You know, I tried an approach quite similar to that with an English teacher once, and it flopped, big time.
I happen to have a degree in English, and can tell you exactly why that is. In Literature, the whole point is to discuss not only what the author said, but how they said it. It's entirely possible to discuss, analyze, and criticize specific idea put forward in a work, literature or scientific, without having read the work itself. One just needs the idea and the supporting, or unsupported, evidence.
I'm not criticizing his prose, grammar, or flow. I'm criticizing specific ideas. If he really didn't put forth these ideas, then that's a valid reason to not discuss his use of them. However, this thread isn't the 'Pollan's ideas on diet' thread, and we're free to discuss things besides his work.
How about you first explain to me why I should take even more time than I already have to explain to you what Pollan himself explains -- and much better than I could? What, you have time for typing, but no time for reading? Not even time to watch YouTube videos? You want links?
Because you seem interested in talking about it. If you can't or don't want to explain, that's fine. However, don't go whining and moaning about how I can't understand or talk about things if you don't.
I'm not buying his books. I don't care to. From what I've read so far, I wouldn't like them, and somehow it appears I'm pretty much already living his advise despite that.
I make it a habit
not to watch every crank someone links to on YouTube.
Do you understand the nature and extent of the role played by government subsidies in agriculture?
Very much so to the point where, if you've read my posts, I'm very critical of them. Nice try though.
And you don't? I mean, I don't think I'd put it quite that way, but whatever the organic movement's roots are, it has absolutely been co-opted by the likes of General Mills -- to such an extent that the designation is essentially meaningless today.
If you want something to be anti-corporate, anti-industrial, then call it that. Don't make up standards like 'organic' and then cry about it when the professionals do it better than you do. It's always been an essentially meaningless designation, an advertising buzz word. So what that it isn't a buzz word that means 'anti-industrial' any more?
Tough to respond to that due to your use of that word: organic. If we can agree to use that here to refer to methods placing more emphasis on polyculture, and on integrated farming techniques, and other alternatives to chemical-based mass monoculture, then I'd ask: Efficient for whom? Do you suppose that farmers who practice large-scale monoculture farming make a lot of money doing so? Since you brought it up, what if the price of oil doubled a few times (and along with it, prices of petroleum-based fertilizers, herbicides, and pesticides) -- would it still be more efficient then?
No, we can't agree on that because it's a clearly false dichotomy. polyculture and monoculture are one thing, but monoculture is in absolutely no way chained to 'chemical-based' and polyculture isn't chained to intergrated farming techiques. Besides that, polyculture and monoculture are not what I was talking about in the first place. I've already come out against monoculture.
No, I didn't bring up oil prices. If they went up industrial farming practices would change to adapt, just like they always have. Nice try, but this just isn't part of what we're talking about.
What I was talking about was
professional farmers being thousands of times more efficient at growing things on the available land than
part time farmers. Industrial farmers have specialized equipment and support businesses specifically for growing food well. Besides that, they constantly invent and adapt new techniques, and keep up on the latest science, to do better and better. No, amateur farmers and hobbyist are
never in my lifetime going to be efficient at growing and producing food as the pros. What techniques and technology the pros use doesn't change that at all. Monoculture, polyculture, organic, 'chemical', doesn't matter. The pros are still pros.
One of Pollan's central points is that agriculture in the U.S. is largely designed around economies of scale. The way food is grown has as much to do with the way it is marketed as the other way around; perhaps more (if you're a buyer for a nationwide chain, you can't deal with a host of little guys; you need people who are playing on your level). The shift toward mass monoculture was largely driven by government policy, starting with Ag Secretary Earl Butz's admonition to farmers: "get big or get out".
Which I've already criticized and isn't an argument for horticulture, but ok.
I don't know about "individual scale" farming, but if some degree of de-centralizing and de-industrializing of our system of agriculture can't support our population then obesity may be far less a problem in decades to come, because if you really look at it close, you'll see that we are fast approaching a point at which we aren't going to have a choice about that. But you're assuming that "feeding our population" is the only reason we grow stuff. It isn't. Food exports are also a major source of global economic and political muscle (an observation which goes a long way toward understanding why agriculture is so heavily subsidized by the government).
Of course it isn't, but feeding our population, and other populations, is the main goal.
Population bomb? Not convincing. Even if it were, not an argument against modern agriculture.