NYT Editorial: When Wal-Mart Goes Organic
[Ian’s note: Ha! This time the NYT is truly wasting their breath: the likelihood that Wal-Mart will “play nice” re organic producers is about the same that Georg Bush will admit his failure in Iraq and withdraw the troops!]
But here are the pitfalls. Wal-Mart will now become the 800-pound gorilla among the other, slightly smaller gorillas that have tried repeatedly to weaken the Agriculture Department’s definition of what organic means. There is no chance that Wal-Mart will be buying from small, local organic farmers. Instead, its market influence will speed up the rate at which organic farming comes to resemble conventional farming in scale, mechanization, processing and transportation. For many people, this is the very antithesis of what organic should be.
People who think seriously about food have come to realize that “local” is at least as important a word as “organic.” The only thing local about Wal-Mart is its shoppers. For “Wal-Mart” and “organic” to make sense in the same sentence, the company will have to commit itself to protecting the Agriculture Department standard that gives “organic” meaning. Otherwise, it will become just another shill word, like “new” or “improved.”
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