The Book That’s Pissed Me Off The Most This Year (& How To Fix America’s Food System) – The Mark Hyman Podcast With Ben Greenfield.

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Body, Diet & Nutrition, Environment, Nutrition, Podcast, Podcast-new, Space

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I recently read a book that frankly, pardon the language, pissed me off.

The book, entitled Food Fix: How to Save Our Health, Our Economy, Our Communities, and Our Planet—One Bite at a Time, is the brand new release from Dr. Mark Hyman.

Dr. Hyman strongly believes that the most powerful tool to reverse the global epidemic of chronic disease, heal the environment, reform politics, and revive economies is food. His new book explains that we eat has tremendous implications not just for our waistlines, but also for the planet, society, and the global economy.

In Food Fix #1 bestselling author Dr. Mark Hyman explains how our food and agriculture policies are corrupted by money and lobbies that drive our biggest global crises: the spread of obesity and food-related chronic disease, climate change, poverty, violence, educational achievement gaps, and more.

Pairing the latest developments in nutritional and environmental science with an unflinching look at the dark realities of the global food system and the policies that make it possible Food Fix is a hard-hitting manifesto that changed the way I think about food forever, and it provides practical solutions for citizens, businesses, and policymakers to create a healthier world, society, and planet.

Dr. Hyman is a physician and New York Times bestselling author. He is the founder and medical director of The UltraWellness Center, a proponent of functional medicine and, the board president of clinical affairs of the Institute for Functional Medicine. He's the bestselling author of multiple books, including the brand new title we discuss on this show: Food Fix: How to Save Our Health, Our Economy, Our Communities, and Our Planet—One Bite at a Time.

During this discussion, you'll discover:

-What prompted Dr. Hyman to write his new book…7:04

  • Saw many patients w/ the same condition as a result of the food they're eating
  • Food system is the main driver behind the problem
  • Food policies make up the system
  • Food industry is behind the policies; biggest lobby group in Washington is food and agriculture industries
  • A handful of companies are the leading culprits
  • $15 trillion industry; makes up ~17% of the global economy
  • Employs over 20 million workers just in the U.S.
  • The way food is produced is a major contributor to climate change
  • Children w/ healthy diets vs. children w/ unhealthy show dramatic differences in brain size and IQ

-Why the true cost of food is not what you see at the store…13:58

  • Take into account the cost of the entire life cycle of the food: production, storage, eating, waste, etc.
  • Massive environmental destruction
  • Who pays for deforestation, chemicals that destroy soil, climate change that results?
  • Methods used for modern farming are killing the soil
  • Obesity, chronic disease
  • Food stamp recipients buy processed food and soda predominantly
  • We pay for it via Medicaid and medicare
  • The companies who cause the damage don't pay for their actions
  • Regenerative farming is a sustainable farming method
  • Farmland LP invests in conventional farms and converts to sustainable farms

-How food stamp programs contribute to the problem…20:33

  • Food and farm workers are not paid a livable wage; they can't afford health care and are on food stamps
  • SNAP = Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
    • No nutrition standards for SNAP assistance
    • 70% of food purchased w/ SNAP is processed food, soda, etc.
    • It's helped w/ security, but not w/ health
  • Incentives such as lower premiums for healthy choices are more effective than penalizing unhealthy behavior
  • Even hunger advocacy organizations are opposed to changes in the program; they are funded by the food industry
  • Around 20% of Coca Cola revenue is from food stamps
  • Wal-Mart nets $137 billion per year from food stamps

-Inconvenient and invisible truths related to the food industry…28:54

  • The food system is driving most of the crises we see in the world today

-The monopoly of seeds in the food industry…34:15

  • 4-6 seed companies control 60% of the seeds
  • GMO seeds
  • Farmers are stuck in the mix (indebted to seed companies, loss of autonomy in their operations)
  • High suicide rate among Indian farmers

-The difference between dirt and soil and the dangers of monocropping…36:40

  • A living organism: There is more microbial life in a handful of soil than anywhere on the planet
  • Growing plants adds carbon to the soil
  • Soil holds water (protection against drought)
  • Depleted soil results in less nutrients in the produce
  • Agro Forestry: trees as a part of the solution

-The problem of food waste…42:40

  • We waste 40% of our food in the U.S.
  • It would require an area the size of China to grow the food that is wasted
  • Environmental problems from disposed food emitting gases in landfills
  • What can you do?
    • Start a compost pile
    • Give away to farmer's market
    • Many cities have mandatory composting or giveaway to the poor
    • Unused food is being used for energy production
    • Dan Barber

-How the food industry influences food policy at the national level…48:17

  • Lobbyists are the only real influence on policy
  • 187 lobbyists per member of congress (from all industries)
  • Legislation is passed to protect big food companies from lawsuits
  • PAC's are created to protect major corporations (dark money)

-How people can proactively contribute to a solution to this problem…55:00

  • Be a “regenetarian”
    • Choose food grown organically and regeneratively
    • Have a compost pile
    • Educate your children
    • Start a community garden
    • Get into the political arena at the local level

-Mark's personal diet and recommendations…59:18

-And much more…

Click here for the full written transcript of this podcast episode.

Resources from this episode:

Book: Food Fix: How to Save Our Health, Our Economy, Our Communities, and Our Planet—One Bite at a Time

foodfixbook.com

– Book: Waste Not: How To Get The Most From Your Food by The James Beard Foundation

– Book: The Blood Sugar Solution by Dr. Mark Hyman

Documentary: Kiss The Ground

Documentary: The Biggest Little Farm

CDC study: Health and Academic Achievement

Farmland LP

Dan Barber (wasted popup)

Episode sponsors:

Kion Coffee: Carefully selected and roasted for taste, purity, high antioxidants and health. BGF listeners receive a 10% discount when you use discount code: BEN10

-Beekeeper's Naturals: A wellness company specializing in innovative nutraceuticals made from healing hive compounds and plant-based ingredients. Get 15% off your order when you use discount code: BEN

kApex: kApex breaks down the fats you eat into fatty acids, which allows you to increase the fatty acid oxidation inside your mitochondria both in your muscle and liver. Get 20% off your order when you use coupon code: GREENFIELDKX

Thrive Market: Organic brands you love, for less. Your favorite organic food and products. Fast and free shipping to your doorstep. Receive a gift card up to $20 when you begin a new membership using my link.

Do you have questions, thoughts or feedback for Dr. Hyman or me? Leave your comments below and one of us will reply!

Ask Ben a Podcast Question

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13 thoughts on “The Book That’s Pissed Me Off The Most This Year (& How To Fix America’s Food System) – The Mark Hyman Podcast With Ben Greenfield.

  1. Nancy Wake says:

    Hi, thank you so much for telling us about this book! It is a very controversial topic! I was just looking for citation materials to finish my research paper and found help with apa style at https://edubirdie.com/citation/apa/ And then just came across your article, because my topic of research is ecology. Your book has a lot of great topics and thoughts! Thanks!

  2. Michael says:

    The pervasiveness of ag chemicals in our food supply makes me curious how wise it is to compost that waste, even certified organic.

  3. Polek says:

    Hi Ben,

    Another gem episode. Love it.

    It is inspiring to hear more talk/podcasts mention the food production aspect and our overall world/environment impact with our food choices.

    You may have already, but reading up on and delving into Permaculture is a real wealth of knowledge in this area of life. The founders David Holmgren and Bill Mollison have put out what I feel is the finest material on Permaculture, but Toby Hemenway (from your neck of the woods) also put out some great reads, along with Aussie Jeff Lawton. I know I have gained immense knowledge and inspiration from a young age listening to and reading about Permaculture

    So much wisdom in these people and practical applications to implement in everyday life. Powerful 3 ethics Permaculture is based on, Care for the Earth, Care for the People, and Share the surplus/fair share.

    Would be awesome to hear an interview with a Permaculture designer/speaker!

    Thanks for all your hard work Ben!

    Polek

  4. Nancy says:

    Hi Just wondering if the Almonds in the Kion Energy Bars are from monocropping. Thanks, Nancy

  5. Cheng says:

    Ben please interview Rob Greenfield – He’s given TED talk on food waste, lived 100% on food he grows and forages, giving away all his possessions and many other powerful and influential projects. He’s currently on world tour with a new book coming called “Food Freedom” http://robgreenfield.tv/foodwaste/

  6. Michelle says:

    Good points and he’s right…but he’s loses credibility when he talks about “Climate Change”

    This mysterious, doomsday disaster of climate change from the carbon dioxide that plants eat…..oooooo the climate boogeyman is gonna get us all.

    Still waiting for an detailed description on what Climate change is…and how CO2 causes this fake global crisis hahaha. ANYONE wanna take a swing? Hahaha

    I enjoyed him bringing for giant lobbyist problem and possible solutions, but stick to reasons why we need change that are actually a thing…like our health as a human race. I can dig that…lose the horsecrap, globalist climate change angle.

    1. Bill says:

      “Climate change”. What a silly myth. I read an article online once that said climate change is fake. My mind is made up. No amount of data or evidence can change it. Humans guard the environment and are nothing but angels. Greenhouse gases are a conspiracy. Plants devour any and all CO2 no matter how much humans create.

    2. Michael says:

      Even better than composting to sequester carbon is biochar and compost working together. Biochar is pure carbon and does not degrade like the organic matter in soil. I think I heard that it is permanent and even increases in volume inm certain conditions.

  7. Art Kiwacz says:

    Sorry to be off topic but i tried using bfg20 on kion website and it did not work. Thanks

    1. David says:

      Looks like you may have mistyped it, try bgf20.

    2. Can you send a screenshot of the error message you're getting to [email protected]? It seems to be working fine on my end.

  8. Shiva4senate says:

    Everyone interested in clean air, water and soil please vote Shiva4senate in Massachusetts!

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