Stephen Budiansky The Local Food Movement Analysis

Improved Essays
Former editor of U.S. News & World Report and of Nature and the recipient of a Guggenheim Award, Stephen Budiansky, in his editorial, “The Local Food Movement: Is It a Better Way to Eat?”, published in 2010, addresses the topic of the local food movement, speaks on the results “arbitrary rules” and “locavores” play in the environment and argues that purchasing local food produce is not always the best thing to do. He backs up this claim by doing the following: first, he acknowledges the opposing argument by stating he enjoys the “pleasure and advantages” of eating what’s regional, fresh and in season; next, he presents statistical figures stated by advocates of the local food movement and brings them down due to their misunderstanding of the …show more content…
His effectiveness leads to the persuasion of his audience by the use of reason and logic. Budiansky provides facts and strikes down statistical figures often used by the opposing side. The author asserts, “The statistics brandished by local-food advocates to support such doctrine assertions are always selective, usually misleading, and often bogus.” Here the author states how the assertions made by the opposing argument are judicious and often lead to misleading information. He states that words such as “food-miles” and “sustainability” used by local food advocates are said everywhere without the awareness of the larger picture of energy and land use. An example of the author shutting down a statistic is when he states, “ One popular and oft-repeated statistic is that it takes thirty-six calories of fossil fuel energy to bring one calorie to bring one calorie of iceberg lettuce from California to the East Coast.” He bring this up to strengthen his overall argument. “That’s apples and oranges comparison to begin with, because you can’t eat petroleum or burn iceberg lettuce” (Budiansky). Budiansky also brings in other targets used by the opposing side in the likes of fertilizers and chemicals being used in modern farming. He answers this by revealing the actual “energy hog” in the industrial agriculture. The author provides facts in showing how American farms have not changed since in its total land mass …show more content…
Just like the author himself, I also appreciate and recognize the convenience of harvesting local fresh produce from your backyard and in general when certain produce are in season. I agree with what he has to say about making the most out of the resources available in certain areas in the nation or even in certain countries. Advocates for the local food movement also can not use statistics that are selective and often pertain to their own group as it can be misleading for others. I enjoy how the author compares the causes of total energy consumed by the American food system. While locavores see that it takes about fourteen percent of the total energy used in transportation, Budiansky acclaims that the share used in fertilizers and chemicals in modern farming use is lower, around eight percent. He also compares this total to the the abundance of energy common household appliances make up for, around twenty-two percent of all energy expenditures in the United States. Overall I must say that this article was well written and structured in a sense that it provided counters to opposing arguments. I must say that the tone used kept me engaged throughout the reading because it was serious. In conclusion, this article has not changed my view on this prevalent issue in today’s society, it only enhanced my current perception on

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    When we purchase food from the supermarket, the chain of connection between natural food and the land is disconnected. Author Berry mentioned in his article ‘The Pleasure of…

    • 185 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The present food production system should be changed into an efficiently sound system that uses renewable resources in local neighborhoods. We must throw out the fossil fuel- based food production system we have now and create an effective and maintainable one for the…

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This can be a true for many consumers who migrated towards the organic trend who felt it is morally inhumane to be eating corporate food when you have the option to eat “free range chickens” or “non-GMO fruits”. Furthermore, Shapin stated that organic farms can minimize its negative environmental impact by citing that Earthbound Farm “annually obviate the use of more than a quarter of a million pounds of toxic chemical pesticides and almost 8.5 million pounds of synthetic fertilizers, which saves 1.4 million gallons of the petroleum needed to produce those chemicals.” (429-430) Shapin aims to educate the readers on what it truly means to be…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Dramatic changes in the American farm economy occurred in the years following the Civil War. These changes came about because of aggressive and progressive farm coalitions. The agrarian interest was instrumental in initiating the dramatic changes in the manner in which State and Federal governments regulated commerce and were the forerunner of many future government agencies that were formed to protect the farmer, the consumer, the laborer and other facets of our economy. Industry prospered as a result of technology, government policies, economic condition and in a general sense the American standard of living improved greatly.…

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The book “Harvest for Hope”, written by Jane Goodall, outlines and inspires the audience to eat mindfully and healthily. The author explains how a great portion of our nutrient intake is unknowingly mixed with toxins, and made in miserable conditions. Dr. Goodall explains this successfully by analyzing the typical practices of industrial agriculture, which then leads her on to examine the repercussions of these techniques, pressing the point that we are fatally detached from nature and it’s ethics. This novel informs the public not only how to leave a small environmental footprint, but also how one can do so positively. Jane Goodall associates many of humanity’s problems to the way the nutrition is composed.…

    • 312 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    David Martirossian Over the past few decades, the locavore movement has received a considerable amount of attention and gained many supporters. The entire premise to this movement is simply eating locally grown or produced products. However, some people have expressed disagreements and worked towards debunking the claims made by locavores and their supporters. There are many issues that must be taken into consideration when assessing the locavore movement as it is associated with nutrition, community, sustainability, and economics.…

    • 493 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the new information age, many people are informed the important of food and heathy life style. Knowing this, many food producers hit their consumers with many bright image of the healthy local grown food. They try to create a mental association of local and healthy food, while in reality they are two different concepts. By definition the local grown food is the food grow and process in the proximity of 50 miles, which has nothing to do with its healthiness. The advertisers create this belief to make consumers buy more of the local food, but the consumers are still getting the same products.…

    • 1479 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Michael Pollan's piece “Big Food Strikes Back” in October 9, 2016 The New York Times Magazine begins with critique of a lack of the discussion about food system during 2008 U.S. presidential campaigns. Nevertheless, the food topic—being multi-dimensional—is inevitably a part of a larger, and more discussed, themes such as public health, climate change, and nation's' energy requirements, to name a few. Furthermore, the author in this article pinpoints the U.S. food systems' problems. The production of monocrops, which are subsidized by the government, result in high emissivity of the greenhouse gasses and have shown a negative impact on public health and ecology.…

    • 497 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Industrialization Dbq

    • 1685 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Farmers in the United States during the industrialization were impacted by problems that affected them. The farmers in America were beginning…

    • 1685 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The farmers who survived the change live miserable lives. They are no longer in control of their own farms. Companies lure…

    • 703 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When it comes to Global warming, being a vegetarian should be turned to as a first resort rather than going more toward the Prius, a car that has been made to cut vehicle emissions in half in an attempt to fight against global warming. Kathy Freston’s article “Vegetarian is the new Prius” caught my eye immediately when choosing an essay for the very fact that, I want Toyota Prius, and also because I’ve tried going vegetarian. Although I see nothing wrong with being a vegetarian, the lifestyle just didn’t work for me. I do to a certain extent agree with her argument because ever since I took ecology in high school, the environment has been very important to me, and I do what I can to help preserve it. Freston wrote that President Herbert Hoover promised a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage”.…

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Locavore Synthesis Essay

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The government has even given the smaller farms more money to be able to produce their crops. “... $2.3 billion was set aside this year for specialty crops,...”(Source E) which means mainly only small farms produce specialty crops and received more money to do so. Unlike in past years, they only received $100 million. There has also been an increase in the amount of small farms there are because of the demand and the need for them that came with this movement. This is “reshaping the business of growing and supplying food to Americans.”…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Toulmin Method

    • 982 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The different parts that are necessary for a successful argument are used and therefore makes McWilliams argument a success. Some of the main parts that make up an argument are the claim, the use of qualifiers and evidence that the author makes. Without the claim, the writer has nothing to debate about and the argument would be over before it even started. McWilliams’ claim is that the Locavore movement is not completely protecting and saving the earth because it does not take into account the other factors that use energy and contribute to the ruin of the earth. The author leads the reader to think that he will be writing on ALL the “other energy-hogging factors in food production.”…

    • 982 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Global warming, the carbon footprint, the greenhouse effect, whatever you wish to call it climate change is an issue that not only affects us but every living organism on this planet. In American author, Michael Pollan’s essay “Why bother?” he presents the issue of climate change and the very reason why it is still a problem after so many years, because of people who believe “why bother.” “Why bother” refers to the mental reality of believing that one individual can’t make any form of difference for an issue. Now while this idea is not entirely false I do feel it has a rather large hole in it.…

    • 1403 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    As I walk into my local Stop & Shop or Market Basket I am overwhelmed by my choices. I look at some of the products and sometimes I find pictures of small farms with wide green pastures. That is how the industrial food system wants us to interpret it, although I know this is far from reality. Most of these industrial farms do not even have animals, and the ones that do are simply awful. In the essay “The Future of Food Production, the author, Sam Forman mentions that as soon as food production became industrialized, the concern for the environment and the livestock diminished.…

    • 1220 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays