Food Inc. 1. Food production has changed more in the last 10 years than in the preceding 10‚000. 2. Images of agrarian (farm) society in the consumer’s mind include: green fields cattle grazing red barns 3. The average supermarket contains 47‚000 (how many?) items 4. How do you think farm animals should be treated? How do your ideas compare to what you saw in the film? I think farm animals should be treated with some respect. If we are going to keep them trapped then we ought to let them do what
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Food Inc. opens in an American supermarket and draws attention to the unnatural nature of year-round tomatoes and boneless meat. It pulls aside the curtain that is concealing the truth about food from the consumer. After the brief intro‚ the movie shifts its focus to the topic of fast food and its impact on the meat industries. Fast food virtually started with McDonald’s. When they decided to simplify their menu and hire employees that repeated one task over and over for minimum wage‚ the result
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Hop-In Food Stores Inc. Hop-In Foods Stores has historically been able to rely on internal financing and long term debt in order to continue its growth. The continued growth is attributed to acquisitions of already established stores. Hop-In management has predominantly stayed away from starting up new stores from scratch due to high start up costs. They had found out that it was easier and more cost effective to buy up smaller stores in good locations. As of 1976 all of Hop-In’s expansion was
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The moment I finished watching Food Inc. I was furious. How could the government sanction the patents that the Monsanto Corporation owned? Why should Monsanto be able to take advantage of the poor farmers who are just trying to make a living while Monsanto is making billions of dollars? All of these questions were swirling around my high school mind trying to understand the reasoning behind patents on seeds. Using Kant‚ I initially thought that the greater good was being harmed. Monsanto was being
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being mass slaughtered. Even though it can’t be denied that meat production overtime has become harsh toward livestock‚ eating meat is ethical because humans need it as an essential food source to live. However‚ under the circumstance that the livestock live joyful and free lives
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Subject: Executive Summary: Whole Foods Competitive Position Analysis Industry Analysis As the largest grocery chain of natural and organic foods in the United States‚ Whole Foods Markets competes within a specialized segment of the $557 billion (FMI‚ 2009) overall grocery retail industry. Its main competitors sit within various strategic groups encompassing specialized organic/natural food retailers‚ traditional grocers (especially those with dedicated organic food offerings)
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Chapter I: Fast Food to all Food 1. If animals should have certain rights‚ do you think those rights also apply to animals we raise for food‚ like chicken and pigs? Are there any rights that these farm animals should have? If so‚ what are they? * Yes‚ I believe that those rights should apply to animals raised for food‚ as well. I’m not saying that we should stop killing them altogether because‚ however cruel it may sound‚ we still need food and meat is food. Yes‚ the farm animals should have
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Management teams‚ personnel and other stake holders from all over the world‚ experience ethically troubling situations every day. Identification of the dilemma and relating it to professionalism or moral ethics is not an easy task. It is even harder if it challenges your personal beliefs‚ norms and virtues (Linzer). Sometimes there may be no documented legal consequences directly related to the predicament in a particular. Most corporations’ guidelines that outline limitations and the conduct for
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The documentary “Food‚ Inc.” portrays the dangers and the transformations in the American food industry‚ saying its harmful effects to public health‚ the environment and the rights of workers and animals. Large corporations such as Monsanto‚ producer of genetically modified foods‚ the U.S. meat companies Tyson Food Inc. and Smithfield Foods and poultry producer Perdue Farms refused to be interviewed for the film. The industry did not remain silent. Associations representing the U.S meat industry
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considered to be true. Food is one the most important concern of people‚ because it impacts what people are (and particularly their physical appearance) and their health. Food marketing has been in the spotlight since rising obesity rates are threatening industrialised countries’ populations. Obesity rates and broader health concerns (such as diseases due to conservatives or additives) make marketing ethics in the food industry a relevant topic. After reading “Fast Food Nation” by Eric Schlosser
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