
By Arun Gupta - Illustrations by Jennifer Lew and Ryan Dunsmuir
To see Gupta discuss "Bacon as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" August 3 on Democracy Now, see here
Among my fondest childhood memories is savoring a strip of perfectly cooked
bacon that had just been dragged through a puddle of maple syrup. It
was an illicit pleasure; varnishing the fatty, salty, smoky bacon with
sweet arboreal sap felt taboo. How could such simple ingredients
produce such riotous flavors?
That was then. Today, you don't need to tax
yourself applying syrup to bacon McDonald's does it all for you with
the McGriddle. It conveniently takes the filling for an Egg McMuffin,
an egg, American cheese and pork product, and nestles it in a
pancake-like biscuit suffused with genuine fake-maple syrup flavor.
The McGriddle is just one moment in an era of
extreme food combinations a moment in which bacon plays a starring
role from high cuisine to low. There's bacon ice cream; bacon-infused
vodka; deep-fried bacon; chocolate-dipped bacon; bacon-wrapped hot dogs
filled with cheese (which are fried and then battered and fried again);
brioche bread pudding smothered in bacon sauce; there's hard-boiled
eggs coated in mayonnaise encased in bacon called, appropriately, the
"heart attack snack"; bacon salt; bacon doughnuts, cupcakes and
cookies; bacon mints; "baconnaise," which Jon Stewart described as "for
people who want to get heart disease but [are] too lazy to actually
make bacon"; Wendy's "Baconnator," six strips of bacon mounded atop a
half-pound cheeseburger, which sold 25 million in its first eight
weeks; and the outlandish bacon explosion, a barbecued meat brick
composed of two pounds of bacon wrapped around two pounds of sausage.
It's easy to dismiss this gonzo gastronomy as
typical American excess best followed with a Lipitor chaser. Behind the
proliferation of bacon offerings, however, is a confluence of
government policy, factory farming, the boom in fast food and
manipulation of consumer taste that has turned bacon into a weapon of
mass destruction.
While bacon's harmful effects were once limited to
individual consumers, its production in vast porcine cities has become
an environmental disaster. The system of industrialized hog (and beef
and poultry) farming that has developed over the last 40 years turns
out to be ideal for breeding novel strains of deadly pathogens such as
the current pandemic of swine flu. If a new killer virus appears, like
the Spanish Flu that killed tens of millions after World War I, factory
farms will have played a central role in its genesis.
Concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs)
churn out cheap but flavorless meat. However, for the CAFOs to exist
there must be demand for the product. That's where the industrial food
sector comes in. Chains like McDonald's, Chili's, Taco Bell, Applebee's
and Pizza Hut approach the tasteless, limp factory beef, pork and
chicken as a blank canvas with which to create highly enticing, even
addictive, foods by pumping it full of fat, salt, sugar, chemicals and
flavorings.
The chains lard on bacon in particular as a
high-profit method of adding an item that has a "high flavor profile,"
a "one-of-a-kind product that has no taste substitute." According to
David Kessler, author of The End of Overeating, a standard
joke in the restaurant chain industry goes, "When in doubt, throw
cheese and bacon on it." In essence, the chains conjure up endless
variations on the McGriddle that itself is the mass-produced version of
the maple syrup-soaked bacon strip from our childhood.
Thus, the crisis of factory farming becomes its
own solution through the use of the industrially produced bacon. We
know our industrial food system is killing the planet and killing us
with heart disease, diabetes and cancer, but how can we resist when it
tastes oh-so-good?

Our current food system has its roots in the Dust
Bowl and the Great Depression. With thousands of farming families
fleeing the land, the Roosevelt administration dispensed credit and
established price supports to stabilize the agricultural sector. The
policy worked, but inadvertently created large grain surpluses. The
problem of surpluses was temporarily alleviated by the demand created
by the total mobilization of the state and nation during World War II.
But after the war, the question of what to do with the excess
production became more pressing.
The answer was to dump the surpluses, first on a
devastated Europe, then during the Korean War and finally as
"humanitarian aid" to Third World countries.
In the name of national food security, the U.S.
government subsidized farmers to produce more food than Americans could
eat, and to dump that surplus as a weapon in the Cold War. This policy
favored economy of scale and technological innovation to increase
yields, because managing overproduction was more effective if the farm
sector was reduced and subsidies targeted at large-scale monoculture
producers rather than farmers who produced a variety of goods or had
small plots of land.
While the U.S. farm population had been shrinking
since the late 18th century, when it was 90 percent of the general
population, in 1940, on the eve of the U.S. entry into World War II,
some 18 percent of Americans were still farmers. By 1970 farmers
accounted for only 4.6 percent of the populace because small farms
could not compete with government-subsidized agribusiness.

It's government policy that allowed CAFOs to come into being. Karl Polanyi argued decades ago in The Great Transformation
that "laissez-faire was planned." In other words, government regulation
of land, labor and finance creates the conditions for free-market
capitalism to operate.
The post-WWII period witnessed a series of
agricultural revolutions that have been exported around the world,
starting in the 1950s with the U.S.-led "Green Revolution" in cereal
grains. In the 1970s, the "Livestock Revolution" went global. And the
1980s saw the "Blue Revolution" — factory farming of fish and seafood.
Over the past few decades, global meat production has increased by more
than 500 percent.
In Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlosser
recounts the 1960s rise of Iowa Beef Packers (IBP), which
revolutionized the beef industry. IBP came into being because it was
able to exploit heavily subsidized water, fuel, land and grain for
cattle feed; a national transportation infrastructure; and anti-union
laws.
IBP's innovation was to combine slaughterhouses
with enormous cattle feedlots. In the slaughterhouses, IBP used Fordist
production techniques to de-skill meat cutting, paid low wages and
busted unions to drive prices down and rake in profits. Faced with
relentless low-cost competition from IBP, other meatpackers had to
adapt or die. By 1971, notes Schlosser, the last Chicago stockyard shut
down. (The modern poultry industry, typified by Tyson Foods and Perdue
Farms, got its start during World War II with the help of price
controls and government-created demand.)

In the 1970s Smithfield Foods revolutionized hog production. According to a Rolling Stone
2006 expose, Smithfield "controls every stage of production, from the
moment a hog is born until the day it passes through the
slaughterhouse. [It] imposed a new kind of contract on farmers: The
company would own the living hogs; the contractors would raise the pigs
and be responsible for managing the hog shit and disposing of dead
hogs. The system made it impossible for small hog farmers to survive —
those who could not handle thousands and thousands of pigs were driven
out of business."
In the 1950s there were 2.1 million hog farmers in
the United States with an average of 31 hogs each. As of 2007 there
were just 79,000 hog farmers left, averaging over 1,000 hogs each. A
single Smithfield subsidiary in Utah holds half-a-million hogs and
produces more shit every day than all the residents of Manhattan.
Rolling Stone's stunning report describes
the lakes of manure that surround pig factories as Pepto Bismol colored
because of the "interactions between the bacteria and blood and
afterbirths and stillborn piglets and urine and excrement and chemicals
and drugs." (Vegetarians who think they are unaffected by this toxic
fecal frappe should think again: The sludge is often used to
"fertilize" crops that may find their way to your table.)

Beef, poultry and hog CAFOs could not exist without large-scale environmental
devastation. Governments at every level exempt these operations from
laws and regulations covering air pollution, water pollution and solid
waste disposal. They are also largely free from proper
bio-surveillance, that is, public monitoring to detect, track and
report on the outbreak of diseases.
Mike Davis, author of The Monster at Our Door,
writes that scrutiny of the interface between human and animal diseases
is "primitive, often non-existent" because companies such as
Smithfield, IBP and Tyson would have to spend money on surveillance and
upgrade conditions at their hellish animal factories.
For Smithfield, devastating the environment is
just a minor cost of doing business. In Virginia in 1997 the company
was slapped with a $12.6 million fine for 6,982 violations of the Clean
Water Act — an average of $1,800 per violation.
Rolling Stone paints a grim picture of
what goes on inside a hog CAFO: "Sows are artificially inseminated and
fed and delivered of their piglets in cages so small they cannot turn
around. Forty fully grown 250-pound male hogs often occupy a pen the
size of a tiny apartment. They trample each other to death. There is no
sunlight, straw, fresh air or earth. The floors are slatted to allow
excrement to fall into a catchment pit under the pens, but many things
besides excrement can wind up in the pits: afterbirths, piglets
accidentally crushed by their mothers, old batteries, broken bottles of
insecticide, antibiotic syringes, stillborn pigs …"

Factory farms are a hotspot of new infectious
diseases. According to a former chief of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's Special Pathogens Branch, "Intensive
agricultural methods often mean that a single, genetically homogeneous
species is raised in a limited area, creating a perfect target for
emerging diseases, which proliferate happily among a large number of
like animals in close proximity."

In his book Bird Flu, Michael Greger, MD, writes, "Factory farms are considered such breeding
grounds for disease that much of the animals' metabolic energy is spent
just staying alive under such filthy, crowded, stressful conditions;
normal physiological processes like growth are put on the back burner.
Reduced growth rates in such hostile conditions cut into profits, but
so would reducing the overcrowding. Antibiotics, then, became another
crutch the industry can use to cut corners and cheat nature."
But what happens when a poultry factory is doused
with antivirals? According to Greger, "Say there's a one in a billion
chance of an influenza virus developing resistance to amantadine [an
antiviral drug]. Odds are, any virus we would come in contact with
would be sensitive to the drug. But each infected bird poops out more
than a billion viruses every day. The rest of their viral colleagues
may be killed by the amantadine, but that one resistant strain of virus
will be selected to spread and burst forth from the chicken farm,
leading to widespread viral resistance and emptying our arsenal against
bird flu."
To compound the problem, "the raising of swine is
increasingly centralized in huge operations, often adjacent to poultry
farms and migratory bird habits," writes Mike Davis. These operations
often abut cities, meaning the "superurbanization of the human
population … has been paralleled by an equally dense urbanization of
its meat supply." These elements have produced an interspecies blender
that is spitting out new viruses at an alarming rate, like the current
swine flu bug.
While CAFOs excel in creating novel pathogens,
they also churn out mountains of cheap but tasteless meat. So there is
another important component to our deadly food system, and that's the
science and industrial manufacturing of highly processed foods.

Just as factory farms depended on government
policies and regulations to exist, the processed food industry could
not exist without industrial farming. In 1966 McDonald's switched from
using about 175 different suppliers of fresh potatoes to J.R. Simplot
Company's frozen French fry. Within a decade, notes Eric Schlosser,
McDonald's went from 725 outlets nationwide to more than 3,000.
Tyson did the same with chicken, which was seen as
a healthy alternative to red meat. It teamed up with McDonald's to
launch the Chicken McNugget nationwide in 1983. Within one month
McDonald's became the number two chicken buyer in the country, behind
KFC. The McNugget also transformed chicken processing. By 2000, Tyson
made most of its money from processed chicken, selling its products to
90 of the 100 largest restaurant chains. As for the health benefits,
Chicken McNuggets have twice as much fat per ounce as a McDonald's
hamburger.
The entire food industry, perhaps best described
as "eatertainment," has refined the science of taking the cheap
commodities pumped out by agribusiness and processing them into
foodstuffs that are downright addictive. Food is far more than mere
fuel intake. Food is marketed as a salve for our emotional and
psychological ills, and dining out as a social activity, a cultural
outlet and entertainment.
To get us in the door (or to pick up their product
at the supermarket), food companies stoke our gustatory senses. The
food has to be visually appealing, have the right feel, texture and
smell. And most of all, it has to taste good. To that end, writes
Kessler in The End of Overeating, the food industry has homed in on the "three points of the compass" — fat, salt and sugar.
One anonymous food-industry executive told
Kessler, "Higher sugar, fat and salt make you want to eat more." The
executive admitted food is designed to be "highly hedonic," and that
the food industry is "the manipulator of the consumers' minds and
desires."
Referencing human and lab animal studies, Kessler
shows how varying concentrations and combinations of fat and sugar
intensify production of neurochemicals, much the same way cocaine does.
One professor of psychiatry explains that people self-administer food
in search of "different stimulating and sedating effects," — much like
a "speedball," which combines cocaine and heroin.
Kessler deconstructs numerous restaurant chain
foods as nothing more than layers of fat, salt and sugar. Take the
McGriddle: It starts with a "cake" of refined wheat flour (essentially
a sugar), pumped with vegetable shortening, three kinds of sugar and
salt. This cradles an egg, cheese and bacon topped by another cake.
Thus, the McGriddle, from the bottom up, is fat, salt, sugar, fat and
salt in the egg, then fat and salt in the cheese, fat and salt in the
bacon, finished off with fat, salt and sugar. And this doesn't indicate
how highly processed the sandwich is. McDonald's bacon, a presumably
simple product, lists 18 separate ingredients, many of them used
multiple times.
The success of the McGriddle and the Baconator has
inspired an arms-race-like escalation among chain restaurants. Burger
King's French Toast Sandwich is nearly identical to the McGriddle. In
2004 Hardee's went thermonuclear with its 1,420-calorie "Monster
Thickburger," laden with 107 grams of fat. And people are gobbling them
up.
Perhaps you feel smug (and nauseated) by all this
because you are a vegetarian, a vegan or a locavore, or you only eat
organic and artisanal foods. Don't. Americans are in the thrall of the
food industry. More than half the population eats fast food at least
once a week; 92 percent eat fast food every month; and "every month
about 90 percent of American children between the ages of three and
nine visit a McDonald's," states Schlosser.
The food industry has successfully appropriated
the childhood creation of bacon dripping with syrup and repackaged it
as a product that provides us with a coveted but deadly hit of salt,
fat and sugar.
We know this food is killing us slowly with
diseases like diabetes, heart disease and cancer. But we cannot stop,
because we are addicts, and the food industry is the pusher. Even if we
could opt out completely (which is almost impossible), it is still our
land being ravaged, our water and air being poisoned, our dollars
subsidizing the destruction, our public health at risk from bacterial
and viral plagues.
Changing our perilous food system means making
choices — not to shop for a greener planet, but to collectively
dismantle factory farming, giant food corporations and the political
system that allows them to exist. It's a big order, but it's the only
option left on the menu.
This story was originally published on alternet.org.

McGriddles® Cakes:
Water, enriched bleached wheat flour
(bleached flour, niacin, iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic
acid), sugar, dextrose, palm oil, soybean oil, brown sugar, leavening
(sodium acid pyrophosphate, sodium bicarbonate, monocalcium phosphate),
natural and artificial flavors (contain milk, soy), rice flour, whey powder,
salt, modified tapioca starch, buttermilk powder, color (caramel),
soybean lecithin, carnauba wax, preservatives (TBHQ, citric acid).
Scrambled Eggs (2):
Pasteurized whole eggs with sodium acid
pyrophosphate, citric acid and monosodium phosphate (added to preserve
color), nisin (preservative). Prepared with Liquid Margarine: Liquid
soybean oil, water, partially hydrogenated soybean oil, salt,
hydrogenated cottonseed oil, soy lecithin, mono-and diglycerides,
sodium benzoate and potassium sorbate (preservatives), artificial
flavor, citric acid, vitamin A palmitate, beta carotene (color).
Processed Cheese Slice: Cheese (milk, modified
milk ingredients, bacterial culture, salt, calcium chloride, microbial
enzyme, lipase), modified milk ingredients, water, sodium citrate
and/or sodium phosphate, salt, potassium sorbate, citric acid, colour,
soy lecithin.
Bacon: Cured with water, salt, smoke
flavoring, sodium phosphate, seasoning [gum acacia, smoke flavor,
maltodextrin, hydrolyzed corn protein, natural flavor (vegetable
source), autolyzed yeast extract, hydrolyzed corn, wheat, and soy
protein, modified cornstarch, contains less than 2% of disodium
guanylate, disodium inosinate, natural flavor (vegetable source), salt,
succinic acid, xanthan gum], sodium erythorbate, sodium nitrite.

Sources: fatfreekitchen.com, nutritiondata.com, nutrition.mcdonalds.com
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