Hunger in America: Let’s fix our broken food system

Latest


 
WASHINGTON, DC — One of the brutal facts of today’s world is that many people, particularly children, are going to bed hungry many days of the month even if families have SNAP, WIC or some other government assistance. Hunger in America exists not because of a lack of food, but because of a lack of willingness to change a food system which leaves lower-income working people as well as the middle classes underfed and undernourished.
Why? It is because we the people allow it, tolerate it, think it’s inevitable. We are so busy trying to survive that we turn away from ugly truths about the country we have built. There is an irreconcilable conflict between the democracy we say we want and the economic system we established to support that democracy. Our democracy says all people regardless of human condition are entitled to basic rights and needs and that the job of government is to ensure those rights are protected and our needs are met. But our economic system lets some people amass tremendous wealth and power, while others have nothing. Equity and fairness go out the window.
While our food system is not the only injustice in today’s America, many people have been working to shed light on it and address its systemic failures. We have become urban and rural farmers, nutritionists, chefs, food truckers, food justice advocates, food bank and pantry workers in an attempt to improve the system and provide genuinely healthy food for real people. If people had access to healthy, nutritious food, they might not get diabetes, cancer and heart attacks that kill working Americans at alarming rates while enriching the pharmaceutical industry. If our food system did not use so many chemical pesticides and fertilizers, we might avoid contaminating our bodies and be able to prevent disastrous health outcomes.
Our food system is literally upside down. Producing food is an American mega-business while its farmers and food workers are at the bottom of the economic pyramid, earning less than a living wage. Those who do the most for us are paid and valued the least—unless they are launched into celebrity-hood, like a handful of mainly white, largely male chefs or restaurateurs. The rest of us barely eke out a living, growing, preparing, marketing, serving, and cleaning up after food.
Why is this? Who suffers? Who benefits? How do we fix our broken food system? That is the subject of our conference.
We look at the entire system to make sense of it and we invite you to join us. Nothing gets addressed, fixed, and made fair and just unless we the people shed light on it and take consolidated action. Let’s fix our broken bodies and our broken food system together.
Margaret Morgan-Hubbard is founder of ECO-City Farms in Bladensburg, MD. Michele and Rick Tingling-Clemmons (who slightly edited this article), are officers in the Gray Panthers of Metropolitan Washington and the principal organizers of the Food Justice and Our Right to Food conference planned for March 23-25 at 301 49th Street NE, Washington, D.C.

+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Moms Aim to Close Dilley ICE Detention Center by Mother’s Day

Thousands of mothers and others across the country are banding together to demand that ICE end the detention of children and families by Mother's Day.

No Data Centers in Michigan!

'The resistance to data centers in Michigan is awe-inspiring! Data center proposals are canceled across the state and country due to public resistance. We want food, water, and clean air.'

He Died on the Floor—And They Told Everyone Else to Keep Working

There is something profoundly broken—morally, culturally, economically—when a workplace responds to death with not even a pause. The message was clear: the Amazon packages matter more than the people moving them.

The Economy: ‘It’s the Best of Times, it’s the Worst of Times’ 

What's going on with the economy? Why is it that the stock market overall has been booming in recent months, while jobs are dwindling and many of the jobs that are available don't pay enough to live on?

Israel Has Buried Gaza in Rubble, But Our Love for the Land Will Always Survive

In this piece originally published at Truthout, Hend Salama Abo Helow, a researcher, writer and medical student at Al-Azhar University in Gaza, speaks about the deep connection of Palestinians to the land.

More from the People's Tribune