Our approach to food production and food service is not value neutral. Through the creation of food, from raw ingredients to finished products, and through the giving or serving of food, we express a myriad of mores, social and cultural norms, anxieties, and personal neurosis. Though these webs of interrelated processes may be socially and personally challenging, their examination fosters community awareness and the opportunity to live, produce and consume with greater care and understanding, both socially and personally.

10 February 2010

Aggrevation Breeds Inspiration

Last night I found myself witness to yet another series of platitudes about food production, food service, the environment and this ephemeral concept: "corporate responsibility."  Let me describe what set me off:  I am a student of culinary management.  A description of just what that is is the subject of further discussion.  Being this student I found myself witness to a lecture on emerging trends and how small operators can define and participate in those trends, without the funds to engage in the requisite market research.  The example before us was McDonald's.  Before we go any further let me be clear: I am not a McDonald's hater, nor do I ascribe to the philosophy that all corporations of a given size are evil.  Rather I am of the mind that corporations, their power and size, are socially created, supported and justified.  Again, the subject of further discussion.  Returning to the lecture, McDonald's has 'uncovered' through its extensive and expensive market research that there are several trends which are of interest to their potential consumer base, including the environment and consumer health.  In response McDonald's has made available a summary of their corporate referendum aimed at addressing these concerns (http://www.mcdonalds.com/usa/good/report.html).  In this referendum McDonald's lists a number of achievements in its changing relationship to environment.  Several of us voiced concern that these achievements were for the most part based on goals set internally, without the direct input or oversight of organizations devoted to the monitoring of environmentally-helpful modes of production.  To give an analogy, this is much like a doctor saying that she has determined for herself what defines ethical practices in the domain of medicine and based upon that determination and her own observations of herself has found herself to be an ethically sound practitioner.  See the problem?  Our concerns were met with defensiveness and an element of disdain (and the accusation that we were just McDonald's haters).  And yet this lecture was literally being given under the title "Corporate Responsibility".  So what I wanted to know was whether we, as potential food service operators, were being encouraged to produce the semblance of care and responsibility in relation to production practices or if we were being encouraged actually to produce food and food service with an attitude of care and responsibility?  In the dismissal of that question, I got my answer:  The consumer (aka the person who pays the bills) wants to think that we care, but it doesn't really matter if we do.  It should be obvious by now that I have some serious problems with that answer.

As food service operators and as consumers we wield incredible power: the power of the dollar.  With incredible power should come incredible responsibility, (remembering of course that the domain of ethics deals not with what is but what should be (and perhaps how to get from 'should' to another, better 'is')).  There is no stronger force in American politics, or American social practices, today than the persuasive power of the dollar, and as consumers and operators we can choose to use that power to develop a future or to eradicate the possibility of a future at all.  The choice is there and no matter where your sympathies lie, it is anything but an easy question and anything but a platitude to be swept under the rug.

As a final thought, I find it particularly insidious that this kind of responsibility can be so easily dismissed when dealing with food, the original and most primal sign of care.  Food production and food service, that is, feeding each other, is the first, the last, and sometimes the only tangible care we can show for each other.  If that fact alone does not encourage a legitimate discussion of responsibility, corporate or otherwise, I am at a loss for what can.

3 comments:

Amelia said...

I love that you're blogging!! Woo!!

This is the conundrum that seems to find food producers on any level. I have precious little hope for corporations (and the government for that matter) having my best interests in mind when they are doing anything, because the dollar is their mark of success. High fructose corn syrup, partially hydrogenated oils, and that little trick around 0g trans fat make me actively hate both the FDA and the makers of processed foods; smaller tricks like giving corn junk 100 different names and figuring out a way to make organic Oreos also bother me. So diabetes, heart disease, the preventable diseases that have flooded especially low-income populations make me frustrated with food producers, the FDA, and their marketing campaigns. And I am totally with you on just how personal these deceptions feel, with food being the "original and most primal sign of care." Others might argue with us, Mikha. Food is survival, they might say, while we both know that food is love.

I feel like even on a small scale it is possible yet challenging to put the consumer's well-being first (unless you are a health food product) because it's almost always more expensive. I just watched this movie aptly entitled 'The Corporation,' and it addresses Corporate Social Responsibility and the fact that by and large it's kind of a farce.

What to do? Keep doing what you're doing: produce food and support producers of food who exhibit transparency of practices and integrity in every aspect of their business. There is a company near here, Taza Chocolate, that is one of many small yet inspiring such companies.

I love you and I can't wait till you have your own amazing establishment!

Anonymous said...

Ah, yes: It's Glaucon's challenge all over again, isn't it? "O Socrates, if you really want to make a case for environmentalism, you must show us that it's better to be earth-friendly--but thought of as a polluter and corporate scoundrel--than it is to be a vile, polluting corporation with the appearance of eco-friendliness!" Socrates's answer, as I recall, seemed to involve some sort of strange math problem and a myth about going to hell when you die...

Environmentalists, of course, have given us, as individuals, very compelling reasons to choose the former. But, it seems to me that the major difference between a corporation and any kind of individually-owned business is precisely that a corporation will never choose the first option over the second. And in fact--going back at least as far as Dodge Brothers Vs. Ford Motor Company, you could argue that a corporation is specifically designed to choose the second over the first...

A great start to the blog: I look forward to reading more!

Mikha Diaz said...

Thank you both for your posts. Perhaps the difficulty in choosing the semblance of care over the fact of care is, as Matt has pointed out, that corporations by definition are purposed to maximize profit, period. Perhaps we could circumvent this conundrum by redefining profit. This, however, would require a wide-ranging reexamination of what we consider to be 'good', to be 'progress', to be 'development'...in short, how we define the ethical. Hans Jonas made some headway in this in his essay "Technology and Responsibility" (Social Research, Spring 1973).