Should food be a right?

Should food be a right?

  • Yes

    Votes: 30 63.8%
  • No

    Votes: 17 36.2%

  • Total voters
    47

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
Believe it or not, in many places around our nation local ordinances and neighborhood covenants actually do act to prohibit the growing of food on one's own property.

In addition, how does an apartment dweller grow enough food to do anything significant?

Food is a basic human right. Starving the masses has rightly been seen as a regime ending mistake for thousands of years; even Caesar knew this and subsidized bread and circuses when Rome's Senators refused to feed them.

THAT'S actually what made him so popular that the Senate had to assassinate him to regain power.

History; read up or repeat it.
Funny how the government prevents us from having a fire, growing food, owning land and every other basic right we had before society when it suits them.

Ask the hundreds of millions of Russians and Chineese that have starved to death due to government negligence, corruption or maliciousness over the last 100 years.

Yeah, government is the solution to everything. Dead people dont need much!!!
 

roundplanet

Well-Known Member
I voted YES, but it's really not a yes or no issue. The reason I ended up voting yes is because I believe
that humans aren't beef cattle, they won't just sit back and be fed. I believe (and may well be wrong) that humans
have imagenations, and a need to progress to what we believe is a better way of living.
As far children are concerned, they didn't ask to be born, no choice in the matter so torture them for absolutely no
fault of there own, I believe that to be a inhuman trate, and would not wish that on my enemy.:peace: What a great Question to ask.
 

ThickStemz

Well-Known Member
I think food should be a right and I think most people would agree with me

How can I live my life if I can't eat? How can I enjoy liberty if me and mine go hungry? How can I pursue happiness with an empty belly?

The basic necessities required to fulfill Constitutional rights in and of themselves are natural rights.
You're not guranteed those things. The constitution just says the government will not stand in your way. It doesn't say the government has to help you achieve those things.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Plenty of desert growers...John kohler of growing your greens, jake mace, and many more.

No comment on goverment. They know best and we the people elect them. Everything is awesome, when you are part of the team.

No. The people don't elect, the corporations do and it's allowed.

When you stand up for your convictions (there is a better way) you are ostracized.
 

beautyring

New Member
I don't believe it would be productive to make food a "right." Humans need to be motivated in order to contribute to society. If everything is handed out to you, then what motivation does one have to apply themselves and be the best they can be?
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Should the government have a program that provides food for people who can't provide it for themselves?

Why/why not?
Reading the replies from our useless wingnuts you'd think we lived in the past, when food was difficult to produce. In those times, including the massive program carried out by Stalin to starve Ukraine into submission, food was given or withheld to control people. Reading what Ben and others say, their mindset remains in the past, and Stalin's means of manipulation fits right into how they would use food as a control tool. Along with torture and maiming. Fuck all that.

Hunger is a political problem. We are now able to produce enough food so that everybody in the world need not be food insecure without straining the economic system. Instead of looking at this situation as an opportunity to advance society, our backward folk yearn for the days when millions can starve if they don't tow the line. Societies that don't starve people into submission are doing better than the good ole boys 'merica. Germany, France, Denmark, UK, Netherlands, Japan and many other countries have adopted systems where people compete and succeed through education and can take risks without fear of starvation.

Society needs more educated and innovative people, not serfs and manual laborers. Most people want to succeed and better themselves if given a chance. Putting a person and his family at risk of starvation if they take a risk and everybody starves is an impediment to progress. We already can see that making food -- or better put, food security -- is part of modern and thriving economies. So, yes, think of food security as a basic right, fund education and healthcare for everybody and this country can begin to move out of the bad old days.
 

roundplanet

Well-Known Member
I don't believe it would be productive to make food a "right." Humans need to be motivated in order to contribute to society. If everything is handed out to you, then what motivation does one have to apply themselves and be the best they can be?
What motivation does anyone have, hunger did not motivate Einstein, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, In fact the less people have to worry about i.e. health care, starving, the more time
we as humans can put pen to paper, idea's to work.:peace:
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
The USA is the richest country in the world. There is no reason for anyone to ever to hungry here. Absolutely ludicrous to allow your fellow citizens go hungry. A healthy well nourished populous is more productive & safer for all of us....
But yet it happens. More food is thrown away in the US than gets to people who need it.....Fucking sickening yes
 

ifwindicuh

Member
Yes the fuck it should, at least natural food should be, when people get to charge you for something that was on this planet before them, they're too powerful
 
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