (industrial operations) and encourage producing the subsidized crop regardless of its value. The incentives are so perverse that farms end up dumping their milk because there is no market for the amount produced.

        Personally am in favor of eliminating all food subsidies. Making food valuable could eliminate so many of our other societal problems - poor health, destruction of natural resources, overpopulation.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              You can… But we’ve chosen to subsidize farming since that tends to be the raw ingredients. So in a way all food is kinda subsidized.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            I can come up with my own, but what are some of the side effects you’re thinking of? Right now food is so cheap that most people’s only metric is price, with no consideration for quality, nutrition, environmental impact, etc. Most of what we are eating isn’t really food, just an engineered combination of four or five heavily subsidized crops.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Right now food is so cheap that most people’s only metric is price

              This makes no sense to me - people can choose healthy or unhealthy options because food is so cheap generally. Do you think that if food becomes expensive people will buy more healthy food for… reasons?

              Most of what we are eating isn’t really food, just an engineered combination of four or five heavily subsidized crops.

              This is pure bullshit.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                Maybe you don’t live in the US. At least here, people spend a smaller portion of their income on food than any society at any time in history, but the most on health care. Not getting into the many reasons health care is so expensive, the fact that food is an afterthought has clearly led to major health issues. So what I am suggesting is that if we had to give more weight to decisions around food it could lead to better choices for our health. My bias is that I’m against the direction our society is heading tech-wise, so in my scenario people would be spending more time with their families and communities and less time and money rampantly consuming products.

                Regarding your second comment, how would you describe the majority of products in grocery stores if not what I claimed they are?

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  So what I am suggesting is that if we had to give more weight to decisions around food it could lead to better choices for our health.

                  You think making food more expensive is going to make people make better choices about what food they buy? I don’t think you live in the US, I think you live in fantasy land.

                  My bias is that I’m against the direction our society is heading tech-wise, so in my scenario people would be spending more time with their families and communities and less time and money rampantly consuming products.

                  🙄

                  Regarding your second comment, how would you describe the majority of products in grocery stores if not what I claimed they are?

                  “Food”.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 year ago

                    It’s not exactly a mystery that when something costs more people do it less. If subsidies went away, the price of processed “foods” made up of highly subsidized ingredients would rise. Most fresh fruits and vegetables are not subsidized so they would not. Do you not think it’s possible that if the price of poptarts, frozen waffles, and white bread surpassed fresh ingredients, some amount of people would choose to make their own breakfast? Similarly, big dairy and meat operations recieve the majority of subsidies in their industry. During COVID as prices rose, many people began buying meat and dairy locally.

                    If you consider boxed meals, canned goods with chemical additives, and shelf stable bread to be real food then I won’t argue with you.

    • @arin
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      21 year ago

      Something something corporate lobbyist reaping benefits at the cost of public taxed $

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Farming is risky business and people need food. You don’t want one bad season ruining a bunch of farmers who then stop farming. Subsidies help reduce that risk so that we have a more stable food supply.