The Slow Food movement began more than 20 years ago with a protest
against the opening of the first McDonald's in Rome. Today the campaign to elbow out fast
food has grown into an international movement with adherents in more
than 140 countries. Initiated by young Italian leftists who appreciated
their country's regional cooking, the movement has focused on preserving
endangered foods, promoting local cooking traditions and farming
without polluting. Recently, its increasingly political rhetoric blames
industrialized agriculture and the fast-food industry for environmental
degradation and the loss of biodiversity as well as the waning of good,
healthy eating. Amid growing concern about rising rates of childhood
obesity in the West, some school systems have responded by switching to
local, fresh ingredients. But critics say Slow Food's message is just
for rich gourmets and doesn't appreciate modern agriculture's higher
yields and lowered food costs. CQ Researcher Slow Food Movement v.17-4 |
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