26 October 2023

Whole Foods

 Whole Foods


On a little shopping expedition in Des Moines I wandered into Whole Foods at the behest of my shopping partner.  When shopping for items to consume (one cannot call shopping at Whole Foods grocery shopping) I like to hit all the aisles to see what’s new and interesting.   Man, what a place! The first thing that caught my eye was the shelf of organic, non-gmo, gluten free items - - quite a selection I might add, but I was uncertain as to whether the items were really edible.  As I continued my perusal there were signs for paleo friendly items and keto friendly items,  Unfortunately I didn’t have a dictionary with me, so I was unable to translate the two terms and have refused to do so since.  I profess ignorance.


Low sodium and low fat items stood out prominently on a vast number of shelves. and of course, one doesn’t want too much salt and fat in one’s diet.  One seriously irksome label however, one which has annoyed me since it surfaced is “sea salt”.  Everything, and I mean everything, now has a label saying Sea Salt.  All salt is sea salt.  Where do you think salt comes from?  It is from salt water evaporating.  This doesn’t take an advanced degree to understand.  And to top it off, most of the salt they sell  as sea salt doesn’t contain iodine.  The reason we all don’t have iodine deficiencies is because Morton puts iodine in its salt.  This is a good thing. And you know, Morton’s salt is sea salt just like Pink Himalayan salt only it's not pink and it has iodine and wasn't obtained from the top of a mountain which doesn't make it any more or less salty.  A second serious bit of marketing is meat from an Angus cow - - purportedly.  Whenever confronted with this pronouncement, I ask the waitperson or the person behind the meat counter if perchance they may have available Herford or Charolais.  The response is always the same; they have no idea what I'm talking about and look at me either quizzically or angrily.   But back to my shopping experience..


After touring the aisles, perusing the labels and noticing many interesting items, I left the store and sat in the car waiting for my shopping companion.  I didn’t buy anything - - not one item.  I was completely overwhelmed by the selection. I simply couldn't decide what items I wanted to purchase, if any. The atmosphere of the store was very upscale, off-putting actually.    Adding to the connoisseur atmosphere, the employees have inhaled the attitude of superiority knowing that they are catering to the intelligent, the worldly, and cosmopolitan folk (and those of more than modest means) who understand that this is the place to do their shopping and we don’t use the phrase “grocery shopping”.  One does not grocery shop in Whole Foods, one provides for one's  healthy sustenance.  


The people who shop in Whole Foods are healthy:  they spend a great deal of their time being healthy.  They eat healthily, they exercise healthily, and they study up on how to maintain their winsome, healthy personalities.  They spend years of their lives being studiously healthy - - longevity being the goal.  We have really no method to determine if they succeed; but surely they must or the aisles would not have as many patrons as one sees there.  In addition, they have food to eat on the premise - - healthy food.  I would hate to think that in Whole Foods, as in say Hy-Vee, they cook up items that they haven't been able to sell - - a rather disgusting practice I might add - - serving out-of-date food.  So one can only assume that Whole Foods would not do such a thing.  I can only say that one should at least once experience whole foods, to see, if you are not a regular visitor, on how the affluent and knowledgeable dine, sup, and break fast.




Richard E H Phelps II

Mingo


Those Darn Drugs

  THOSE DARN DRUGS


Representative Dunwell has enlightened us with reference to the Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy or ODCP.  Presumably this is to soften the blow of a renewed war on the citizens of Iowa which is euphemistically termed "The War on Drugs".  The Office of Drug Control Policy has as its defining purpose the arrest and prosecution of all who indulge in substances which our enlightened legislators have decided we can't have, use, deliver, conspire with, or otherwise engage in.


We have been told for years that "drugs" are bad and woe unto those who don't do as they are told - - here in the land of the free. This flows right into an announced freedom - - to have guns ready at hand.  I saw the other day, the remark by a legislator that the legislature will be addressing once again the "freedom" to possess weapons.  Now one can only assume that the rationale for all this is that drugs are bad and guns are good.  


For various reasons, I have some concern with this selective use of the word "freedom".  I for one, would certainly feel safer, and be safer, if I am confronted in front of the courthouse with someone who had a little meth in his pocket as opposed to someone bristling with hardware.  There is little possibility that the person with a little meth in his pocket is going to tackle me, hold me down, pry my mouth open, and stuff in some meth or other illegal substance he or she just happens to have on them as they stroll around town.  On the other hand, I don't need to be tackled to get shot and the person doing the shooting can even be across the street.


The war on drugs has caused immense suffering in this country - - far more suffering than the use of drugs ever has or will.  Prosecuting someone for the use of drugs, which by the way, is a crime that has no victim (to say otherwise is making things up again), disrupts the life of not only the person being arrested, but his or her family, employer, and others who have a personal relationship with the person being arrested.  I am not being harmed, if my neighbor smokes marijuana in his house or snorts a line of coke or meth.  It is none of my business nor should it be the State's.


The cliche that drugs destroy lives is simply nonsense.  Prison destroys lives.  If you want to see someone whose life has been destroyed, hop down to our local prison and take a look around and then tell me that the people inside haven't had their lives destroyed. And while there, take a good look at mom and the kids coming for a visit. There has always been a demand for drugs, there is a demand for drugs today, and there will always be a demand for drugs.  The Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy (ODCP) is not for the purpose of controlling drugs, it is for the purpose of controlling the people of Iowa.  Drugs will be with us as long as there is a demand so how about it, let's just get over it already.  After all, aren't we free?


Richard E H Phelps II

Mingo, Iowa