Food Apartheid: The Silent Killer in the Black Community

Medicate

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I been saying this for years, always wondered why there were not any or enough whole food stores or nutritional stores in Black Neighborhoods, but there is liquor stores and Mcdonalds on every corner...........:childplease:

http://atlantablackstar.com/2015/06/16/food-apartheid-the-silent-killer-in-the-black-community/

mcdonalds.png


Fast food franchises appear suddenly in Black communities like a jack-out-of-a-box, occupying corners close to houses, schools and malls. These franchises function as pimps, pasting seductive images of fast food on windows to grab the attention of those passing by and ignite hunger pangs in residents who are too weak or defeated to demand anything better.


Franchises function as money-making machines, growing exponentially within Black communities, serving junk disguised as food. This junk triggers chronic, irreversible diseases such as diabetes and heart disease; these diseases are left to run through Black bodies like electricity at night.

It seems fast food has become the “McMighty” killer of Black people, but their deaths are insignificant because driving up profits is more important than Black lives. Generating cash to fund holidays, cars and lavish homes happens at the expense of Black life. And Black life has always been used to maximize profit. Essentially, it was the labor of Black slaves that enabled America to accumulate an unprecedented amount of wealth, and today building wealth just sings a different tune.

While living in the Flatbush area of Brooklyn, New York — an area with a large population of Black immigrants and African-Americans — I was duped into thinking it was cheaper to eat fast food. I grabbed a burger on my way to class and sipped on sugar-packed mocha lattes as I scribbled down lecture notes. Everywhere I turned there were “lunch specials” offering “free sodas” or the chance to “supersize” my meal. I was cornered into a schedule of fast food reinforcement, which operated within the iceberg of my unconscious mind. Of course, there were a few Caribbean restaurants offering authentic dishes that corresponded to homemade meals, but these dishes were often more expensive than fast food.



Food apartheid is a relentless social construct that devalues human beings and assumes that people are unworthy of having access to nutritious food. Food apartheid affects people of all races, including poor white people, although Black and brown people are affected disproportionately. Under these conditions — which are overtly abusive — whole communities are geographically and economically isolated from healthy food options.

While living in Flatbush, I was locked in a food apartheid: my body ballooned, my energy waned, and my health began to deteriorate. Often, meals were not a fun pastime; instead they were tortuous, messy affairs in which I rushed through the uncomfortable ordeal hoping that the fizz in the soda would wash down the grease. Clearly, I was making bad choices and lost in a fog of fast food abuse; burgers wrapped in paper became my only solace.

I soon realized that I had to leave Flatbush before fast food killed me.

But escaping food apartheid isn’t easy. Many neighborhoods carry an invisible “white people only” label, and often it is these neighborhoods that have organic grocery stores and farmers’ markets. Moving into a different neighborhood becomes a battle with landlords, who have money falling out of their ears, but still demand the first and last month’s rent, and an additional month’s rent as a security deposit. Consequently, moving costs thousands of dollars, and for someone living from paycheck to paycheck, escaping to a new neighborhood becomes a distant dream. Inevitably, people become incarcerated in a monstrous fast food playground in which the ride never ends and eventually induces nausea, disease and death.

As a Black British-Ghanaian, I’ve compared the food I was exposed to growing up in Stratford, London, England, to the food that was available to me in Flatbush, Brooklyn — the substantial difference in the quality of food is heart-wrenching. When it comes to meeting the needs of the poor through food, the bar is set far higher by the British.

This is not to say that malnourishment and poverty does not affect communities in the U.K. The U.K. is not without its problems: back in 2013, horse meat was found in school dinners and hospital meals. But even with these problems, poor people in the U.K. are treated with greater respect and dignity when it comes to the accessibility of good food, compared to poor people in America.

And food that would be placed in the garbage in British supermarkets is allowed to be sold in grocery stores in Black communities.

In Flatbush, the disregard for Black health was shown by mold on blackberries and the abundance of vegetables that were wilted and discolored. Indeed, racism lived in the cracks and holes of mediocre food.

My departure from Flatbush symbolized the development of an enriched and analytical consciousness, and with this the brutal reality of food apartheid slammed into me like a truck in the dark. With this new mindset, I chose to consume better food and wondered whether America had a conscience. I questioned whether I had made the right decision about moving to America in the first place because there is something unappealing about raising children in a country that doesn’t look after its own.



The body is linked to the mind, and a healthy, functioning mind is also dependent on a nourished body. With a foggy mind, one cannot be productive, develop intellectually and challenge the status quo. Bad food helps to keep hearts and minds weak, and people in a malleable state of submissiveness.

The Black Panthers understood the connection between nutrition and academic performance, or the mind-body connection, and it was this understanding, among other things, that drove them to create The Free Breakfast Program, a revolutionary program that provided breakfast for poor Black children. Today, we see Black children are targeted by fast food franchises, whose logic lies in the belief that if you “get them while they’re young” they will be lifelong consumers of bad food.

Just like drugs destroyed Black communities and Black minds to eradicate the intellectuals orchestrating the civil rights movement, bad food also functions as a killer and an intellectual sap. And let’s not forget that some of these foods are addictive, thereby serving the same debilitating function as drugs.

The inhumanity of food apartheid is lodged in the acceptance of capitalism. So perhaps it’s not “our” food that’s killing us, but the food transplanted into our communities by capitalist crusaders.

Within our communities there are individuals and groups who are conscious about what they consume and offer alternatives to fast food. The Food Project based in Boston is doing important work exposing families to the value associated with growing their own food, and accessing fresh produce from farmers’ markets. In New York City, teenagers with Youth Ministers for Peace and Justice (YMPJ) installed a green roof. The green roof was designed to grow vegetables, flowers and herbs as a means to retain water. Further, the Backyard Gardeners Network based in the Lower 9th Ward in New Orleans is using food growing traditions to establish community and energize the neighborhood.

In addition, there are many among us who demonstrate that conscious eating can be a way of life. Rastafarians, for example, follow a specific diet defined by a preference for foods occurring in their natural state, and the consumption of foods that promote good health. Rastafarians avoid foods that have chemicals or additives in them. Finally, many among us are skilled in the art of cooking, and through cooking meals one can assume greater control of one’s diet.

But these alternatives do not eliminate the need for the destruction of food apartheid, they simply show us that by turning to the skills and knowledge within our communities, change is possible.
 

Michael9100

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Within our communities there are individuals and groups who are conscious about what they consume and offer alternatives to fast food. The Food Project based in Boston is doing important work exposing families to the value associated with growing their own food, and accessing fresh produce from farmers’ markets. In New York City, teenagers with Youth Ministers for Peace and Justice (YMPJ) installed a green roof. The green roof was designed to grow vegetables, flowers and herbs as a means to retain water. Further, the Backyard Gardeners Network based in the Lower 9th Ward in New Orleans is using food growing traditions to establish community and energize the neighborhood.

I believe this is one solution that help fill the void with the lack of black farmers...
 

Medicate

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Liquor stores that pump out alcohol,cigarettes, and a majority of other unhealthy products, purposely sold at low prices specifically targeting poor Black people, which will always inevitably cause addiction and a revolving door of customers coming back. Its akin to a dope dealer......And what are the two main contributions to death and disease?......Alcohol and Nicotene.

What one has to ask themselves is why mostly foreign nationals such as Arabs and Koreans target only black neighborhoods for their businesses? My old hood had a store where the Arabs had their whole family migrating between Iran and this store, one day we would see the older people of the family, then another 3-4 months later we would see the younger folks, and we'd ask where the other was at, and they'd say they went back to Iran for studies....Basically creating generational wealth and business on the backs and deaths of Black people and with the poisons that Muslims themselves abstain from, yet will sell.

Same is with the big corporations of fast food chains that use the same racist parasitic capitalist blueprint to make their targets.
 

dora_da_destroyer

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Miss me with this doom and gloom BS :camby:Black people want to eat healthy, then they'll eat healthy. Or are our minds again shackled by the woes of slavery? :stopitslime:
Thats a simplistic point of view, I've had my mind blown time and time again by people's ignorance about food (my own god damn father thinks pork is white meat and swore for most his life vegetarians ate poultry since chicken isn't meat :dahell:).

Cheap processed foods and not understanding things like how making a real baked potato as opposed to boxed potatoes is healthier, what a serving size is, how sodium content affects weight and health, etc all play into poor eating habits. You see this across races, it's an economic problem. Then add to the fact most the produce (meats and dairy as well) dumped in these communities is not fresh and is full of chemicals, hormones, and filler, you can try to eat healthy and you're still damaging yourself.

I've read a few food threads here on the coli, and just by the general demographic that frequents these boards, I can tell a lot of y'all don't truly know how poorly educated the lower wage community is about nutrition and the obstacles they face when trying to feed their families.
 

Gab

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why are you bumping this shyt fukking thread? You seriously trying to blame cacs for your own eating choices? Nah man, this one i cant get on board with:whoa:
 
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There is still no excuse to be fat. It does not cost more to eat better from the grocery.

Have to disagree with you there. The cost is perhaps more but it's not measured in dollars and cents. Financially you can often usw thw same money for a night out with the fam at a fast food restaurant and buy groceries to eat (healthy) for 2-3 days. However, eating at home requires time and effort to prep. Unfortunately, for many of us we won't , feel we cant sacrafice the time necessary to make thw better decisions. Then there's the matter of distance. Ive lived in places where the two mile ride/walk to the grocery store you'll pass 3-4 fast food spots.

Damn ole boy got me. Didnt even realize this thread was done in June. My bad @GunRanger
 

GunRanger

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Have to disagree with you there. The cost is perhaps more but it's not measured in dollars and cents. Financially you can often usw thw same money for a night out with the fam at a fast food restaurant and buy groceries to eat (healthy) for 2-3 days. However, eating at home requires time and effort to prep. Unfortunately, for many of us we won't , feel we cant sacrafice the time necessary to make thw better decisions. Then there's the matter of distance. Ive lived in places where the two mile ride/walk to the grocery store you'll pass 3-4 fast food spots.

Damn ole boy got me. Didnt even realize this thread was done in June. My bad @GunRanger
The prep time gets me too,but mnow what i do? I cook my week worth of dinner on sunday.
 

frankster

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Teach kids from 9 yrs old in school how to shop for store and store food, as well as to prepare, cook, and serve healthy meals quickly.....
 

ViShawn

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OP you should look up the whole stuff on Food Deserts.
 
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