GINTA: It’s time to rethink the way we eat
A COUPLE OF WEEKS AGO I went to pick up an order from the local Bulk Barn store. They are the revolutionary ‘bring your (any) container to refill’ buy-in-bulk business, but of course now the reusable container option is out the window so we’re back to single-use plastic bags, which you can bundle together and take to recycling outlets, such as London Drugs.
It is still a good option for bulk staples. You order online and the next day you pick up your order at the door, card ready. Two weeks ago, while doing just that, I noticed a line-up at the fast food place across the parking lot.
I wondered about the future meals contained in those beans, seeds and nuts that I had just purchased, versus a meal for one or for a family, ordered through the drive-through for not much less than what I had paid for. That, of course, is but one aspect of it. Not opposing takeout; our family, like many other Kamloops residents, has been ordering the occasional cooked meal from locally-owned restaurants, which nowadays is as much an act of social duty as can be.
The same day, the news about the COVID-19 outbreak at the Cargill plant in Alberta broke out. I thought of that drive-through line-up. Cargill is the exclusive supplier of beef, pork and eggs for McDonald’s in Canada and by now, the site of the largest coronavirus outbreak in North America. Some record, huh?