Fast Food Nation : The Dark Side of the All-American Meal
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Interesting facts about the history, structure, innovations in the fast food industry. The author beats you to death with his solutions to current problems. These solutions have been tried through out history and have failed.. eg. a labor union for fast food workers... lets see raise wages so a McDonald's employee can pay dues to an organization that is going to look out for them. Right. The issue with fast food is you and I. We don't have the self control to watch what we eat.
I give the author credit for writing a well researched book. However I felt the book could flow a little better at times I didn't feel the chapters connected. There were human interest stories about specific people doing what is right/moral, but they didn't seem to lead anywhere as the next chapter was once again pointing out how bad our slaughterhouses are. This book is very honest on the conditions in the slaughterhouses if you are squeamish this book is probably not for you.
You might never eat a fast food burger again. Frightening and appalling. Very well written and the research seems solid. Put me right off fast food franchises. A very worthy listen.
Really opened my eyes to some things and makes me not want to eat ... anything. Grayyyyyyt. It helped me realize in yet another way how our morality in social justice and our own health have been cashed in for convenience. I think I'm beginning to see the narrow path more clearly now ...
I have a much better eating habit after having read this book. Informative and entertaining.
I was expecting … then read this book! I was expecting a book along the lines of Morgan Spurlock’s “Supersize Me” movie. If “Supersize Me” is that ‘what’ of how fast food is affecting us as society, “Fastfood Nation” is the ‘how’ and ‘why’ of what our streamlined feeding process has become and what it has done to our entire world. Very thoughtful and VERY scary. I have still not eaten at a fast food place since reading this book. I highly recommend this for all comers.
This is one of the best audio books I've ever listened to. I thought the whole thing was fascinating. I couldn’t listen to it fast enough.
What an eye-opening book. Propaganda? I think not. Schlosser pretty much tells it like it is. Anyone who clings to the sentimental but foolish notion that politicians aren't bought off by the lobbyists for the major industry associations would do well to avoid this book. The reality is that we the taxpayers are providing corporate welfare -- directly and indirectly -- to those who all but enslave a captive workforce to do their dirty work. Bravo.
This was a very interesting book. From the history of fast food restaurants to the conditions of the meat packing processes (from feed lot to ground beef) there was quite a bit of food for thought. It was enough to change my buying habits.
Schlosser takes a look into the ingredients, the kitchens, and the corporate boardrooms behind America's fast food. The picture is not pretty. More important, he looks at how fast food has restructured American life--destroying family farms, changing the basic nature of the food we eat, transforming the work force from people with skills, pride in their work, and benefits, to disposable hands whose lives and personalities mean nothing to employers beyond what can be transcribed in dollars and cents. This book will make you reconsider where you buy food. I hope it will also help Americans reconsider the government they have elected to do their political work.
"Eric Schlosser is a correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly. He has received a number of journalistic honors, including a National Magazine Award for an Atlantic article he wrote about marijuana. This is his first book."