1. In the beginning when the blind man came to their house for the first time, he judged Robert because he was blind. "And his being blind bothered me. My idea of blindness came from the movies. In the movies, the blind moved slowly and never laughed." The narrator changes his mind when Robert told him to draw the Cathedral on the paper.…
The objective of this experiment is to perform a steam distillation using a microscale distillation apparatus and isolate a natural product from cloves.…
Corn production has gone up due to the help of ammonia fertilizer. Corn farms do not practice organic agriculture. Crop yield has gone up four times compared to Ian and Curt’s ancestors in the early 1900’s with the help of fertilizers and herbicides to kill the weeds. The government subsidizes large farms to plant on more land and to buy out their neighbors if they do not want to grow crops. Farmers get rewarded for overproduction of cheap corn which keeps the production of corn going on full blast. Majority of the corn produced gets fed to animals or us in the form of high fructose corn syrup which is empty calories. Due to consolidation of family farms into large farming operations, the consumers are harmed while the cooperation benefit because they get cheap corn produced in surplus to turn into high fructose corn syrup or feed to sell to livestock producers. Consumers are harmed because more high fructose corn syrup is being produced and put into the foods we consume on a daily basis. Corn is in everything that we consume, such as sodas and hamburgers. High fructose corn syrup has adverse effects such as a higher risk of acquiring type 2 diabetes and obesity. The table sugar consumption has decreased, but high fructose corn syrup consumption has increased by 30% because it is cheaper to buy and produce. In the late 1980’s high fructose corn syrup has taken over half of the sweetener…
Corn is among the most planted and produced crops in the US. According to 2013 statistics, the US is the largest corn producer in the world with 80 million acres of corn fields and almost $64 billion annual sales. Besides its consumption as raw food, industrial processing of corn yields high economic value. Among industrial uses of corn, High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) is the most controversial one from an ethics perspective. HFCS is an artificial sweetener that is found in a wide range of processed foods. It is produced by applying enzymatic processes to convert corn’s glucose into fructose. HCFS is used as a sweetener in various foods and beverages such as yogurts, breakfast bars, cereals, breads, soups, lunch meats, and soft drinks. Since 1970s, it has become the most economical alternative to cane sugar and replaced most of its use as an industrial sweetener. Due to quotas on domestic increased tariffs on sugar imports, the US has the highest price for sugar around the world while government subsidies to corn production make HFCS a much cheaper alternative to sugar. Moreover, HFCS is easy to transport, %20 sweeter than table sugar, and extends the shelf life of products. As a result, HFCS has become a major substitute for cane sugar for the U.S industry such that soft drink giants like Coke and Pepsi use HFCS in their products instead of sugar since 1984. Despite its economic value, HFCS is shown to be related to obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and fatty liver disease. This paper examines the ethical issues of HFCS use in foods and beverages.…
Sugar and molasses were important commodities for Britain since they were its source of revenue from the colonies. The British West Indies were originally the colonists’ main molasses provider; however the colonists bought molasses from foreign markets where the commodity was cheaper. Because the colonists depended on other countries, the British government passed the Molasses Act in 1733, which implemented a tax of six pence per gallon on molasses bought from non-British colonies. The British hoped that the high tax would persuade the colonists to buy molasses from the British West Indies. In addition, the Molasses Act was supposed to help the West Indies gain profits and raise revenue to pay off the debt from the French and Indian War in 1763. Nonetheless, it was never seriously enforced because the colonists found ways to avoid paying the tax such as smuggling molasses and bribing custom officials.…
The Sugar Interest, the wealthy British plantation owners, were one of the main causes of the start of the Revolutionary War. The Sugar Interest’s influence in British Parliament to give the Sugar Islands back to France was a factor. A second factor was the Sugar Interests desire for high profits and no competition. A third factor was the need to create revenue to provide funds to pay the debt incurred from the French and Indian War.…
Gunnars, K. (2013). Daily Intake of Sugar - How Much Sugar Should You Eat Per Day?. Authority Nutrition. Retrieved 12 May 2016, from https://authoritynutrition.com/how-much-sugar-per-day/…
In the year of 1764 the Sugar Act has been passed by the British Parliament. This is an act, according to the British Parliament, that will help pay off their war debt that came of after the French and Indian War. This act placed an order on the American colonist to pay taxes for items such as molasses sugar, and other items. Being that we American Colonies had no say in what was to be taxed upon as well as who and how much, we colonist are upset to be taxed without representation! People of our colonies have resorted to smuggling these taxed items in response to this unjust decision! For raiding our homes we bring to you mobs and rebellions. We the people will not stand for this as we are not to be treated as your money slaves! Give me…
In the article “The Government Can’t Stop Sugar” by the Chicago Tribune, we learned about the many problems that sugar has caused. Sugar has led up to many disputes in the government, it also has caused many Americans to become addicted to it. Our love for sugar has led to unhealthy lifestyles, causing many Americans diseases and to become obese. The Chicago tribune argues that our sweet is killing us. They gave various studies, examples, and facts that persuades the reader into thinking that we are to blame for our love but I don’t think we are the only ones to blame. In order for you to get a better understanding about why we are not the only ones to blame I will first be providing examples from the article that I agree with and find helpful…
The first industrial factories were the sugar mills of the Americas. The sugar mills contained sophisticated and organizational systems that can be compared to modern industries and characteristics.…
On average Americans consume 75 pounds of sugar in one year. John Oliver jokely said that’s roughly like “ eating Michael Cera’s weight in sugar every year.” Throughout his jokes comes the shocking truth of how it’s affecting our country. His 10 minute segment on Last Week Tonight about sugar brought forth the truth that is hidden from millions of Americans each day.…
It was 1861 when the first string of sugar plantations started to develop along the coast of northern Queensland, Australia. Queensland had previously been accustomed to having cheap labor at their disposal with the use of servants and convicts. Convict transportation came to a stop and the government soon was in need of increasing income to make up for the lost labor, similar to the Europeans around the same time. Europeans were big into trading and had “previously been interested in African nations and kingdoms… traders then wanted to trade in human beings” (Ismael Montana). Around the seventeenth century many enslaved Africans were being taken to Europe and the Americas to work on tobacco and sugar plantations. Initially convicts from Britain…
The movie makes some really good points. The best point is that subsidized corn artificially lowers the cost of animal feed and high-fructose corn syrup. This creates a tax-subsidized economic incentive for people to choose fast food over nutritious options. Scrapping farm subsidies including corn would be a great idea (that the movie doesn't propose). It has a good segment about how Monsanto is using intellectual property law to unfairly create a US soybean monopoly, suing farmers who never bought Monsanto seed and forcing them to capitulate because of the sheer weight of legal bills.…
Automated dispensing is a system being implemented in today 's pharmacy 's nation wide. It involves the use of machines pre stocked with drugs that are programmed to automatically dispense physicians orders upon request.…
The Sugar Act placed a tax on sugar, molasses, and other products shipped to the…