Is Whole Foods as healthy as people want it to be? SOme say yes. Some vehemently say no. This is the real question right now. Is this totally blue health food grocery store ready to embrace deep red MAHA beliefs? It's up for debate.
New contributor and food writer Ben Ryder Howe wrote about this debate in yesterday's New York Times Wednesday Food section. Whole Foods has always been known for good gluten free foods and fresh from the vine and tree produce.It had a reputation of selling freshly prepared food that was not only healthy but also delicious.It advocated lower sugar in its' products along with no chemicals or artificial coloring. Yet there was some problems, namely the prices.It was jokingly referred to as "Whole Payvheck" because it was so expensive to shop at any of the branches.Now the headache comes from MAHA or Make America Healthy Again.The company's founder and owner, John Mackey is a capitalist and also a libertarian. Like other MAHA he is a zealot for eating well. Errol Schweizer,a former vice-president for the grocery edition declares that whole Foods is a straight up dialectical contradiction,. Whole Foods can appeal to both sides of the aisle.
Yet the store is reluctant to embrace total MAHA ideology.Corby Kummer, executive director of Food and Society,at the Aspen Institute a non profit think tanks feels that the store has always had a get out of my face and don't tell me what to do attitude.It's been anti-government and anti-corporation. Whole Foods has always been for pele who have rejected the mainstream.One critic of this is Alex Clark, host of the podcast, "Culture Apothocary With Alex Clark," part of the Turning Point USA Network founded by Charlie Kirk.She has embraced healthy living during an aha moment when she was eating too much Chick FIket .Now the fervent MAHA only gets her foods at Whole Food .She can;t figure out why this grocery store who has been one of the first and biggest promoters of healthy eating won;t jump on the MAHA bandwagon, she has accused the company of shying away from typical MAHA causes such as opposition to seed oils and betraying its. mission to improve American health. Yet the store shies away from being too red or too blue. It could also be afraid of losing it's liberal coastal base of loyal customers too.
Should Whole Foods be a part of a political debate? No.It's just a grocery store serving people who want to eat well. That's not political. Tha't s just good common sense.
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