Filed Under: Organic Activists

A Bad Taste

Frances Moore Lappe and Anna Lappe have forced their way back into the spotlight as they plug their new book, “Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet.” Last week, they wrote a Los Angeles Times op-ed that blasted “the myth that cheap food comes without high costs,” and that the far more expensive “sustainable” model of agriculture — which would price many foods out of the reach of consumers — is preferable. It’s the usual line from the pro-organic crowd: that the more expensive food is, the better off the world is. As Theresa Marquez, marketing director for Organic Valley, has said: “The question is not, why is organic food so expensive. The question is, why are the foods we are eating now so cheap.”



This week, the mother-and-daughter duo celebrate Earth Day by cashing in, pushing their latest tome — an organic food cookbook. It’s a successor to Frances’s original “Diet for a Small Planet.” It’s also the latest move in her activist career. Frances Moore Lappe is an advisory board member of EarthSave International, the pro-vegetarian pet project of Baskin-Robbins ice cream heir turned diet book author John Robbins. Other advisory board members include Neal Barnard of the anti-meat Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and PETA’s Ingrid Newkirk. (Both of these groups have ties to animal rights terrorists.)

More on “Organic Activists”

Featured image for post

This Huge Organic Scam Ought to Be a Movie

Posted November 9, 2021 at2:23 pm
Featured image for post

No, Organic Doesn’t Mean Better

Posted September 4, 2018 at2:25 pm
Featured image for post

Fight Brewing Over “GMO 2.0”

Posted April 16, 2018 at2:41 pm