Food Commentary
I found this editorial in The Week very interesting coming from a secular perspective.
By The Week Staff | March 21, 2013
Food is the new
religion. I am hardly the first to make this observation, but I heartily
endorse it: Secular sophisticates have jettisoned traditional beliefs about sin
and sanctity, so they fulfill their instinctual need for purity and redemption
through what they eat. I see the proof whenever I visit the local Whole Foods
to hunt and gather weekend victuals. There, you cannot help but smirk at the
organic, locavorish righteousness of it all—even as you succumb to the spell.
(To see how Whole Foods will soon become more righteous still, see Talking
points.)
Look at that
basketball-sized, organic cauliflower in the produce aisle—grown, the sign
boasts, on a family farm just 90 miles away! In the meat counter, the grass-fed
beef has a maximal animal-welfare rating of 5, assuring us that the cow was so
happy in life it met the butcher smiling. In the coffee aisle, aromatic rows of
whole-bean, Fair Trade Sumatras and Guatemalas—roasted locally, of
course—promise morning enlightenment. In the vitamin aisle, you can armor
yourself against worldly corruption with sacramental resveratrol, acai berries,
and hemp seeds, and probiotics with 40 billion beneficial bacteria per capsule.
No wonder, then, that the affluent shoppers who push their heaping carts around
the store—many in workout tights that display their buns of steel—have such a
confident, self-congratulatory air. Yes, they are paying double what groceries
cost at Stop N’ Shop. But how much purer we all are, how oxidant-free! How much
longer we’ll live than the wicked masses! We are The Chosen. Give us this day
our artisanal, gluten-free bread and our goji berry juice, and may our carbon
footprint be small. Amen.
I have said this before, but while food may be the new religion for many "sophisticates", I think the predominant religion of the masses in our society today is sports.
And he walked in all the way that his father walked in, and served the idols that his father served, and worshipped them:
II Kings 21:21
I have said this before, but while food may be the new religion for many "sophisticates", I think the predominant religion of the masses in our society today is sports.
And he walked in all the way that his father walked in, and served the idols that his father served, and worshipped them:
II Kings 21:21
2 Comments:
Reminds me of the saying, "Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in their hospital beds dying of...NOTHING!!"
Affluence. Most are not growing their own;)
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