Voices of the Food Revolution. John Robbins
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Part V: The Politics of Dinner—Food Policy for Healthy People
13. Dr. Raj Patel: Global Hunger, Global Hope
14. Michele Simon: How the Food Industry Undermines Your Health and How to Fight Back
15. Dennis & Elizabeth Kucinich: Bringing Sanity to Public Food Policy
16. Morgan Spurlock: Super Size Me
17. Nikki Henderson: Food Access in Historically Underinvested Communities
Steps You Can Take: Action for Systemic Change
Resources for Transforming Food Policy
Part VI: Food and the Human Spirit
18. Frances Moore Lappé: Choosing Courage
19. Kathy Freston: Leaning into a Healthier Life, One Bite at a Time
20. Marianne Williamson: Food, Body, and Divine Perfection
Steps You Can Take: Leaning into Consciousness and Alignment
Resources for Feeding Heart, Soul, and Community
Part VII: Being a Food Revolutionary
21. Ocean Robbins Interviews John Robbins
Acknowledgments
We want to express our deepest gratitude to our wives, Deo Robbins and Michele Robbins, who have put up with us through thick and thin for forty-six years and nineteen years respectively, and provided us with abundant wisdom, boundless support, and infinite love.
Thank you also to the other members of our family and support team. To Veronica Monet, for the countless ways she has nurtured and encouraged us. To Bodhi and River Robbins, our twins/grandtwins, for teaching us about unconditional love and the power of play. And to Tom Callanan, Elizabeth Hendren, and Megan Saunders for all the ways their love and labor have enriched our lives and literally made this book possible.
Thank you to the brilliant and inspiring visionaries we were blessed to interview as we developed this book: Bill McKibben, Caldwell Esselstyn, M.D., Dean Ornish, M.D., Elizabeth & Dennis Kucinich, Frances Moore Lappé, Gene Baur, Geneen Roth, Jeffrey Smith, Joel Fuhrman, M.D., Joseph Mercola, D.O., Kathy Freston, Marianne Williamson, Michele Simon, Morgan Spurlock, Neal Barnard, M.D., Nicolette Niman, Nikki Henderson, Raj Patel, Ph.D., Ronnie Cummins, Rory Freedman, T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D., and Vandana Shiva, Ph.D. We are profoundly grateful to each and every one of you for your beautiful and courageous work, for your eloquence, and for the generosity with which you share your wisdom.
Thank you to Lionel Peter Church, Gregg Boggs, Kaia Van Zandt, Candice Csaky, and Brandon Jennings, who did so much infrastructural work to make this possible.
Thank you to all of the affiliates and partners who have made the launch of the Food Revolution Network such a success. This book might never have happened without you. In particular, thank you to Bonny Meyer, Chris Kaatz, Dawn Moncrief and A Well-Fed World, Eron Zehavi, Jeff Nelson, Linda Riebel, Sylvia Bass, Tamara West, and Tera Warner for your unique and vital contributions.
We also want to thank Caroline Pincus and the whole team at Conari. It is always a privilege and a pleasure to work with you.
We want to thank all of the farmers, farm workers, retailers, community leaders, chefs, educators, advocates, conscious consumers, and community leaders who are working for more nutritious, local, organic, natural, conscious, and sustainable food.
And we want to thank you, dear reader, for every step you take to live the food revolution. You inspire us, and you are helping to change this world for the better.
Introduction
Thank you for participating in one of the most important conversations about our food that has ever taken place.
Our food chain is in crisis. Big agribusiness has made profits more important than your health—more important than the environment—more important than your right to know how your food is produced.
But beneath the surface, a revolution is growing.
From rural farms to urban dinner plates, from grocery store shelves to state ballot boxes, people are rising up and taking action. We're reclaiming our food systems and our menus, and we're taking responsibility for our health.
Today there's a huge and growing demand for food that is organic, sustainable, fair trade, non-GMO, humane, and healthy. In cities around the world, we're seeing more and more farmers' markets, and more young people getting back into farming. Grocery stores (even big national chains) are displaying local, natural, and organic foods with pride. The movements for healthy food are growing fast, and starting to become a political force.
The days of skyrocketing obesity and chronic illness . . .
The days of families, companies, and governments being driven to bankruptcy by mounting health-care costs . . .
The days of unlabeled, genetically engineered foods spreading rampantly through our food system while family farmers are driven out of business . . .
Those days may be numbered.
Medical science today knows a lot about the impact our food choices have on our health, and on the world around us. But so far, that information has been far too slow to spread. Despite all the progress, hundreds of millions of people just keep getting sicker, and our planet keeps getting more polluted.
Even our doctors often are ignorant of how powerfully food impacts health. On average, physicians still receive only 24 hours of nutritional education in all their years of medical school. No wonder doctors are more likely to tell you how you can undergo an invasive and dangerous $50,000 procedure than they are to tell you how you can simply and easily change your diet to prevent illness in the first place.