Farmageddon – Philip Lymbery & Isabel Oakeshott Tristram Stuart provides his own view of Farmageddon in an insightful Guardian article: “This catalogue of devastation [explored in Farmageddon] will convince anyone who doubts that industrial farming is causing ecological meltdown. Whether it’s a question of the wellbeing of individual farm animals, the biodiversity in rainforests or the harm caused to peoples such as the Toba tribe – displaced to the grim suburbs of Lima by the onward march into their traditional forests of GM soy plantations that feed European livestock – fixing the food system has to be a priority. […]With every meal we eat, we choose whether or not to contribute to these problems. The businesses we buy our food from are our servants; they want to keep us happy. It follows that they will change only if we show them we are unhappy with, or, even better, enraged by, the current system.[…] Lymbery brings to this essential subject the perspective of a seasoned campaigner – he is informed enough to be appalled, and moderate enough to persuade us to take responsibility for the system that feeds us.” Read the full review here: http://bit.ly/2kVfUyF


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Add to Calendar Europe/Paris Farmageddon – Philip Lymbery & Isabel Oakeshott Tristram Stuart provides his own view of Farmageddon in an insightful Guardian article: “This catalogue of devastation [explored in Farmageddon] will convince anyone who doubts that industrial farming is causing ecological meltdown. Whether it’s a question of the wellbeing of individual farm animals, the biodiversity in rainforests or the harm caused to peoples such as the Toba tribe – displaced to the grim suburbs of Lima by the onward march into their traditional forests of GM soy plantations that feed European livestock – fixing the food system has to be a priority. […]With every meal we eat, we choose whether or not to contribute to these problems. The businesses we buy our food from are our servants; they want to keep us happy. It follows that they will change only if we show them we are unhappy with, or, even better, enraged by, the current system.[…] Lymbery brings to this essential subject the perspective of a seasoned campaigner – he is informed enough to be appalled, and moderate enough to persuade us to take responsibility for the system that feeds us.” Read the full review here: http://bit.ly/2kVfUyF

Farmageddon – Philip Lymbery & Isabel Oakeshott

Tristram Stuart provides his own view of Farmageddon in an insightful Guardian article: “This catalogue of devastation [explored in Farmageddon] will convince anyone who doubts that industrial farming is causing ecological meltdown. Whether it’s a question of the wellbeing of individual farm animals, the biodiversity in rainforests or the harm caused to peoples such as the Toba tribe – displaced to the grim suburbs of Lima by the onward march into their traditional forests of GM soy plantations that feed European livestock – fixing the food system has to be a priority. […]With every meal we eat, we choose whether or not to contribute to these problems. The businesses we buy our food from are our servants; they want to keep us happy. It follows that they will change only if we show them we are unhappy with, or, even better, enraged by, the current system.[…]
Lymbery brings to this essential subject the perspective of a seasoned campaigner – he is informed enough to be appalled, and moderate enough to persuade us to take responsibility for the system that feeds us.” Read the full review here: http://bit.ly/2kVfUyF
#Librerialondon #libtryptich #libreriarecommends #farmageddon #guardianbookreviews #youarewhatyoubuy

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Farmageddon – Philip Lymbery & Isabel Oakeshott

Tristram Stuart provides his own view of Farmageddon in an insightful Guardian article: “This catalogue of devastation [explored in Farmageddon] will convince anyone who doubts that industrial farming is causing ecological meltdown. Whether it’s a question of the wellbeing of individual farm animals, the biodiversity in rainforests or the harm caused to peoples such as the Toba tribe – displaced to the grim suburbs of Lima by the onward march into their traditional forests of GM soy plantations that feed European livestock – fixing the food system has to be a priority. […]With every meal we eat, we choose whether or not to contribute to these problems. The businesses we buy our food from are our servants; they want to keep us happy. It follows that they will change only if we show them we are unhappy with, or, even better, enraged by, the current system.[…]
Lymbery brings to this essential subject the perspective of a seasoned campaigner – he is informed enough to be appalled, and moderate enough to persuade us to take responsibility for the system that feeds us.” Read the full review here: http://bit.ly/2kVfUyF
#Librerialondon #libtryptich #libreriarecommends #farmageddon #guardianbookreviews #youarewhatyoubuy

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