industryterm:food restaurants

  • Beyond Monsanto’s GMO Cotton: Why Consumers Need to Care What We Wear
    http://ronnie.organicconsumers.org/beyond-monsantos-gmo-cotton-why-consumers-need-to-care-what

    3. GMO and toxic cotton: You’re eating it. Keep in mind that most of the world’s highly contaminated cotton seeds and cotton gin trash end up in animal feed (especially non-organic dairy) and in low-grade vegetable cooking oils, purchased by consumers or used in fast food restaurants and school cafeterias. Non-organic cotton is one of the most toxic crops on the planet.

    Government regulatory agencies, prompted by large cotton farmers and the garment industry, falsely claim that cotton is not a “food crop,” (in spite of the fact that 60 percent of what is harvested by weight ends up in the food chain). This means that super-toxic pesticides and herbicides are allowed to be sprayed, in copious quantities, on the cotton plant. So-called cotton by-products—cotton seeds, cotton seed oil and cotton gin trash—end up being sold and consumed as ingredients in both animal feed and human food. The pesticide residues in cottonseed accumulates in the fatty tissues of dairy cows, and are passed on in the milk and dairy products consumed by humans. Cottonseed oil is routinely laced into a variety of food products, from vitamins to potato chips, and is often addes to olive oil without being labeled. This means that GMOs and pesticide residues from cotton crops find their way into a wide range of non-organic food products, triggering health issues including food allergies, cancer and liver, kidney and immune system damage.

    [...]

    7. Chemical-intensive clothing poses dangers to human health. Skin is the body’s largest organ. One of its major jobs is to protect internal systems. But skin also acts as a conduit, a way of entering the bloodstream through absorption. Chemicals and #pesticides from synthetic materials and non-organic cotton make their way into human bodies through our skin. If you care about what you put in your body, you must also care what you put on your body. Health issues from such toxic chemical exposure range from headache to asthma to cancer.

    #OGM #santé #coton

  • Il y a ceux qui pensent à des pics pour que les SDF ne dorment pas devant chez eux...
    http://seenthis.net/messages/265970

    ... et il y a des maires en Italie qui décident de mettre de la musique techno à fond pour évacuer les Roms, sauf que... les Roms ont commencé à danser, au lieu de partir...

    I rom occupano abusivamente il campo, il sindaco mette musica a tutto volume per cacciarli

    Dopo aver provato in tutti i modi a far sloggiare un accampamento rom abusivo dal proprio Comune, ha tirato fuori quello che secondo lui doveva essere l’asso nella manica: ha ingaggiato un Dj, ha ordinato di sparare «a palla» musica techno e si è messo ad aspettare.


    http://www.ilmessaggero.it/PRIMOPIANO/ESTERI/rom_sgombero_musica_techno/notizie/801156.shtml

    #Roms #Belgique #musique #techno #Landen

    La technique de la musique, par contre, avait bien marché à la garde d’Hambourg... les « indésirables » sont partis après que dans la gare on ait mis de la musique classique 24h/24h... Peut-être le maire de Landen a juste fait le mauvais choix de genre musical...

    • Why a #San_Francisco Burger King Blasts Classical Music Day and Night

      Just outside a Burger King on Market Street, San Francisco’s main thoroughfare, classical music plays day and night. Instead of the hits circa 2018, it’s more the hits circa 1718, from composers such as Vivaldi and Bach. For years, San Franciscans have puzzled over why baroque constantly plays at a high volume on this block. But as an article published today in the Los Angeles Review of Books explains, the otherworldly music serves an earthly purpose: to discourage local homeless people from sticking around.

      Sound has long been used in public places to discourage loitering. In LARB, author Theodore Gioia writes that classical music as crowd dispersal probably dates to 1985, when a Canadian 7-Eleven pioneered the playing of Mozart in parking lots where people gathered. The tactic became store policy at almost 200 locations. Other methods are less sonorous. In 2008, increasing sales of a device called “the Mosquito” made news as it was installed in malls, movie theaters, and parking lots. Since the Mosquito emitted a tone that only young people could hear—due to more sensitive hair cells in ears—it was touted as a way to deter lingering teenagers.

      While the Mosquito incited outrage for targeting the young, it’s harder to be outraged about classical music. On one hand, it’s often seen as cultured and even soothing. Other fast food restaurants, such as McDonalds, tested using classical music to break up drunk brawls. But instead of its calming properties, it’s other aspects of classical music that appeal to those trying to tame “anti-social” behavior: It’s loud, and some people dislike classical tunes, considering them elevator music-like or elitist. That effect seems to have been sought after at the Market Street Burger King, where local property owners put forward the idea of playing classical music to shoo away anyone uninterested in buying Whoppers.

      This musical strategy is similar to hostile architecture, which uses design features such as strategically placed spikes and dividers on benches to keep homeless people from lying down. Neither solves underlying problems; instead they drive them away. And in both cases, once you’re aware of the tactic, you may start to notice it everywhere.


      https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/loud-classical-music.amp?__twitter_impression=true
      #villes #urban_matter #musique_classique

  • Historic Bookstores in Damascus Closing Doors | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/historic-bookstores-damascus-closing-doors

    Damascus - For some four decades, Maysaloun bookstore in the heart of Damascus was one of the city’s most important sources for publications on leftist and progressive thought, but in January of 2010, it closed its doors after its owners put it up for commercial investment.

    This historical bookstore was not the first to meet such a fate; many other bookstores had already been converted into shops, fast food restaurants, or branches of the private commercial banks that have invaded the Syrian market in recent years.