by chris » Wed Jun 29, 2005 12:28 pm
Anonymous wrote:I would call these places up and ask if they certify honey and they would say no, you can't. They were right you can't it is impossible, just like it is for every other product, but Honey is on the list as a product that can be labeled Organic and there are guidelines to follow. It is asinine.
In the case of honey, I can see why you might consider "organic" honey to be ridiculous. Technically, you can call your honey organic if your hives are 4 miles away from any cultivated land. As long as they're surrounded by natural plant growth or organic fields, the honey is technically "organic" and can be labeled as such. There are undoubtedly other foods that can be labeled as organic, although they don't differ from their non-organic counterparts in any significant way.
However, there's a much greater difference in how other foods are grown, and the organic standards really DO mean something. Given the choice between eating genetically modified vegetables that have been sprayed with RoundUp 40 times during the growing season, and non-GMO vegetables that have not been subjected to any chemicals, the choice (at least in my opinion) is clear.
The whole Organic "process" is a method for hippies to think they are eating good and a way for people selling organic crap to charge ridiculous sums of money for food.
I know- I dealt the idiots making it and the idiots making the rules!
With all due respect, you dealt with one
very small segment of what's becoming a very large industry. To make a blanket statement about organic food as a whole based on that experience wouldn't be fair. It would be like a stranger stumbling into JC, reading one of the thousands of messages posted by Pinback, and concluding that he's a thoughtful, insightful, intelligent guy.

[quote="Anonymous"]I would call these places up and ask if they certify honey and they would say no, you can't. They were right you can't it is impossible, just like it is for every other product, but Honey is on the list as a product that can be labeled Organic and there are guidelines to follow. It is asinine.
[/quote]
In the case of honey, I can see why you might consider "organic" honey to be ridiculous. Technically, you can call your honey organic if your hives are 4 miles away from any cultivated land. As long as they're surrounded by natural plant growth or organic fields, the honey is technically "organic" and can be labeled as such. There are undoubtedly other foods that can be labeled as organic, although they don't differ from their non-organic counterparts in any significant way.
However, there's a much greater difference in how other foods are grown, and the organic standards really DO mean something. Given the choice between eating genetically modified vegetables that have been sprayed with RoundUp 40 times during the growing season, and non-GMO vegetables that have not been subjected to any chemicals, the choice (at least in my opinion) is clear.
[quote]
The whole Organic "process" is a method for hippies to think they are eating good and a way for people selling organic crap to charge ridiculous sums of money for food.
I know- I dealt the idiots making it and the idiots making the rules![/quote]
With all due respect, you dealt with one [i]very[/i] small segment of what's becoming a very large industry. To make a blanket statement about organic food as a whole based on that experience wouldn't be fair. It would be like a stranger stumbling into JC, reading one of the thousands of messages posted by Pinback, and concluding that he's a thoughtful, insightful, intelligent guy. :smile: