←back to thread

354 points perihelions | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.444s | source
Show context
prairieroadent ◴[] No.44534531[source]
there has to be a way for us as a society to introduce a level of accountability into our so called "food" supply chain without the burden of regulation... perhaps it's as simple as spending more educating our kids about agriculture

amendment: seems to be an unpopular take... my point being regulation is a workaround for a population that is worst than uneducated, miseducated, especially in regards to agriculture and "food" supply chain... if kids were provided with an actual education and not miseducated on the subject then the demand for on-demand food testing would go up, and prices for said testing would eventually go down after supply rises to meet demand increasing competition thus encouraging technological innovations to come in and lower prices

amendment ii: in a competitive market where all participants are thoroughly educated and the consumer is armed with the ability to test their food frequently then a market would likely emerge where consumers buy directly from farmers who out of market forces publish test alongside their crop

replies(4): >>44534570 #>>44534752 #>>44534869 #>>44535107 #
downrightmike ◴[] No.44534752[source]
FDA and USDA are supposed to do that. It has to be government lead, because we know business will cheat
replies(1): >>44535282 #
SoftTalker ◴[] No.44535282[source]
But government won't cheat?
replies(3): >>44535479 #>>44536110 #>>44536169 #
1. prairieroadent ◴[] No.44535479[source]
yeah, it seems people don't realize the level of corruption that exists in this country... middle management is a workaround for miseducation
replies(2): >>44536190 #>>44538427 #
2. markhahn ◴[] No.44536190[source]
not sure which country "this" is, but corruption (taking bribes for harm) is quite uncommon in the US, Canada, Europe, etc.