Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Reflection on Food Waste

Reflection on Food WasteAs a part age employee in a grocery store during my early high school days, I witnessed on a regular basis that at the end of from each one day a mammoth quantity of baked goods and perishable forage items which had opened their shelf life were carted to the garbage compactor. At the same judgment of conviction at the stores previous entrance there were a couple of aged and homeless people begging for alms in order to buy their daily meal. I wondered at the time as to why the discarded food could non instead be distri besidesed to those in solemn need of it waiting just outside. As I go on with my studies in university I realized that the same scenario was and is still universe played out on a world-wide scale where food does not reach the people who need it the most alone for different reasons. While in the case of the hungry outside the grocery store, the action may provoke been needed to prevent pandemonium and inconvenience for the staff. H ow perpetually planetaryly, human hunger and starvation is caused by food shortages resulting from environmental degradation, rapid population growth, questionable technology and modern economic models.Through the Holy Bible, the basis of my faith, I know that idol has given all human beings dominion over the earth and all its creatures but for our own selfish purpose we tend to interpret the facility granted to us as permission to unbridled mastery over nature. We ought to remember that being given dominion over the earth merely makes us custodians of His creation. Gerald Barney, a scientist aptly stated that, for the first time in the history of Creation, the life have a bun in the oven systems of the planet earth are being destroyed by human activities. Throughout history serviceman have caused locally significant damage to the environment, but never before have human numbers and actions combined to threaten the integrity of the entire planet.1 In light of this shocking real ity there is an ever increasing need for the implementation of a just and sustainable global food system to prevent humanity from crises, for hunger and malnutrition are responsible for to a greater extent deaths today than any known disease. Each and all(prenominal) human being must be responsible participants in the reduction of global climate switch which has caused major environmental disasters. Floods and droughts are known to be the main causes of worldwide food shortages and famines.Since my childhood I was always taught not to waste food and not to eat as if there was no tomorrow. I realize the wisdom in that teaching as there is not only an environmental live of getting food on the table but it also leaves a detrimental footprint on nature in the form of global warming, pollution, goal of the eco system, degradation of arable land and fresh pissing supply. Unlike the aboriginal peoples of our land who treated the earth and nature as sacred using it rigorously for basic living needs, in our society as a whole we conceive of the land in terms of ownership and use. It is a lifeless strong point of exchange.2 How do we cultivate a way of life that does not violate the integrity of creation? Will we use the knowledge, be ready to use e truly effort and stick in our perseverance to prevent further damage to the environment and replenish the arable lands that now lie wasted? The answer is in the hands of each and every human being. Just as each member of a family is responsible for the maintenance and protection of their home, we as a global family must adopt the same attitude caring for our planetary home, we call Earth.While environmental degradation may be the indirect result of our actions, we humans are directly in control of the size of our families and the global population at large, however controversial the methods employed may be. Can the rate of the worlds secure crop production keep feeding the hungry on this earth? Both my parents came f rom large families in India and with the modest incomes both sets of grandparents earned they were able to sustain their children. Basic fruits and vegetables were home grown and staple grain was locally produced or easily available. Hunger and malnutrition, I was told was minimal in those times. Presently, in the land of my ancestors, having large families is still considered a blessing from God in spite of widespread poverty, malnutrition and hunger a human crises that is rising exponentially. They were fruitful and prolific they multiplied and grew exceedingly strong, so the land was filled with them.3 The land is said to be overflowing when the food supply is inadequate and the environment is deteriorating. It is also known that a full environment is a dynamic concept depending on the application of human wisdom and knowledge.4 The same Creator who declares children are a reward is also displeased when overpopulation causes destruction of His handiwork. Do we have the wisdom and the knowledge to offer proper advice for human reproduction? If so, will we be able to ensure the present global population and guarantee future generations an abundance of what creation has to offer? If we fail to find positive answers to the issue of overpopulation, the global food shortage will lay down chaos in poor nations further causing these failed states to export diseases and refugees. The earth does not contain resources to feed the hungry indefinitely for this will cause global grain shortage which in turn would raise prices and put food out of reach of even more people.In our quest for the growing engage of food worldwide, we must do all within our power to make agriculture as productive as possible. As a student of employment and economics I am aware that less land is required for farming if production is maximized per acre leaving more land to be left in its wild and natural state. Biotechnology through genetic engineering of seeds has been a boom to agricultu re by increasing the yield of crops, using less water and pesticides, creating less stress on our fragile land and producing grain of a higher nutritional value. However the use of biotechnology is a sharply divided up issue because it also gives humans the right to claim a patent on life form which is an ethical concern. Are we trying to play God? Needless to say the very success of natural science has bred an attitude which has allowed for the exploitation and domination of the natural world in complete disregard to the mixer and ecological consequences.5 Firms try to maximize profits where the marginal cost of production equals the marginal benefit derived from the produce. However, this current economic model, in my opinion, is flawed as it does not include the implicit cost of environmental degradation caused through the use of pesticides or improper crop rotation that is incurred in the production of food. Essentially, companies in the food biotech industry only seem to car e about maximizing their profits regardless of how it affects the environment or humans that depend on food for survival. It is very disturbing to hear that food biotech companies purchase some of the crops from third world countries in order to genetically modify the seed only to sell it dorsum at prices that are at a very high premium.A biotech company in the U.S. bought coffee beans from Brazil in order to genetically modify them so that they would be more weather-resistant to climate changes in Brazil that threatened future crops. However, when it came time to selling these genetically modified beans back to Brazil, this same biotech firm marked up the price to the extent that Brazil was unable to afford it. Developing countries should not be subjected to this unethical practice carried out by such firms. Therefore, in my opinion, in order to build a sustainable future for people, a new earth economic model needs to be developed, one that aligns the saving with ethics and th e environment.Will future life and production be controlled through biotechnology and selfish economic considerations? To counter any advancement that technology has make to benefit human food security, staple grains are now being grown to produce bio-fuels. According to the teachings of my faith, do not, for the sake of food, destroy the work of God. Everything is thusly clean, but it is wrong for you to make others fall by what you eat.6 It would prick my conscience to realize that in order to drive my car across Canada it would require an acre of maize if not more grain that could have been used to feed so many hungry and malnourished people in this world. The need for the development of tack on fuels is no doubt an urgent issue but it should not be at the cost of seeing our very own species placed in dire straits an ethical irresponsibility.The last third of the twentieth century witnessed an unprecedented shift in the Human-Earth relationship the Third Mediation as Thomas p ick termed it. Human impact now threatens Earths capacity to regenerate life as we know it and love it. Despite our basic dependence for survival on this planet, we continue to damage it through environmental degradation, overpopulation, massive use of technology and economic greed. If we are to achieve a globally just and sustainable food system, we have to learn to live in a way that does not outstrip natures capacity to regenerate itself on its own time cycles and terms.Further we should avoid forcing changes in natural systems themselves, changes that are at times even difficult for adaptable species to accept.EndnotesRasmussen, Larry. Toward an Earth Charter. Religion Online. The Christian Century Foundation, 23 Oct. 1991. Web. 14 May 2010. .N. Scott Momaday, A First American Views His Land, National Geographic Magazine (July 1976), 18.Meeks, Wayne A. Exodus. HarperCollins turn over Bible New Revised Standard Version (with the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books). Student ed. Sa nFrancisco HarperCollinsPublishers, 1994. 79. Print.Fick, Gary W. Ecology in the Bible. Food, Farming, and Faith (S U N Y Series on Religion and the Environment). Albany, New York State University Of New York Press, 2008. 37. Print.Gorringe, Timothy. Playing God. Harvest Food, Farming and the Churches. London SPCK, 2006. 117. Print.Meeks, Wayne A. Romans. HarperCollins Study Bible New Revised Standard Version (with the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books). Student ed. SanFrancisco HarperCollinsPublishers, 1994. 2135. Print.

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