 |
| An
excerpt from Eric Schlosser's |
Eric
Schlosser interview |
| Fast
Food Nation |
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Introduction
Cheyenne
Mountain sits on the eastern slope of Colorado's Front Range, rising steeply
from the prairie and overlooking the city of Colorado Springs. From a distance,
the mountain appears beautiful and serene, dotted with rocky outcroppings, scrub
oak, and ponderosa pine. It looks like the backdrop of an old Hollywood western,
just another gorgeous Rocky Mountain vista. And yet Cheyenne Mountain is hardly
pristine. One of the nation's most important military installations lies deep
within it, housing units of the North American Aerospace Command, the Air Force
Space Command, and the United States Space Command. During the mid-1950s, high-level
officials at the Pentagon worried that America's air defenses had become vulnerable
to sabotage and attack. Cheyenne Mountain was chosen as the site for a top-secret,
underground combat operations center. The mountain was hollowed out, and fifteen
buildings, most of them three stories high, were erected amid a maze of tunnels
and passageways extending for miles. The four-and-a-half-acre underground complex
was designed to survive a direct hit by an atomic bomb. Now officially called
the Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station, the facility is entered through steel
blast doors that are three feet thick and weigh twenty-five tons each; they
automatically swing shut in less than twenty seconds. The base is closed to
the public, and a heavily armed quick response team guards against intruders.
Pressurized air within the complex prevents contamination by radioactive fallout
and biological weapons. The buildings are mounted on gigantic steel springs
to ride out an earthquake or the blast wave of a thermonuclear strike. The hallways
and staircases are painted slate gray, the ceilings are low, and there are combination
locks on many of the doors. A narrow escape tunnel, entered through a metal
hatch, twists and turns its way out of the mountain through solid rock. The
place feels like the set of an early James Bond movie, with men in jumpsuits
driving little electric vans from one brightly lit cavern to another.
Fifteen hundred
people work inside the mountain, maintaining the facility and collecting information
from a worldwide network of radars, spy satellites, ground-based sensors, airplanes,
and blimps. The Cheyenne Mountain Operations Center tracks every manmade object
that enters North American airspace or that orbits the earth. It is the heart
of the nation's early warning system. It can detect the firing of a long-range
missile, anywhere in the world, before that missile has left the launch pad.
This futuristic
military base inside a mountain has the capability to be self-sustaining for
at least one month. Its generators can produce enough electricity to power a
city the size of Tampa, Florida. Its underground reservoirs hold millions of
gallons of water; workers sometimes traverse them in rowboats. The complex has
its own underground fitness center, a medical clinic, a dentist's office, a
barbershop, a chapel, and a cafeteria. When the men and women stationed at Cheyenne
Mountain get tired of the food in the cafeteria, they often send somebody over
to the Burger King at Fort Carson, a nearby army base. Or they call Domino's.
Almost every night,
a Domino's deliveryman winds his way up the lonely Cheyenne Mountain Road, past
the ominous DEADLY FORCE AUTHORIZED signs, past the security checkpoint at the
entrance of the base, driving toward the heavily guarded North Portal, tucked
behind chain link and barbed wire. Near the spot where the road heads straight
into the mountainside, the delivery man drops off his pizzas and collects his
tip. And should Armageddon come, should a foreign enemy someday shower the United
States with nuclear warheads, laying waste to the whole continent, entombed
within Cheyenne Mountain, along with the high-tech marvels, the pale blue jumpsuits,
comic books, and Bibles, future archeologists may find other clues to the nature
of our civilization -- Big King wrappers, hardened crusts of Cheesy Bread, Barbeque
Wing bones, and the red, white, and blue of a Domino's pizza box.
what we eat
Over the last three
decades, fast food has infiltrated every nook and cranny of American society.
An industry that began with a handful of modest hot dog and hamburger stands
in southern California has spread to every corner of the nation, selling a broad
range of foods wherever paying customers may be found. Fast food is now served
at restaurants and drive-throughs, at stadiums, airports, zoos, high schools,
elementary schools, and universities, on cruise ships, trains, and airplanes,
at K-Marts, Wal-Marts, gas stations, and even at hospital cafeterias. In 1970,
Americans spent about $6 billion on fast food; in 2000, they spent more than
$110 billion. Americans now spend more money on fast food than on higher education,
personal computers, computer software, or new cars. They spend more on fast
food than on movies, books, magazines, newspapers, videos, and recorded music
-- combined.
Pull open the glass
door, feel the rush of cool air, walk in, get on line, study the backlit color
photographs above the counter, place your order, hand over a few dollars, watch
teenagers in uniforms pushing various buttons, and moments later take hold of
a plastic tray full of food wrapped in colored paper and cardboard. The whole
experience of buying fast food has become so routine, so thoroughly unexceptional
and mundane, that it is now taken for granted, like brushing your teeth or stopping
for a red light. It has become a social custom as American as a small, rectangular,
hand-held, frozen, and reheated apple pie.
This is a book
about fast food, the values it embodies, and the world it has made. Fast food
has proven to be a revolutionary force in American life; I am interested in
it both as a commodity and as a metaphor. What people eat (or don't eat) has
always been determined by a complex interplay of social, economic, and technological
forces. The early Roman Republic was fed by its citizen-farmers; the Roman Empire,
by its slaves. A nation's diet can be more revealing than its art or literature.
On any given day in the United States about one-quarter of the adult population
visits a fast food restaurant. During a relatively brief period of time, the
fast food industry has helped to transform not only the American diet, but also
our landscape, economy, workforce, and popular culture. Fast food and its consequences
have become inescapable, regardless of whether you eat it twice a day, try to
avoid it, or have never taken a single bite.
The extraordinary
growth of the fast food industry has been driven by fundamental changes in American
society. Adjusted for inflation, the hourly wage of the average U.S. worker
peaked in 1973 and then steadily declined for the next twenty-five years. During
that period, women entered the workforce in record numbers, often motivated
less by a feminist perspective than by a need to pay the bills. In 1975, about
one-third of American mothers with young children worked outside the home; today
almost two-thirds of such mothers are employed. As the sociologists Cameron
Lynne Macdonald and Carmen Sirianni have noted, the entry of so many women into
the workforce has greatly increased demand for the types of services that housewives
traditionally perform: cooking, cleaning, and child care. A generation ago,
three-quarters of the money used to buy food in the United States was spent
to prepare meals at home. Today about half of the money used to buy food is
spent at restaurants -- mainly at fast food restaurants.
The McDonald's
Corporation has become a powerful symbol of America's service economy, which
is now responsible for 90 percent of the country's new jobs. In 1968, McDonald's
operated about one thousand restaurants. Today it has about twenty-eight thousand
restaurants worldwide and opens almost two thousand new ones each year. An estimated
one out of every eight workers in the United States has at some point been employed
by McDonald's. The company annually hires about one million people, more than
any other American organization, public or private. McDonald's is the nation's
largest purchaser of beef, pork, and potatoes -- and the second largest purchaser
of chicken. The McDonald's Corporation is the largest owner of retail property
in the world. Indeed, the company earns the majority of its profits not from
selling food but from collecting rent. McDonald's spends more money on advertising
and marketing than any other brand. As a result it has replaced Coca-Cola as
the world's most famous brand. McDonald's operates more playgrounds than any
other private entity in the United States. It is one of the nation's largest
distributors of toys. A survey of American schoolchildren found that 96 percent
could identify Ronald McDonald. The only fictional character with a higher degree
of recognition was Santa Claus. The impact of McDonald's on the way we live
today is hard to overstate. The Golden Arches are now more widely recognized
than the Christian cross.
In the early 1970s,
the farm activist Jim Hightower warned of "the McDonaldization of America."
He viewed the emerging fast food industry as a threat to independent businesses,
as a step toward a food economy dominated by giant corporations, and as a homogenizing
influence on American life. In Eat Your Heart Out (1975), he argued that "bigger
is not better." Much of what Hightower feared has come to pass. The centralized
purchasing decisions of the large restaurant chains and their demand for standardized
products have given a handful of corporations an unprecedented degree of power
over the nation's food supply. Moreover, the tremendous success of the fast
food industry has encouraged other industries to adopt similar business methods.
The basic thinking behind fast food has become the operating system of today's
retail economy, wiping out small businesses, obliterating regional differences,
and spreading identical stores throughout the country like a self-replicating
code.
America's main
streets and malls now boast the same Pizza Huts and Taco Bells, Gaps and Banana
Republics, Starbucks and Jiffy-Lubes, Foot Lockers, Snip N' Clips, Sunglass
Huts, and Hobbytown USAs. Almost every facet of American life has now been franchised
or chained. From the maternity ward at a Columbia/HCA hospital to an embalming
room owned by Service Corporation International -- "the world's largest provider
of death care services," based in Houston, Texas, which since 1968 has grown
to include 3,823 funeral homes, 523 cemeteries, and 198 crematoriums, and which
today handles the final remains of one out of every nine Americans -- a person
can now go from the cradle to the grave without spending a nickel at an independently
owned business.
The key to a successful
franchise, according to many texts on the subject, can be expressed in one word:
"uniformity." Franchises and chain stores strive to offer exactly the same product
or service at numerous locations. Customers are drawn to familiar brands by
an instinct to avoid the unknown. A brand offers a feeling of reassurance when
its products are always and everywhere the same. "We have found out . . . that
we cannot trust some people who are nonconformists," declared Ray Kroc, one
of the founders of McDonald's, angered by some of his franchisees. "We will
make conformists out of them in a hurry . . . The organization cannot trust
the individual; the individual must trust the organization."
One of the ironies
of America's fast food industry is that a business so dedicated to conformity
was founded by iconoclasts and self-made men, by entrepreneurs willing to defy
conventional opinion. Few of the people who built fast food empires ever attended
college, let alone business school. They worked hard, took risks, and followed
their own paths. In many respects, the fast food industry embodies the best
and the worst of American capitalism at the start of the twenty-first century
-- its constant stream of new products and innovations, its widening gulf between
rich and poor. The industrialization of the restaurant kitchen has enabled the
fast food chains to rely upon a low-paid and unskilled workforce. While a handful
of workers manage to rise up the corporate ladder, the vast majority lack full-time
employment, receive no benefits, learn few skills, exercise little control over
their workplace, quit after a few months, and float from job to job. The restaurant
industry is now America's largest private employer, and it pays some of the
lowest wages. During the economic boom of the 1990s, when many American workers
enjoyed their first pay raises in a generation, the real value of wages in the
restaurant industry continued to fall. The roughly 3.5 million fast food workers
are by far the largest group of minimum wage earners in the United States. The
only Americans who consistently earn a lower hourly wage are migrant farm workers.
A hamburger and
french fries became the quintessential American meal in the 1950s, thanks to
the promotional efforts of the fast food chains. The typical American now consumes
approximately three hamburgers and four orders of french fries every week. But
the steady barrage of fast food ads, full of thick juicy burgers and long golden
fries, rarely mentions where these foods come from nowadays or what ingredients
they contain. The birth of the fast food industry coincided with Eisenhower-era
glorifications of technology, with optimistic slogans like "Better Living through
Chemistry" and "Our Friend the Atom." The sort of technological wizardry that
Walt Disney promoted on television and at Disneyland eventually reached its
fulfillment in the kitchens of fast food restaurants. Indeed, the corporate
culture of McDonald's seems inextricably linked to that of the Disney empire,
sharing a reverence for sleek machinery, electronics, and automation. The leading
fast food chains still embrace a boundless faith in science -- and as a result
have changed not just what Americans eat, but also how their food is made.
The current methods
for preparing fast food are less likely to be found in cookbooks than in trade
journals such as Food Technologist and Food Engineering. Aside from the salad
greens and tomatoes, most fast food is delivered to the restaurant already frozen,
canned, dehydrated, or freeze-dried. A fast food kitchen is merely the final
stage in a vast and highly complex system of mass production. Foods that may
look familiar have in fact been completely reformulated. What we eat has changed
more in the last forty years than in the previous forty thousand. Like Cheyenne
Mountain, today's fast food conceals remarkable technological advances behind
an ordinary-looking façade. Much of the taste and aroma of American fast food,
for example, is now manufactured at a series of large chemical plants off the
New Jersey Turnpike.
In the fast food
restaurants of Colorado Springs, behind the counters, amid the plastic seats,
in the changing landscape outside the window, you can see all the virtues and
destructiveness of our fast food nation. I chose Colorado Springs as a focal
point for this book because the changes that have recently swept through the
city are emblematic of those that fast food -- and the fast food mentality --have
encouraged throughout the United States. Countless other suburban communities,
in every part of the country, could have been used to illustrate the same points.
The extraordinary growth of Colorado Springs neatly parallels that of the fast
food industry: during
the last few decades, the city's population has more than doubled. Subdivisions,
shopping malls, and chain restaurants are appearing in the foothills of Cheyenne
Mountain and the plains rolling to the east. The Rocky Mountain region as a
whole has the fastest-growing economy in the United States, mixing high-tech
and service industries in a way that may define America's workforce for years
to come. And new restaurants are opening there at a faster pace than anywhere
else in the nation.
Fast food is now
so commonplace that it has acquired an air of inevitability, as though it were
somehow unavoidable, a fact of modern life. And yet the dominance of the fast
food giants was no more preordained than the march of colonial split-levels,
golf courses, and man-made lakes across the deserts of the American West. The
political philosophy that now prevails in so much of the West -- with its demand
for lower taxes, smaller government, an unbridled free market -- stands in total
contradiction to the region's true economic underpinnings. No other region of
the United States has been so dependent on government subsidies for so long,
from the nineteenth-century construction of its railroads to the twentieth-century
financing of its military bases and dams. One historian has described the federal
government's 1950s highway-building binge as a case study in "interstate socialism"
-- a phrase that aptly describes how the West was really won. The fast food
industry took root alongside that interstate highway system, as a new form of
restaurant sprang up beside the new off-ramps. Moreover, the extraordinary growth
of this industry over the past quarter-century did not occur in a political
vacuum. It took place during a period when the inflation-adjusted value of the
minimum wage declined by about 40 percent, when sophisticated mass marketing
techniques were for the first time directed at small children, and when federal
agencies created to protect workers and consumers too often behaved like branch
offices of the companies that were supposed to be regulated. Ever since the
administration of President Richard Nixon, the fast food industry has worked
closely with its allies in Congress and the White House to oppose new worker
safety, food safety, and minimum wage laws. While publicly espousing support
for the free market, the fast food chains have quietly pursued and greatly benefited
from a wide variety of government subsidies. Far from being inevitable, America's
fast food industry in its present form is the logical outcome of certain political
and economic choices.
In the potato fields
and processing plants of Idaho, in the ranchlands east of Colorado Springs,
in the feedlots and slaughterhouses of the High Plains, you can see the effects
of fast food on the nation's rural life, its environment, its workers, and its
health. The fast food chains now stand atop a huge food-industrial complex that
has gained control of American agriculture. During the 1980s, large multinationals
-- such as Cargill, ConAgra, and IBP -- were allowed to dominate one commodity
market after another. Farmers and cattle ranchers are losing their independence,
essentially becoming hired hands for the agribusiness giants or being forced
off the land. Family farms are now being replaced by gigantic corporate farms
with absentee owners. Rural communities are losing their middle class and becoming
socially stratified, divided between a small, wealthy elite and large numbers
of the working poor. Small towns that seemingly belong in a Norman Rockwell
painting are being turned into rural ghettos. The hardy, independent farmers
whom Thomas Jefferson considered the bedrock of American democracy are a truly
vanishing breed. The United States now has more prison inmates than full-time
farmers.
The fast food chains'
vast purchasing power and their demand for a uniform product have encouraged
fundamental changes in how cattle are raised, slaughtered, and processed into
ground beef. These changes have made meatpacking -- once a highly skilled, highly
paid occupation -- into the most dangerous job in the United States, performed
by armies of poor, transient immigrants whose injuries often go unrecorded and
uncompensated. And the same meat industry practices that endanger these workers
have facilitated the introduction of deadly pathogens, such as E. coli 0157:H7,
into America's hamburger meat, a food aggressively marketed to children. Again
and again, efforts to prevent the sale of tainted ground beef have been thwarted
by meat industry lobbyists and their allies in Congress. The federal government
has the legal authority to recall a defective toaster oven or stuffed animal
-- but still lacks the power to recall tons of contaminated, potentially lethal
meat.
I do not mean to
suggest that fast food is solely responsible for every social problem now haunting
the United States. In some cases (such as the malling and sprawling of the West)
the fast food industry has been a catalyst and a symptom of larger economic
trends. In other cases (such as the rise of franchising and the spread of obesity)
fast food has played a more central role. By tracing the diverse influences
of fast food I hope to shed light not only on the workings of an important industry,
but also on a distinctively American way of viewing the world.
Elitists have always
looked down at fast food, criticizing how it tastes and regarding it as another
tacky manifestation of American popular culture. The aesthetics of fast food
are of much less concern to me than its impact upon the lives of ordinary Americans,
both as workers and consumers. Most of all, I am concerned about its impact
on the nation's children. Fast food is heavily marketed to children and prepared
by people who are barely older than children. This is an industry that both
feeds and feeds off the young. During the two years spent researching this book,
I ate an enormous amount of fast food. Most of it tasted pretty good. That is
one of the main reasons people buy fast food; it has been carefully designed
to taste good. It's also inexpensive and convenient. But the value meals, two-for-one
deals, and free refills of soda give a distorted sense of how much fast food
actually costs. The real price never appears on the menu.
The sociologist
George Ritzer has attacked the fast food industry for celebrating a narrow measure
of efficiency over every other human value, calling the triumph of McDonald's
"the irrationality of rationality." Others consider the fast food industry proof
of the nation's great economic vitality, a beloved American institution that
appeals overseas to millions who admire our way of life. Indeed, the values,
the culture, and the industrial arrangements of our fast food nation are now
being exported to the rest of the world. Fast food has joined Hollywood movies,
blue jeans, and pop music as one of America's most prominent cultural exports.
Unlike other commodities, however, fast food isn't viewed, read, played, or
worn. It enters the body and becomes part of the consumer. No other industry
offers, both literally and figuratively, so much insight into the nature of
mass consumption.
Hundreds of millions
of people buy fast food every day without giving it much thought, unaware of
the subtle and not so subtle ramifications of their purchases. They rarely consider
where this food came from, how it was made, what it is doing to the community
around them. They just grab their tray off the counter, find a table, take a
seat, unwrap the paper, and dig in. The whole experience is transitory and soon
forgotten. I've written this book out of a belief that people should know what
lies behind the shiny, happy surface of every fast food transaction. They should
know what really lurks between those sesame-seed buns. As the old saying goes:
You are what you
eat.
Copyright © 2000
Eric Schlosser. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin
Company.
Fast
Food Nation
Read
an Interview with Eric Schlosser.
A
January/February 2001 Book Sense 76 pick
"The author shines a light on the fact that it is impossible for the average
American consumer to experience a transaction that doesn't involve processing
of some kind. This book is vital reading for everyone who is fighting the battle
against big chains, homogenization, and globalization. This is the most thought-provoking
nonfiction I've read in awhile."
-- Juliana Wood, Bibelot, Baltimore, MD
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European Meat Disaster
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