Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Government > At the voting booth turn Left > Beating sugar b...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 215 of 265
Post > Topic >>

Beating sugar beet

by "T Moore" < click.an.email.ico@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sep 1, 2005 at 04:41 AM

"What a terrible smell" my father asked, "what could it be?"

"They're boiling sugar beets", I said, "there's a sugar factory here," we 
were passing through Cantley in Norfolk, England."

Sugar beets make syrup, and bread, and you can use them as a vegetable, 
almost anything. Having sugar beets, and little else, instilled in me a 
hatred of refined beet sugar that has never gone away. Not a hatred of 
sweet things, mind you; just of that one hideous product.

Hideous because refined sugar is, in the nutritional sense, the most 
unnecessary, even dangerous substance imaginable. The famous French 
slimming guru Michel Montignac put it, "sugar", he said in his book Eat 
Yourself Slim, "is a poison and should be treated as such."

Couldn't agree more. And of all sugars, it happens to be beet sugar that
is 
by some distance the worst. Cane sugar, although just as unnecessary, is a

bit better. Honey a bit better yet. But honestly, all of these are best 
avoided and replaced by artificial sweeteners, of which there is now a 
great variety.

A poison it is, but how addicted the world seems to be to it. People put
it 
in absolutely everything, so that even the most fervent sugar hater can't 
avoid taking it in unless he gives all processed foods a wide berth. Open
a 
tin of peas and you'll find there's sugar in it. A frozen TV dinner:
ditto. 
A simple loaf of bread: the same. There's sugar everywhere. No surprise, 
really, for sugar is a huge business; the world annually produces in the 
region of 135 million tonnes of the stuff.

The EU fears 'the European sugar revolution'. The first shot in this
bloody 
conflict was going to be fired by the European Commissioner for 
Agriculture, Denmark's Mariann Fischer Boel who has drawn up a plan for
the 
drastic reduction - a phasing out, rather - of all subsidies for sugar 
farmers. As things stand, European sugar beet growers are guaranteed a 
price for their product that is three times higher than the world market 
price.

A slap in the face for sugar farmers in the rest of the world, especially 
in developing countries like Brazil, India, Thailand and Mexico who find
it 
all but impossible to compete. Even their own domestic markets are 
distorted by huge dumping of European sugar; a high guaranteed price is an

open invitation to excess production.

Thus, Europe produces not one but three types of sugar: A sugar (for EU 
consumption), B sugar (for reserve stocks) and C sugar (excess for dumping

in poor countries and putting their cane farmers out of business).

High time that an end was put to this selfish dishonesty (or is it 
dishonest selfishness?) and Ms Fischer Boel has my full sup****t. If she 
manages to convince the 25 European agriculture ministers of the rightness

of her scheme then be prepared for a lot of wailing and gna****ng of teeth 
from among the European farming community.  A sugar cube is a small price 
to pay for fairness.

The one problem with the Commissioner's plan is that it will also
adversely 
affect many sugar farmers in poor countries such as Jamaica,  Mozambique 
and Malawi, who have a special deal with the EU allowing them to sell 
quantities of cane sugar to Europe at the guaranteed EU price. They, too, 
will see their income drop by about 40 percent over the next two years. A 
generous compensation scheme - to tide them over until they've switched to

a less harmful and teeth-rotting type of crop - would be the least the EU 
could do.

But still. Sugar? There ought to be a law.


-- 
T Moore
N E Manchester, England

http://sitemenu.tom-moore.com/
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Beating sugar beet
"T Moore" <   2005-09-01 04:41:50 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Thu Jul 24 5:54:44 CDT 2008.