• yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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      12 hours ago

      You think so? What’s the difference between a Canadian or American pizza?

      • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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        2 hours ago

        i’d argue not inherently the thing, but this is more a big vs small business argument

        all “american pizza” in canada would be a big chain, which tend to cost cut every tiny bit which leads more salt, fat, and sugar to balance out cheap, bland ingredients

        when you buy canadian pizza, it’s more likely to be from a small business, or at least idk from the outside canada seems to be less of a profit-driven hedge-fund hellscape

        this is the way it is in australia: we have some US brands that are absolute garbage tier, and our local brands tend to focus on quality, ingredients, “gourmet” etc

        • argarath@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          GMOs are not dangerous, it’s ridiculous how people are still believing in that bullshit. If anything GMOs can be much healthier for us than regular crops, you know why? Because we can make GMOs that need waaaaaay less pesticides than regular crops, we can make GMOs that have way more vitamins and nutrients that the regular version of those plants lack (I’m still incredibly pissed that the golden rice incident happened, rice that can give thousands of malnourished people the vitamin A they needed to not go blind was destroyed because of this ridiculous and baseless fear). By making GMOs we can carefully make plants that grow faster, healthier food with less need of pesticides if needed at all, capable of surviving the harsh climates that global warming is throwing at all of our crops, with no negatives (intellectual property is an issue caused by capitalism, not inherit to only GMOs).

          • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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            7 hours ago

            Mostly just the impact of intellectual property abuse on your food sovereignty, not so much any direct effect on your biochemistry.

              • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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                7 hours ago

                Yes well most of those fears were based in a distinct lack of application of the precautionary principle in the way the industry was being run and regulated, as well as misdirection when representing the methods being used. So there was no way for citizens to know whether things were safe or not, other than an appeal to authority, but driven by shareholder interests.

                So I don’t blame people for worrying, though I was always more concerned about the biopiracy and other corporate shenanigans.