Alas, the corruption of the humble "Bhutta" by the greedy Americans is
now complete...

 

 

 

The article from Wired is reproduced here, and the original paper with
the research is: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2008/11/10/0809870105


 

 

 

That the $100-billion fast food industry rests on a foundation of corn
has been known more through inference and observation than hard
scientific fact - until now. 

Chemical analysis from restaurants across the United States shows that
nearly every cow or chicken used in fast food is raised on a diet of
corn, prompting fresh criticism of the government's role in subsidizing
poor eating habits. 

"People had talked about what they observed or found out about, as
individual journalists or individual consumers," said University of
Hawaii geobiologist and study co-author A. Hope Jahren. But anecdotes do
not add up to scientific proof, she said. "We got national data on how
this food is being produced. It's very objective."

Corn is central to agriculture in the United States, where it is grown
in greater volumes and receives more government subsidies
<http://www.slate.com/id/2122>  than any other crop. Between 1995 and
2006 corn growers received $56 billion in federal subsidies
<http://farm.ewg.org/farm/progdetail.php?fips=00000&progcode=corn> , and
the annual figure may soon hit $10 billion.

But in recent years, environmentalists have branded corn as an icon of
unsustainable agriculture. It requires large amounts of fertilizer and
pesticides, both of which require large amounts of fossil fuel to
manufacture. 

Most of the resulting corn is fed to livestock who didn't evolve to
subsist entirely on corn. In cattle, eating corn increases flatulence
emissions of methane - a potent greenhouse gas - and creates an
intestinal environment rich in e. coli, a common cause of food
poisoning. That necessitates mixing cow feed with antibiotics, in turn
producing antibiotic-resistant disease strains. 

Many of those livestock end up in high-calorie, low-nutrition franchised
fast foods, which have been repeatedly linked to obesity, diabetes and
heart disease. Fast food's biggest selling point is its low price - and
that, say industry critics, is largely possible because of corn's
ubiquitous cheapness. 

"We're seeing that corn is the number-one reason that fast food is so
cheap and available," said Meredith Niles, a food policy analyst at the
Center for Food Safety who was not involved in the study. "U.S. programs
are subsidizing obesity in this country."

Jahren's team analyzed hamburgers, chicken sandwiches and french fries
from multiple McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's restaurants in six
U.S. cities. In both types of meat at every location, a telltale
configuration of nitrogen and carbon traces showed that the animals had
eaten corn-heavy diets; in the case of beef, 150 out of 162 samples came
from animals that ate nothing but corn. Fries were prepared in
corn-based oil. 

The results weren't surprising, said New York University food studies
expert Marion Nestle, but underscored the fact that "most people aren't
aware of the extent to which corn ingredients permeate the food supply."


Nutrition aside, Jahren urged consumers to consider the implications of
what they eat. "When you give a nickel to fast food, invariably it goes
right back to the corn industry," she said. 

For Niles, the results are a political challenge. 

"We have a new President taking his place in the White House. It's a
great opportunity to rearrange agricultural policy and to think about
obesity," she said. "This study shows that it comes down in a lot of
ways to one product." 

 

 

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