• @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    I’ve always pointed to the fact that over half the food in the US is left to rot until it ends up in a landfill yet food insecurity is rampant in the richest country in the world.

    When they send police to arrest people, including homeless people and parents trying to feed their kids, for dumpster diving behind grocery stores and some grocery stores now literally shred or pour bleach on the packages of still sealed food that they throw away, maybe it’s a sign that society needs a pretty major paradigm change on how goods and services should be distributed.

    When police arrest people for giving homeless people food, maybe we should question who they’re really here to serve and protect.

    • Lenny
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      146 months ago

      This is a chat between my husband and I the other day and I’ve just felt so sad about it since then. Horrific display of wastefulness to humans AND birds

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Sigh, remember when small restaurants and bistros literally used to let employees take unsold food at the end of the day, and if there were still food left after going through the employees it would be set out on the counter for anyone else to take? Remember when that used to be a massive perk of working in food service?

        Apparently many large chain venues aren’t even letting employees take unsold food anymore, using “safety” as an excuse even though the sellable and unsellable food are often literally minutes apart.

        • Lenny
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          56 months ago

          I used to dumpster dive, and got told time and time again how disgusting it was, despite the fact that the food was packaged, inside a large trash bag with other non trash merch. You’d wear gloves and wash the packaging before opening as a precaution. It was no different to that item being in a plastic shopping bag, yet somehow the transition to inside a dumpster made people freak out about it.

          We’ve become so disillusioned about food, it’s crazy.

    • Xanthrax
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      76 months ago

      It’s not a war against homelessness, it’s a war against THE homeless. I completely agree.

    • @interceder270
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      26 months ago

      maybe it’s a sign that society needs a pretty major paradigm change on how goods and services should be distributed.

      The disparity in wealth just needs to continue to grow until enough people recognize they are not on the receiving end of it.