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Fast Food Nation : The Dark Side of the All-American Meal

Fast Food Nation : The Dark Side of the All-American Meal

List Price: $34.95
Your Price: $22.02
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Where do I begin.
Review: Well first of all, a while ago as a conscious decision to eat healthier, I cut down on my fast food consumption. When I do eat at a fast food place I opt for the healther items on the menu such as the Chicken McGrill (which McDonalds claims only has 4 grams of fat, but can I believe them anymore?).

I read this book because I was very interested in the fact that our nation as a whole is obese. And I found it really amusing after the boys in New York I think it was, sued Mc Donalds because they ate it everyday and got fat. I do not agree with this because EVERYONE knows that eating McDonalds on a regular basis is bad for you, let alone eating it every day. But I didnt not know however how bad it really is and how dangerous it is.

This book is a great book, it puts it all out there for the world to know. I think that this should be a manditory book to read in high school because it sure opened my eyes and made me think twice when I think about getting fast food. So maybe our kids will be making wiser choices if they knew the truth about what they were putting in their mounths. I also cannot believe the horrible meat that is being fed to our school children. I work for the local school district and I cannot believe the crap that they feed these kids, nothing healthing is being fed for lunch unless you think pizza and cheeseburgers are good almost every day.

So please read this book and learn more about the horrible conditions these workers are put through and the disgusting things the meat we eat is going through before it gets to our plates. I garuntee you will be disgusted and shocked at the same time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: They're not just big in Texas
Review: A friend recently suggested Eric Schlosser's outstanding expose "Fast Food Nation." I clawed through it, but had to pause here and then to gain traction against the decades of deceit, graft, and cronyism that defined the food industry's rise in worship of the almighty dollar. Don't misunderstand: I'm a capitalist, no doubt, but the practices described in this text stretch well beyond that reasonable to fuel a healthy free market. One might be skeptical of the muckraking that is so carefully detailed, but that's exactly the rub: the devil is in those details. Schlosser does such a meticulous job of substantiating every morsel of data (62 pages of footnotes) that he leaves you full with the knowledge of system derailed by its own appetite. We want bigger meals, bigger cars, and bigger houses to what end? We spend >$110 billion each year on fast food, and another $30 billion to try to lose the weight we so carelessly invited? A recent report by the Centers from Disease Control (CDC) pinpoints the next two years as the turning point when obesity will overtake smoking as the #1 preventable cause of death in this county. The price tag? About $440 million dollars in public health costs. It's not just you who is affected when you supersize yourself. In an era of skyrocketing health care premiums, you'll smother all of us.

Some of the more intoxicating gems from Schlosser's book:
1) Americans spend more on fast food than new cars, and more than higher education and computers put together.
2) Fast food purchases outweigh book sales by about 4-fold.
3) Perhaps 2 cents out of every french fry purchase goes to the farmer who grew the potatoes.
4) The rate of obesity among American adults is twice as high now (>25%) as it was in the early 1960's.
5) The rate of obesity among American children is twice as high now as it was in the LATE 1970's.
6) In the UK, the number of fast food restaurants doubled between 1984 and 1993-- and so did the adult obesity rate.
7) A large Coke (32 oz) has 310 calories. A supersize order of fries has 29 g of fat and 610 calories. Note that 3600 calories is equivalent to one pound of fat.
8) A medium Coke at McDonald's in the 1950's (8 oz) was 33% smaller than a CHILD's Coke today (12 oz).
9) A medium Coke at McDonald's contains about 3.5 oz of Coke syrup, or about 10 cents worth. You pay about $1.29.
10) A 1996 USDA study revealed that 7.5% of all ground beef samples taken from processing plants were contaminated with Salmonella, 12% with Listeria monocytogenes, 30% with Staphylococcus aureus, and 53% with Cloistridium perfringens. All of these pathogens can make you ill; Listeria kills 20% of those it infects with food poisoning. You are what you eat: 79% of the contaminated beef contained microorganisms that spread primarily by fecal matter. You know what that means.

I could go on, but that point sums it up nicely. Personally, I working on more responsible carnivore habits, as a stepping stone to my ineluctable conversion to vegetarianism. There's just too much wrong-- with how the cattle are treated, how the workers are treated, and how the consumers are slipped a sometimes repulsive, if not downright dangerous product-- to continue to blindly order an "All-American Meal".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You don't have to become a vegetarian
Review: I'd like to recommend on Ruth Ozeki's "My Year of Meats" to whoever was stunned by this book like me.

This is a serious issue, and might be a turning point to the worst or to the best.

You can contribute the world by buying from family farmers instead of corporations. for more details: themeatrix.com

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dirtaaaaaaay!
Review: After reading "Fast Food Nation", I admit, it's getting difficult to contemplate eating at anything with a clown taking my order. And I have found there are other options. We really don't have to feed our children the "food" from these places.

This is an excellent piece of work, well researched and convincing in its presentation. Very liberal, but it's all good. Perhaps the most frightening image I have taken from this book is Walt Disney and Ray Kroc cooperating from beyond the grave. It's difficult to even watch the McDonald's commercials advertising Disney tie-ins now.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Poor workers
Review: This book is awesome! This reveals all the secrets of fast food industries. If you really love fast food, you will be shocked so much when you realize what you were eating.

Probably the major part of this book is about the food, but i am so interested in the workers at fast food restaurants. They are in dangers that we never imagine, and especially teens are the victims of the industries. It seems that what fast food restaurants cook is not only hambergers... but also dead bodies and criminals. He mentions about the hard working condition,so probably you would never wanna work there and feel so sorry for them.

As i told, the food is major issue of the book and it made me so sick, but it is the truth. if you want the truth, you should definiteoly read this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: You want fries with that?
Review: Yeesh. Gross. Sick. Disgusting.

I think you get the point. "Fast Food Nation" tells it like it is - and some of it is not very pleasant to the ear. I've come to think that reading this book is a "necessary evil" - you don't really want to read it, but you have to. The revelations Eric Schlosser provides are too important to ignore.

It starts slowly with the dawn of the fast food era, but soon enough Schlosser is touching on many topics; globalization, the exploitation of fast food workers, how and why fast food companies focus their ad campaigns towards children, why the fast food companies don't like labor unions, and more.

Then it really gets interesting when Schlosser begins to talk about the food itself. The chemicals used, the procedures of the meat-packing plants, pathogens, mad cow disease, E coli, salmonella...it's all here. It's not a pleasant story, but as mentioned, a story that needs to be told nonetheless.

Powerful and disturbing stuff. Would have been five stars if not for the slow start.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read this book, and pass it on.
Review: With obesity rapidly becoming the number two cause of death in North America (cancer being number one), this book should be mandatory reading for all high school age kids; and I would strongly recommend Mr. Schlosser creates a version of this book for elementary school children. Personally I never was a big consumer of McDonald's or any fast food products for that matter, but like most parents I would take my children on occasion for a Happy Meal and get myself a Big Mac... until my very last experience with McDonald's food three years ago. Driving across New York State from Salem MA. to my home north of Toronto, I stopped at one of the many McDonald's restaurants along the highway and ordered a plain hamburger... no fries, no drink, just a hamburger. I was literally crumpling the wrapper and putting it back in the bag when it was as if someone flipped a switch and I instantly HAD TO FIND A WASHROOM. The remainder of my trip (about 6 hours to go from that point) was literally driving at high speed from rest stop to rest stop across New York State. I've never eaten at McDonald's since, have never taken my children there, and will never do either again under any circumstances. I came to this decision well before reading Mr. Schlosser's book, and like most kids, mine still ask to go but this book has given me the answers to the "why not?" question when I refuse.

Mr. Schlosser goes off on a bit of a rant on the meat packing industry which is and always has been a brutal business, but some of the recalls of ground beef products in recent times are horrifying. Not only for the quantities recalled, but for the reasons these products were recalled. Ironically it is here that Mr. Schlosser compliments the McDonald's corporation and clearly illustrates just how powerful this organization is. When the FDA wanted stricter controls on salmonella counts in ground beef the meat packing firms said "impossible". When McDonald's requested that ground beef used in McDonald's hamburgers meet this new FDA standard, the meat packing firms said "no problem". So McDonald's actually do have the power to effect positive change in the meat packing industry, but will they use this power for positive or profit driven reasons?

This is a terrific book and it points out very clearly the dangers of eating fast food which I genuinely believe cannot be consumed safely in any quantities. Recently my local school board took steps to ban "junk food" from school cafeterias, food which included meals supplied by McDonald's. The manager of our local McDonald's wrote a scathing criticism of not only this policy but of the use of the term "junk food" in reference to McDonald's meals. His major point was "since when has bread, meat and potatoes been considered junk food?". After reading Fast Food Nation I only wonder how is it possible to even consider a meal from McDonald's simply bread, meat and potatoes?

Read this book you'll be glad you did and pass it on to people you care for, you may literally be saving their lives. If you are a parent, set an example of proper eating habits and be forthright with your children on the choices they make regarding the food they consume. If they are old enough let them read this book for themselves and draw their own conclusions. A lifetime of obesity related health problems, the working conditions in the restaurants, the inside of meat packing plants and the plethora of natural and artificial flavourings put into this food is generally NOT depicted in fast food ads... for good reason. Time has long passed when we could take for granted the safety of food served in these establishments.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: From Dark comes Light
Review: If you've read up on nutrition and health, read about the dangers of overly processed food, and otherwise pursued healthier living, you'll love this book.

Though the information it contains is downright scary, you'll be engrossed by this book. The author writes well and weaves an intriguing story of our nation's food supply.

What did I get from this book? Further support for the attitude I've developed that you should live off of your local food supply. Instead of eating processed convenience foods and unhealthy meals at national food chains, look to local growers.

Find out what you're eating. Know how your food was grown (whether animal or vegetable), how it was treated, and each step of the process from growth to your plate. Don't take food for granted; demand quality and cleanliness.

This book, along with everything else I've read over the last year or two, has been a strong positive in my life. It contains some very scary information, but this is information that you're better off knowing. I cannot praise this book enough; it is excellent.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More than fast food
Review: For some reason I was expecting this book to be about fat Americans and why we eat so much fast food. (I guess that's what I get for not reading reviews, eh?) It is SO much more than that. It's about the beginnings of the industry, the struggles of fast food pioneers, what the industry has become, what's really in the food, the takeover of the food industry by big business, and where all of this leaves the unsuspecting consumer.

I was unable to put this book down. I can't even explain how it made me feel - curious, angry, and even awe-struck. You never know what people are capable of until money is at stake.

I would recommend this book to anyone. People who are interested in food, food service, business, farming, chemistry... it shows how one commodity - FOOD - is a part of so many different, larger entities.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Be aware of what you eat ! ! !
Review: The book, Fast Food Nation, is very good for every fast food consumer to read. It exposes the truth and all that goes on inside the fast food industries. It shows you what unhealthy food really means. You have to read this book to believe it. Words can not describe how well formulated and outstanding this book is. So get out there, read this book, and have a clue what is inside your hamburger today. Then, you will be able to decide wheather to continue eating fast food or not. I strongly recommend this book because "knowledge is wisdom."


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