The Food Inc. documentary was okay but it spent more time trying to hit Lefty political points that conveying the larger picture of tightly-held corporate control over America's entire food chain in the hands of a dozen or so food conglomerates that own many different brands on store shelves.
The Food Inc. documentary was okay but it spent more time trying to hit Lefty political points that conveying the larger picture of tightly-held corporate control over America's entire food chain in the hands of a dozen or so food conglomerates that own many different brands on store shelves.
I know, but it seems that no one on our political side seems interested in taking out monsanto. Politics at times, do4es indeed make strange bed fellows.
I know, but it seems that no one on our political side seems interested in taking out monsanto. Politics at times, do4es indeed make strange bed fellows.
Political conflicts/debates are often going not by rigidly defined left and right wings (whatever right and left might mean). For example one can support Republicans on one issue and Democrats on other.
When the system gets centralized and more oppressive, both parties might coalesce around key power issues while bamboozling the public with secondary (from establishment point of view) quarrels.
In such situation the main polarization might be between the center and the margins, when the fringe groups left and right raise the same issues although in different language, making coordination difficult. In addition the center might use triangulation technique.