When it comes to what goes in our
food and eventually goes in us, people are concerned. That is a fact. Global
agriculture and food exports are a hot topic for politicians, scientists, and
more than ever, young citizens. Millenials and the environment are positively
correlated, with concern for the environment in general (including agricultural
techniques) steadily on the rise. Many young liberals and even some young
conservatives make the environment a priority in their political viewpoint.
From issues like the Keystone Pipeline to China and U.S. carbon emission
agreements, millennials are usually on the side of the action which will result
in better environmental health. The cultural phenomenon is widespread, and when
focused on the specific subjects within that field like the handling of today’s
agriculture, we see that millennials in California are especially proponents of
transparency in food production.
Everyday citizens around the country are
going to work, Oregon is even voting on a GMO labeling bill this week. As far
as states go though, California residents the cake for their actions towards
sustainable agriculture and rejection of forced GMO inconspicuousness. In
California there are many homegrown initiatives to keep food local and sustainably
grown. Such examples include the Local Food Policy Groups which attempt to monitor
their community’s food system so that it fits the needs of all its citizens. There
website states that, “The California Food Policy Council is an emerging voice
in California’s policy making process that strives to bring transparency to
food systems legislation, and to re-envision a political process that includes
a more diverse range of food and farming interests to the table.” While some
work to build up policies and knock others down, others are making a change in
the field. California has numerous community gardens which allow people to grow
their own food right in the city. This has provided low income families for
healthy nutritious food that would otherwise be out of reach among the cheaper
processed foods. It had kept the area’s air and water clean, and it has also
allowed the land to remain fertile since the soil is not deprived by aggressive
farming. On the state level, California began the push to label products containing genetically modified foods which has become widespread among many
states. Although the law was shut down repeatedly, the citizens have not given
up. Some stores have begun labeling foods on their own, and the initiative is
still being passed around in order to be presented again in the near future for
another round of consideration.
Still, California
is only one state in a country whose youth are overwhelmingly choosing to eat
locally, grow their own food, and boycott the current food production model
through their diets. Many have gone vegetarian, vegan, completely organic, or
any other special diet in order to boycott what they feel is not a fair or
healthy choice of food items they are exposed to on a daily basis.
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