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Book of the Month/December 2012 PDF Print E-mail
Engaging the Culture - Book Review
Written by Douglas Wilson   
Saturday, 01 December 2012 09:16

Organic Food
The Truth About Organic Foods was a tasty, soul-satisfying book -- sweet and savory both. The author, Alex Avery, does not attack organic food as such, but what he does critique, devastatingly, is the pretension that wafts over the whole organic movement. If you like how organic tastes -- as Avery himself sometimes does -- then knock yourself out. It is great to live in a free country.

The pretension can be seen, for example, in claims made about "taste," but when those claims are tested in blind taste tests, the results are all over the road. Just as it is very hard to really taste when you have lost your sense of smell, so also it is sometimes hard to taste when you have lost your right to peek at the answer key.

But commitment to organic is frequently located in our religion genes, which means that the response to criticism is much more visceral than it might be to ordinary, runaday criticism. If you go to lunch with a friend, and he mentions that he thinks you might be happier with the grilled cheese in this joint than with their burger, the conversation will not likely escalate out of control. It is just a sandwich or a burger. But the claims that swirl around the ingestion of organic foods range from our obligation to save the planet to the future survival and health of all the children. It would be hard to ramp up many of the claims made any higher. Not surprisingly, evangelistic zeal consequently runs high, and there is often a corresponding resentment among those who would rather not be evangelized right now.

This book covers the waterfront -- from organic's odd historical origins to its dubious health claims to a discussion of pesticide residues, and then from there to crop yields, from crop yields to GMOs (frankenfoods!), and from GMOs to taste and freshness issues.

The book is just jammed with facts, and is heavily footnoted. Now someone mentioned to me (when I said that I was going to be reviewing this book) that I really ought to go look at some critical reviews of the book so that I might anticipate some of the objections that might be raised. So I did, and what I found indicated that the objection I really needed most to answer was "Nuh UH! Truth about organic food? That's not truth! Corporations must have paid him big time!" I confess myself unable to answer this line of argument, so we will just move on.

You can probably guess what Avery's conclusions might be. Organic food doesn't do anything special for your health, pesticide residues are nothing to worry about, crop yields in organic farming are significantly lower, and so on. But it is not really a question of whether someone likes these conclusions -- the basic question is whether the conclusions are justified. In other words, I would argue that if someone really wants to promote organic eating as a superior way to go, the arguments in this book really need to be dealt with. And by dealt with, I mean answered. Given the claims that are made for organic food, there really needs to be an honest debate over it.

If I were to summarize my takeaway point from this book, it would be this -- and it is an ironic takeaway indeed. The organic movement is not sustainable. If you look at the yields coming from organic farms, and then factor in the range land that is necessary to produce the requisite organic fertilizer, and couple this with organic farming's refusal to use herbicides and the resultant wind and water erosion that occurs because the weeds have to be tilled up, what you have is a genuinely  unsustainable scenario. Organic farming is sustainable only so long as it is dedicated to growing niche designer crops for rich people. As soon as you put pen to paper to calculate whether or not we could feed the world this way, you discover that it is an impossibility.

Now the eco-diehards in the organic movement actually grant this, but they are the ones who think that people are the problem. They acknowledge that we therefore need to get rid of a bunch of people in order to get down to what they think the "sustainable levels" ought to be. But these are secularists of various stripes -- Christians who prefer organic generally know that people aren't the problem. But if people aren't the problem, then organic farming cannot feed us all -- as Avery repeatedly shows, in various interesting ways.

This relates to another point that needs to be made, one that doesn't have anything to do with organic issues directly. This is a question about economics. Since markets ought to be free, and farmers (both conventional and organic) ought to be free to grow and sell whatever they want without being hassled (or subsidized) by bureaucrats, none of what I am about to say involves approval of coercion of any farmers of whatever kind. This doesn't mean anything goes, because farmers ought to be liable in civil court if they give anybody salmonella and this is proven in open court. But that is all the protection we need. Don't give any farmers money (so this is not a defense of our current agricultral subsidies), and don't give any farmers grief, and may the best methods gain whatever market share they earned for themselves in open and honest competition.

One of the reasons why the organic mentality appeals to many Christians (the kind of Christians who are susceptible to Wendell-Berry-like appeals) is that Christians find hubris off-putting, and we like the idea of accepting our "limits." I share this instinct, and, like Chesterton in Orthodoxy, I celebrate the poetry of limits. Whenever scientists don the white lab coat to ascend to the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north, the palms of my hands get clammy. When those in the organic movement want to point to such hubris, examples are not hard to come by. But we need to remember that hubris can grow in a truck patch as easily as in 6,000 acres that have been thoroughly Monsantoed. The central characteristic of hubris is that it will not accept correction from the facts. Avery's book gives us a great opportunity to test ourselves. The judgment you use will be the judgment you receive (Matt. 7:1-2).

So we should fully accept the idea of fixed limits -- we are creatures, not gods. But where those limits ought to be set is quite a different question than whether we ought to have limits at all. If a wife were to mention to her unemployed husband of three years (and counting) that perhaps a day filled with sweet video games was not the way forward, and if he were to respond that her problem was that she did not want to accept our creaturely limitations, I would suggest to her that she could reply that she loves the idea of creaturely limitations. She just thinks they are somewhere out beyond the boundaries of the couch.

Every form of collectivism and socialism is a loutish form of government that won't get off the couch. And it has to be said that the organic movement, considered as a whole, is an adjunct wing of the Left -- it is the Left's cafeteria. I know and appreciate the fact that there are a number of conservative Christians (crunchy cons) who want to participate in it, but I also suspect that many more of them are being recruited by the Left than they realize. In many ways, they have already been coopted, in ways they do not realize.

This is a great book. I commend it highly. 



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Last Updated on Saturday, 01 December 2012 09:38
 
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David Douglas  - Getting to the res  Saturday, December 01, 2012 10:05 am
Quote:
"Now the eco-diehards in the organic movement actually grant this, but they are the ones who think that people are the problem. They acknowledge that we therefore need to get rid of a bunch of people in order to get down to what they think the "sustainable levels" ought to be. "


P.J. O'Rourke in his book "All the Trouble in the World" summarized this attitude succinctly in the subtitle to his chapter "Famine":
Quote:
Just enough of me, way too much of you.


Truth be told, in breaking down the attitudes behind many "crises", this sentiment, a hatred of mankind (considered inclusively) is at the root. The unwillingness to accept any reasonable solution to the crisis du jour means the only solution to have a lot fewer people.

Of course I doubt that they have thought through the chaos and sacrilege to their precious gods of Gaia and Liberal Secularism that will ensue if they get their way. The "way too much of you" will not go gently into that goodnight to allow the enlightened ones to reach the the beautiful land of "just enough of everyone".
Matt Carpenter  Saturday, December 01, 2012 11:20 am
Where would a person like Joel Salatin fit on this spectrum? Many conservative Christians speak highly of him but he is also popular with the organic crowd.
John Tomberlin II  - Wendell Berry  Saturday, December 01, 2012 11:24 am
Doug, I listened to some of your sermons years ago going through rooms in the home. You started that series (I think) about cultural drifts/shifts that can be bad/sinful/unwise. You used the example of turning the ugly part of the fence toward your neighbor and the good part toward yourself. Many, many Christians read and enjoy Wendell Berry. And many of his arguments are along the same lines as yours (the unsustainable nature of so much of the meat and agricultural, etc) as far as thinking about neighbor, thinking about other generations, etc.

The book you reviewed for this article is duly noted, and I am sure it makes many fine points. However, despite following this blog for some time I have yet to see you deal with any of Wendell's actual arguments. And as a lover of literature surely you love Jaybercrow, right?

"What are People For" and "The Hidden Wound" are worth anyone's time. Just sayin'. It'd be nice to see you delve into some of Berry's stuff for real. He's a potent force these days among the 30-somethings (of which I am one). Thanks for this review though.
Joshua Butcher  - Source credibility  Saturday, December 01, 2012 12:44 pm
Pastor Wilson, I can understand the disenchantment with organicites who denigrate Avery because of a supposed bias, but it is interesting that he works for the Hudson Institute, which has been consistent in its criticism of organic farming and has received funds from both the government and major companies with investments in big farming.

I'm sure many (if not all) of his arguments need answering, but I wouldn't be surprised to find manipulated statistics and finding. Would you?
David Douglas  - OK, show me...  Saturday, December 01, 2012 2:41 pm
Joshua,

The statistics may or may not be manipulated. He presents some things purported to be facts.

I suggest you either interact with them or figure out and convince us that they are indeed not factual. Nothing is gained by simply suggesting the statistics are manipulated.

Can one be paid by people who think the same way you do, and not have their character impeached by suggesting they are a lap dog for their employer? By that logic, assuming you are not self-employed, can I safely assume you are your employer's poodle? Didn't think so.

Perhaps they are in agreement and the thing they agree on is true.
Joshua Butcher  - False entailment  Saturday, December 01, 2012 5:45 pm
There are two reasons why I think my suspicion is warranted, and does not entail a universal suspicion of bias.

First, private and small businesses have greater risk in lying because if they get caught as it could ruin them. Big businesses have more ability to make settlements or pay legal fees to dodge consequences. Government has almost nothing to lose by lying, since our elections for the past half century have shown that voters aren't willing to vote such folks out of office.

Second, even when statistics aren't egregiously manipulated, it is quite possible to arrive at interpretations of the data that a) can suit either side given the perspective being argued, or b) can over- or underestimate the significance of something based upon a supposition about the past, present, or future context. The higher the stakes, the more scrutiny ought one to make.

I'm not interested in impugning Avery, but I'm not going to swallow government- and big-business funded-research without greasing it with some additional backing (anymore than I would swallow far-left lampooning of his research, as you indicated).
John Tomberlin II  - Joshua's question is very reasonable  Saturday, December 01, 2012 7:21 pm
serving manna is actually a big deal, works often, etc. So when there's an obvious money trail it's AT LEAST worth asking and digging a little deeper. I'd imagine Doug makes this connection all the time for things he's already set against.
Douglas Wilson  Saturday, December 01, 2012 8:28 pm
Sure, it is an obvious question to ask. But on this topic it applies equally to both sides of the debate -- and will continue to do so until one side starts giving the food away.
holmegm  Sunday, December 02, 2012 4:34 am
With the obvious exception of government, I'd like to know just who could be funded by those who dislike their outlook? Why would we even expect such a thing? :confused:

Should I expect Whole Foods to fund research showing that its products are nothing special? Does their absence from the funding list discredit said research?

The way our opponents get along with each other is, of course, just further evidence of their evil. The way we get along with our co-belligerents, is, of course, mere wisdom and prudence :)
Joshua Butcher  Sunday, December 02, 2012 5:40 am
If one is skeptical of the far left because they have shown willingness to further their agenda of earth-worship through funny figures and assumptions, why not also be skeptical when those in power on the opposing side further their agenda of man-worship? I'm not saying that funding programs that further one's own agenda are automatically evil, or wise. I'm saying look at the stakes and look at the established reputation of the sources. McDonalds and Merck aren't on the same moral plane as the CREC or even the Boy Scouts, folks.

As Pastor Wilson concluded, the issue applies to both sides of the debate--so let's apply it to both sides, and not just the one we happen to like best.
David Douglas  Sunday, December 02, 2012 8:40 am
None of us sits where God sits, in a totally objective spot uninfluenced by anything. Come to think of it, God probably doesn't either, although he sees all things clearly, truly, and righteously. And we ought to strive for that.

But are we capable having sincere conclusions based on facts and our world view? I'm hoping everyone on this thread is. Are we capable of being wrong, but sincere. Sure. Are we capable of being hacks, in the tank for the highest bidder? Sure. Could some hack just happen to be right? Yeah, that too. But it doesn't follow merely from researching a viewpoint and coming to conclusions about it that someone is being bought off. If that were the case, no one could have a opinion that is worth anything.

The point is not whether one's conclusion could be bought off either with money or fealty to some idol, it can. The point is lacking facts, it is pointless to talk like that.

Try the spirits. Trust everyone; but cut the cards; the first guy's story must be true, until you hear the second guy's version. Words to live by. So go live by them.

A set of facts, and conclusions was presented above. And the conclusions even moved on the possible motives of foodies (an imprecise umbrella term for lack of a desire to parse the players here any further). Either the facts are wrong. Or they are right but the author or Doug come to the wrong conclusions. Or the facts are incomplete.

I'd feel better if those who thought there was more to the story, brought more of the story to the table.
oldfatslow  - Inescapable, but Misused Concepts  Sunday, December 02, 2012 11:56 am
I've surmised that the appeal
of organic/natural foods is a view
of the Doctrine of Total Depravity
hybridized with a hatred of the Image
of God in man. If man has any
input to a product, it's tainted and
bad. Therefore, the less input from
man the better in our foods. Rather
than the sin of man, the very
existence of man becomes the
great evil and corrupter of an
otherwise ideal world.

I've said before when it comes to
agriculture, I'll take Borlaug over
"organic." Vietmeyer's
three volume books on his life are
awesome start with this one.

ofs
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Sunday, December 02, 2012 5:22 pm
I once read a vaguely historical novel that was set in the vaguely historical Middle Ages. The main character was a midwife or maybe a doctorish sort of person, and she basically invented obstetrical forceps and was saving mothers and babies all over the place. Well, she got in trouble with the religious powers that be, who came after her with inquisitiony persecutorial zeal because didn't she know God had laid down a curse in regard to childbirth and how dare she try to alleviate that curse? Well of course they'd missed the gospel in there somewhere, because curse-alleviating is a good business to be in.

Now as I recall, there was a curse on the ground, too. Thorns and thistles. I think we can assume potato bugs and weevils and aphids and the like are lumped in there, as well. Reactions against things like pesticides seem to come either from an curse-denying nature is just fine as it is attitude or from the same place as the forceps-condemning clergy in the novel: how dare we try to alleviate the curse. I doubt the latter is as conscious, but it strikes me as being a tad ungrateful.

Also, I remember as a little girl picking potato bugs by hand with my Grampa a time or three. As a former agricultural worker (however short-term...and however short), I say three cheers for better living through chemistry!
gullchasedship  - The true story of forceps  Sunday, December 02, 2012 8:00 pm
The real story of forceps is even more bizarre. A French Huguenot family kept them from others as a trade secret for 150 years (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forceps_in_childbirth).
Phil F  - 2nd hand agrarian  Sunday, December 02, 2012 7:50 pm
Interesting gift for my 'crunchy' relatives! Does he deal any arguments concerning monoculture in food production?
As for Wendell Berry, his lament would be a utopian critique. But one not as useful as the theological series by David Wells.
Everyone seems to want to bathe themselves in green to escape their foodie despair- or guilt, as if to gain a real experience beyond products/services. It's near existentialism (Heidegger: Being and Time).
And throw in some Albert Borgmann with your Berry
Phil F  - re:  Sunday, December 02, 2012 8:01 pm
Douglas Wilson wrote:
Sure, it is an obvious question to ask. But on this topic it applies equally to both sides of the debate -- and will continue to do so until one side starts giving the food away.


Do 'crunchy' farmers really keep modern statistics? There's got to be a market here for an app. I gotta think of a cool iPhone watering/row assignment concept or something
gullchasedship  - Thanks!  Sunday, December 02, 2012 8:01 pm
Thanks for the review. I'll have to check out the book!
Shayne McAllister  Sunday, December 02, 2012 8:52 pm
I've watched a couple of food-related documentaries recently such as Food Inc., and Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead. The organic movement's argument goes something like this: we all are eating too much processed food. We eat McDonald's way too much. It's terrible for us, so let's eat the way God intended: organically. They're missing that if everyone just ate their non-organic veggies instead of Big Macs all the time, we'd have similar results.
Nikki McGraw  Monday, December 03, 2012 5:58 am
You might be interested in reading Wheat Belly by William Davis. In it he chronicles the effects of GMO wheat on the population. His studies have shown a link between altered wheat and the rise of celiac disease, obesity, and other health issues. Another good book is Fruitless Fall by Rowan Jacobsen. In it he proves that Colony Collapse Disorder corresponds to bees exposed to pesticides. This exposure attacks their neurological system and renders their navigation ability void. They then die of exposure.
The organic movement has been concerned with the lack of study of GMO's and just bringing them to market. After 50 years the results of these actions are beginning to come forth. The correct balance should be the main discussion. There are people on both sides who would take the issue to extremes. We should strive to feed more people, but the dominion mandate also includes stewardship.
One of the most convincing arguments for Covenant Renewal Worship is that we don't throw the baby out with the bath water. I think the same applies here. Hippee-liberals are dominately associated with organic foods, so what? Our object should be to seek the mind of God and find the right balance so that we are good stewards of what we've been given.
David Smith  Monday, December 03, 2012 7:56 am
Ms. McGraw, you say, "One of the most convincing arguments for Covenant Renewal Worship is that we don't throw the baby out with the bath water. I think the same applies here. Hippee-liberals are dominately associated with organic foods, so what? Our object should be to seek the mind of God and find the right balance so that we are good stewards of what we've been given."

You speak for me here as well, madam! Being someone who has hardly ever encountered a bandwagon he didn't want to take an RPG to, I am as skeptical about the whole "organic" movement as anyone. Wendell Berry, one of my favorite authors, has said as much himself in his essays. While I need to read Mr. Avery's book, for me, organic foods aren't simply about nutrition, as vital as that is. For example, my culture and community are as threatened by the yuppie collectivist-cosmopolites (former hippies?), sipping their fair-trade coffee and purchasing their produce at Whole Foods, and their support of tyrannical leftist, globalist, multi-culti policies, as by this mercantilist government and their corporate cronies who have increasingly taken over agribusiness, particularly over the last seventy years.

I am only about a generation away from the farm here in rural Tennessee, and while we must be on our guard against good-ol'-days" thinking, my older relatives often speak with love of the self-sustaining communities that existed here prior to the virtual government takeover of agriculture after WW II. Yes, make no mistake, farming is hard work! But there is a true freedom that comes with knowing that, with God's help, you can take care of your family and neighbors with the food you produce on your own land. During the Great Depression, folks didn't have much money, but they had plenty to eat! (What's going to happen, btw, when we go over the real Fiscal Cliff and affordable produce at WalMart isn't available? Where are the masses of people living now? Is that sustainable?).

Understood, there are those on the left who make a religion out of organics and sustainability (There's yet another perfectly good word that they are so overusing and abusing that I can hardly use it myself anymore! AAAARRRRGGGGHHH!!!). But as a traditional conservative (I dislike the awkward sounding paleo-conservative), I am as hostile to the "conservatism" that allows for more and more state-sponsored corporate control of my food, my land, and my culture. "But we can't feed the world using traditional agricultural methods", I hear. There's a good deal more to say about that - and I don't think it must necessarily come down to mere Luddite vs. Technocrat thinking - but I increasingly don't give a rat's hind-quarters about "feeding the world." Much of the world would be better off without our constant - again, mercantilistic - meddling. Whatever one's view regarding organics, we need to get a good deal more local in our thinking rather than tending to everyone else's business. Bigger ain't necessarily better, nor is it sustainable (sic!). We need an agriculture - organic or otherwise - churches and communities, for that matter, that are on a human scale, wherein I am far better able to know and be accountable to a flesh and blood neighbor, than I am in this increasingly anonymous and abstract globalist system we find ourselves in.

Are my comments a mere tangent in terms of this thread? Maybe, but I think we have to be very careful about the significant baggage such terms as "organic" carry, whether from the "left" or the "right".
Matt Weber  Monday, December 03, 2012 7:36 am
Quote:
...pesticide residues are nothing to worry about...


Actually, he says that pesticide residues are nothing to worry about so long as they are kept within EPA limits. It's good to see you come out in favor of government regulation though.
M. Stewart Quarles  Monday, December 03, 2012 7:50 am
This debate will drive you bonkers.

Dichlorophenol-Containing Pesticides Linked to Food Allergies, Study Finds; Chemical Also Used to Chlorinate Tap Water

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/12/121203081621.htm
The Scylding  Monday, December 03, 2012 11:31 am
I did some time organic farming, so I have a bit of an insight.

The whole movement is 50% fashion, 30% nostalgia, 10% science and 10% hokum.

When I sold organic produce, I tried to get customers buying based on taste alone - and then commented that not only does it taste delicious, it is also organic. But, for that I had to impose stringent quality control, way more than most of the organic produce you see on shelves even today.

The movement has 2 power bases - big business trying to capture a niche market, and hippie-esque crazies, who also buy into homeopathy etc.

But there are legitimate producers too - Joel Salatin comes to mind, although he is a bit odd.

A better alternative was suggested by an institute in South Africa, who tread some sort of midway between mindless commercialism, and hippie-farming. Their point was to study nature carefully, in all aspects, and then to optimise production by what you have learnt. They were able to demonstrate increased profits, with decreased chemical input, based on well designed rotational cycles etc.

Unfortunately though, it seems that polarization is the word of the day: On the one hand you have the Monsanto-bots, and on the other you have the "hippie-farmers", and never the twain shall meet. And, on the one hand you have agri-scientists producing what their piper wants, and on the other, you have unsubstantiated claims, left, right and center.

Sad, sad state of affairs.
David Smith  Monday, December 03, 2012 11:52 am
Scyling, you say, "Unfortunately though, it seems that polarization is the word of the day: On the one hand you have the Monsanto-bots, and on the other you have the "hippie-farmers", and never the twain shall meet. And, on the one hand you have agri-scientists producing what their piper wants, and on the other, you have unsubstantiated claims, left, right and center."

Amen, sir! Amen!