Pollan's Suggestion

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Just like the Ancient Mayan’s diet, the modern American diet consists of corn, and may even depend upon it. Unlike the Mayans, however, today’s corn can exist in a variety of hidden forms… Cereal, cups and plates, cheeses, adhesives, medications, feed for livestock on farms, and even the reflective sheen on magazine covers. Wow… Who knew, right? In his article “What’s Eating America,” featured in the New York Times Magazine, Michael Pollan suggests that the widespread ignorance about the importance of corn-based products in American life is not an accident. How could that possible be? For what reason could an entire industry, full of numerous companies, choose to hide such simple information? Perhaps the answer is also simple... If the American public were to realize just how massive the corn industry is as well as just how dependent American life is on corn as a foundation, the public would inevitable learn more about the production process for corn and pose a threat to the industry.
Upon investigation, one can learn that the boom in corn yields occurred shortly after World War II as a result of people using ammonium nitrate as inorganic fertilizer. After WWII, America had a leftover supply of ammonium nitrate, which is a vital ingredient for manufacturing bombs. Ammonium nitrate is a chemical compound that consists of nitrogen, oxygen, and hydrogen. So rather than letting those resources go to waste, agronomists, or scientists who study the science of soil management and the production of field crops, suggested using the leftover ammonium nitrate as fertilizer for farming. The agronomists’ idea of using ammonium nitrate as inorganic fertilizer was a godsend for the agriculture business and resulted in a boom in crop yields, esp...

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...corn yields for all of the corn-based products that are sold in America alone. If the American public were properly informed about their dependence on corn as well as the negative effects of the fertilizer used to produce all of their corn, Americans would be presented with a problem and a possible solution: stop using inorganic fertilizer. Unfortunately, refusal to use inorganic fertilizer not only slows the production of corn, but it results in a loss of profit for agri-business companies. So by knowing that the corn industry is massive, one can eventually learn how corn is produced (with ammonium nitrate), and pose a threat to the entire industry. The mere fact that companies can lose money because of an informed populace is enough reason for these companies to hide the fact that their products are grounded in corn and use American ignorance to their advantage.

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