Teaching children food ethics starts with eating their broccoli

The response from a young Helen Razer: "Feed the world my broccoli." But can we eat and consume our way into a better, fairer world?

Feed the world my broccoli

Feed the world my broccoli. Source: Getty

“Eat your greens.”

Yes, I know now this is . No, I did not care to take it back then. I was five and my mother was rapidly ageing throughout this tea-time standoff. Poor woman. Poor anyone cursed with the care and feeding of a stubborn little kid. I forgive her, as I forgive all who resort to a version of the following reproach:

“Don’t you know there are children are starving in Cambodia?!”

This was my first lesson in food ethics. I understand why it was taught, but I didn’t learn it well. And, this wasn’t just because I loathed back then. It was because it made no damn sense. To suggest that the act of chewing held within it some great moral power – you eat to honour those who suffer famine – seemed absurd.
Quinoa chaufa (chaufa de quinoa)
Despite their good intentions, maybe your parents were wrong about the reason you should eat your greens. Source: Peru: The Cookbook
Between you and me, it still seems absurd. Every time I hear an echo of this old reproach, I feel as though I’m five. When a chain claims this takeaway cup will save a life, or a supermarket brand boasts that breakfast will build schools, I run straight back to pre-school. “No,” I want to tell 'em.  “If you care so much, build the school and send the broccoli and don’t make me responsible.”

Across the past decade or so, 'ethical' foods have arrived to market our individual sense of moral responsibility right back to us. We have genuinely come to believe we can eat and consume our way into a better, fairer world. Do you care about justice? Well, then you’ll buy . It boosts the “developing” economy of Peru.

If you care about tasty salads, buy quinoa. If you care about the farmers of Peru, consider smashing a globalised trade economy that rewards a wealthy few and penalises many.
Cannellini bean, ruby chard and quinoa pilaf
Does the developed world's appetite for quinoa help – or harm – the Peruvian farmers who grow the grain? Source: Anjum’s Australian Spice Stories
Both economists and food ethicists remain divided about whether the quinoa craze helped or harmed the nation of its traditional cultivation. When global market , so did the price. Great, right? Impoverished farmers were now growing gold. But, the people of Peru and Bolivia who had relied for many years on this staple were no .  Oops. Next, modest farmers unable to meet mass demand are offered financing by high-minded people, because economic growth is always good. Except, of course, it’s not. The crop price when a few farmers – those who borrowed money to expand their operations first – can produce it more efficiently on a mass scale. The other farmers are (a) paying off debt and (b) selling their little crop at a greatly reduced profit and … well. You get the idea: things ain’t simple.
To suggest that the act of chewing held within it some great moral power – you eat to honour those who suffer famine – seemed absurd.
A bratty pre-schooler knows this, but somehow, we forget it. Tell a mouthy kid like Helen, “Eat your greens because children are starving in Nation X”, and they’ll answer, “Well, pop it in the post, then.” When you’re little, you know that the world is big and complicated and well beyond your control. When you’re older, you can be tempted to think that you’re now big enough to control it.

If it makes you feel good to purchase a coffee that comes with some rainforest promise, do it.  If you feel moved to withdraw your support from a fast-food franchise, then move that support elsewhere. If you really want to retain your faith that one small act can save so many, that’s okay, too. Faith can be a comfort. And truth can be a real bore.
Can the coffee you buy really make a difference?
Can the coffee you buy really make a difference? Source: Getty Images
The boring truth is that we can’t buy our way to international justice. The boring truth is that we can’t exchange money for morals. A more exciting truth, however, is that we adults that food, good food, is a right for all. Through understanding this simple truth, and then the more complicated ones about uneven distribution, we can again have faith. The faith that all might be very well fed.

Helen Razer is your frugal food enthusiast, guiding you to the good eats, minus the pretension and price tag in her weekly Friday column, Cheap Tart. Don't miss her next instalment, follow her on Twitter .

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4 min read
Published 6 February 2018 8:20am
Updated 16 October 2018 8:21am
By Helen Razer


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