BOYCOTT WHOLE FOODS!!!

BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Meg White

After Whole Foods CEO John Mackey wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street 
Journal this week slamming "ObamaCare [1]," progressive foodies 
across the whole foods boycottnation have registered their shock and 
devastation [2].

It seems everyone from Daily Kos [3] to Facebook [4] has their own 
"Boycott Whole Foods" petition going. While much of the outrage is 
certainly rooted in the massive failure of healthcare reform PR in 
general, the betrayal of the jolly green grocer stings significantly 
more than the invective hurled by the town hall protesters.

Still, what did you people expect? Whole Food is a corporation, which 
means by definition it is a member of corporate America. Mackey 
describes himself as a Libertarian and his thoughts on 
employer-supplied health insurance may not be quite as altruistic as 
expressed in his op-ed. From a recent profile of the company at 
Socialist Worker [5] magazine:

Using a carrot and very large stick, Mackey managed to "convince" 
Whole Foods workers across the country to vote in 2004 to 
dramatically downgrade their own health care benefits by switching to 
a so-called "consumer-driven" health plan -- corporate double-speak 
for the high deductible-low coverage savings account plans preferred 
by profit-driven enterprises. As Mackey advised other executives in 
the same 2004 speech, "[I]f you want to set up a consumer-driven 
health plan, I strongly urge you not to put it as one option in a 
cafeteria plan, but to make it the only option."

The author concludes by saying Whole Foods is the "second largest 
anti-union retailer in the U.S., beaten only by Wal-Mart. Most of 
Whole Foods' loyal clientele certainly would -- and should -- shudder 
at the comparison."

Whether or not it is second to Wal-Mart in its treatment of unions I 
can't say, but it is the 10th largest food and drug store in the U.S. 
[6]When you're "the world's leading natural and organic grocer [7]," 
there are going to be some trade-offs.

Therefore, while whether or not one should "shudder at the 
comparison" is more of a personal choice, conjuring up shock over a 
big-time CEO's willingness to throw universal healthcare under the 
bus to boost profits is as futile as it is naive.

As I see it, if a public option does survive there is a chance that 
large companies will have to pay more for health insurance as their 
sweet deals with the industry may not be quite as sweet as they once 
were. There's no way Whole Foods is going to get the small business 
exemption your local co-op may qualify for. Furthermore, the op-ed 
itself was really more of a huge ad in a major newspaper touting the 
health benefits of eating at Whole Foods than a slam on healthcare 
reform.

So let's put away the outrage for the moment and look at where the 
organic/healthy/whole foods movement(s) that allowed Whole Foods to 
flourish has landed, just decades after being born as a hippie fad.

Recently re-reading Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma [8] and 
then tackling the compendium of essays in the companion book for Food 
Inc. [9], I was once again reminded of the many various assertions in 
the argument over what and how we feed ourselves. The argument is not 
just between Monsanto and Alice Waters, however; those who used to 
philosophically dine side-by-side are now at loggerheads over how to 
proceed.

In his book Pollan deftly balances the arguments made by the likes of 
Joel Salatin (owner of Polyface Farm) and Gary Hirshberg (CEO of 
Stonyfield, the world's leading organic yogurt producer), each of 
whom have essays published in the Food, Inc. book. Salatin sneers at 
corporate organics with nearly as much derision as he reserves for 
the federal government, whose food safety inspection rules are 
heavily weighted to favor factory farms over small sustainable ones 
such as his. Hirshberg makes the argument that even though the 
organic movement had to make some compromises in order to go 
mainstream, it's better for everyone that those who shop at Wal-Mart 
are exposed to Stonyfield and that the USDA has some (albeit more 
relaxed than many wanted) standards for certifying organic food.

Of course, the nuanced argument one gets in such books is not 
currently available in the scream-fest that has become this debate. 
While Whole Foods' regular customers are expressing their anger via 
#boycottwholefoods tweets, conservative Twitterers are flooding the 
market with pro-Whole Foods updates, complete with profile pictures 
that proclaim "I am the angry mob." I don't know about you, but 
grocery shopping is unnerving enough; I have no desire to shop 
alongside an angry mob.

Thankfully I don't have to alter my habits to impose a boycott. 
Though there is a Whole Foods just over a half mile from my house, I 
rarely go. Whenever I do, I find that as many times as I rejoice over 
the availability of seitan, I'm also snickering at the availability 
of yuppiness like vegetarian cat food [10].

You're more likely to find me in the aisles of Trader Joe's. I know 
Joe's has its fair share of problems [11] too, and sometimes I wonder 
what they have to pull to keep their prices for organic foods so low. 
But I'm a poor writer with student loan bills to pay and a marked 
distaste for pretension. So I choose what seems to me to be the 
lesser evil.

But not all self-nourishment necessitates such bellyaching over 
personal responsibility. This Thursday I made the effort to get up 
early to go to the farmer's market in downtown Chicago before work. I 
find the experience of handing my money over to a farmer (or, 
sometimes his bleary-eyed teenage kids) to be so reaffirming of my 
faith in humanity's capability to nourish itself that it's worth 
throwing down a 20-spot for some decent produce and an honest smile. 
I admit that as a person who doesn't have kids, doesn't eat meat and 
does have health insurance, my willingness to spend a bit more 
assuaging my sense of food guilt at a farmer's market is enhanced.

I personally feel lucky to have the option of choosing the farmer's 
market or Trader Joe's over Whole Foods or even less palatable "big 
box" grocery stores. And at my last place, I had an 
honest-to-goodness neighborhood food co-op between the El train stop 
and my apartment. So I'm better off than some rural and suburban 
readers who may not have as many choices as an urbanite such as 
myself.

Don't be too quick to resort to self pity, though. Have you checked 
out your community's options for food co-ops [12], 
community-supported agriculture groups [13], farmer's markets [14] or 
even direct farm purchasing [15]? You may be surprised at what's 
right under your nose.

And there's always the potential grocery store right in your own 
backyard or community garden [16]. There's nothing more trustworthy 
or fulfilling than food you made with your own hard work (and some 
sunshine), even if it's more trouble than stopping by the store. 
After all, my tomato plants may not want to go to fruit, but they're 
certainly not going to pen an anti-healthcare reform op-ed.

In fact, I'd be much more shocked if I saw such sentiments being 
expressed by small-share farmers and co-op owners than I was when 
reading Markey's Wall Street Journal piece. People naturally advocate 
for "solutions" which will benefit them, and healthcare reform is 
unlikely to benefit the Libertarian CEO of Whole Foods more than the 
farmer who sold me the juicy peach I ate for breakfast this morning.

So progressives: quit blustering and tweeting and go to the farmer's 
market this weekend. Your aching belly will thank you.
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