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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: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: America Has Created Corporate Communism
Review: Schlosser does a great job tying the fast food industry into a host of societal ills that plague our land. In effect this book more than any other explains the basic fact that we now have corporate consumerism instead of capitalism and that this corporate economy functions with the same efficiency as communism. I for one am sick of the blighted ugly jumbled strip mall landscape and have a little more pride in the potential of America than the one created by our fast food moguls. I'm glad that someone like Eric Schlosser has been able to get this to a masss audience and I hope that even the Republicans can see that the "fast food" vision of the world is even antithetical to their stated goals of efficency and local control.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Welcome to "The Jungle"
Review: The author definitely has an agenda, no two ways about it, and as a political conservative I squirmed more than a few times at what seemed to be a blanket indictment against the Republican party, but as a human being I could not help but be affected by this book. The second part, especially, detailing the horrible conditions at meat-processing plants is certainly an eye-opener, reminiscent of Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle", written in 1906. This book, if nothing else, is eduational. Especially interesting to me was the chapter about the New Jersey chemical companies that develop formulas that make fast food taste and smell the way it does, totally in the chemical realm. There is also some interesting, if not comprehensive, fast-food history here. Unfortunately, one thing this book did not do is stop me from eating at fast food places. Excuse me, I think I'll go grab a Big Mac.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Better taste
Review: Not a diatribe against profit or capitalism, despite the attack from the probable beltway conservative think tank member who is so blinded by his own agenda that he won't let evidence (oh, sorry -- anecdote) get in the way, this book asks people to think about the consequences of what they eat. You may not pay now, but you'll pay later, if you ignore these warnings.
From an unrepentant meat eater.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Must Read for food activists
Review: This is one of the best books I have read on the history of the fast food restaurant phenomena and corporate greed. A must read for vegetarians and food safety reformers.
Eric details how the slaughterhouses hire illegal aliens, but who would have imagined that the greed goes so deep, so beyond what he wrote about, that our country's largest meat dealer, Tyson, would have been brought up on 36 charges of smuggling into our country illegal aliens to work the plants. In early January, after a sting operation by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the company and many of it's top executives were charged with trucking in illegal aliens and furnishing them with false social security numbers and false identification papers to work in plants in eight states. You know that if the federal government, under a republican administration makes charges like these, then the company must really be F...ing evil.
Good book, read it.
Greg Lawson,
President, Vegetarian Society of El Paso

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Response to the review "A Bad Taste"
Review: This book is such an important piece of research and a long overdue peek into an industry we all assume is benign.
I think the reviewer who left the review entitled "A Bad Taste" is really some fast food ceo in disguise...vainly trying to throw up a smoke screen to throw the american public off the trail. Didn't fool this reader. Everyone deserves to make a profit but why can't business people make those decisions with integrity and honesty...oh I almost forgot... there is no profit margin in doing the right thing...

My first reaction to "A Bad Taste"....Me thinks thou protest too much.

Buy this book, especially if you care about the planet, your health and the health of your kids. I learned a great deal and I used to eat fast food once in a while "as a treat" ...good god, some treat.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Review in Bad Taste
Review: The book here describes why the fast food nation should look twice at the contents of an all-american meal, mainly based on the idea that the exploitation of hard workers only is upgraded to the exploitation of all. While some corporations will show up ANYWHERE to promote their product.:) We need to be strong to resist the urge of making it our way so we can bring back the basic social elements of a by gone era. Our social lives in America need help and in protesting the basic family dinner, the corporations have condensed (like everything) in to ten to fifteen minutes a dinner that could have been better spent at home communicating with your family in comfort, not in the haze of a fluorescent network of uncomfortable architecturally plastic benches. All in all this book has made me think again how my fifteen minutes could be better used in preparing a meal at home (that is nutritious) so that I can spend some quality time with the family.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You dont have to be American to enjoy it
Review: I haven't read a book this insightful about how big-buisness food corporations are shaping and changing America and the world, since `Diet for a New America`. These two books, `Fast Food Nation(America)` and `Diet for a New America` are my two all-time favorite books! Which is funny, because I am from Japan! But, these books are not just for Americans to read! These books concern the whole world and all the people in the world. Almost every country or continent (Japan, China, South America, Europe, and many other places) has a McDonalds, a Burger King, or at least a meat industry... so these books are important for us to read. Not only are we effected directly, but we (our health, our environment, our world) are effected indirectly by these industries. I urge people from all over the world to educate themselves about the world they live in by reading these books!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tastes Great
Review: Fast Food Nation does a very good job of showing the greasy underbelly of an industry that has long been at odds with the American public. It is easy to takes sides with Schlosser and see the fast food industry as an unstoppable and gluttonous economic forced that is responsible for everything from the destruction of the family to farm to environmental savages. So, it seems like a liberal read as you begin, but Schlosser is surprising fair. He is repulsed and enamored by the process as we are. It's an honest look at a disturbing industry.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chilling and compelling, a must read...
Review: Something always bothered me about fast food places. The constant churn of employees, the almost supernatural uniformity from one locale to another. How in the world do they supply so many burgers to millions of customers everyday and make them taste the same?
This book spells it all out in brilliant (if not disturbing detail) and looks at the social and economic ramifications of our love for the quick bite.
A must read for folks who love the down and dirty...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't listen to [other reviewers], read the book!!!
Review: In spite of [other reviews], this is a fine book. The facts presented are right on.

The fact that fast food employees are forced to work less than 40 hours a week to prevent having to provide benefits has NOTHING to do with the Fair Labor Standards Act limitations on overtime.

I could spend a full page dispelling his page full of mistatements, but it's not worth the time. Schlosser's point is not that people should not be in business for the money. His point is that business should be run in a socially responsible manner. People should not suffer. Animals should not suffer. Making money does not give a free pass to do as one damn well pleases.

READ THIS BOOK! You will gain a view on big business that they try heartily in their marketing to prevent you from seeing.


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