I just found out today that a Whole Foods is going to be built close to my neighborhood. Too bad it’s not an Earth Fare.
While many crunchy, green mamas might rejoice at Whole Foods coming to town, I am in mourning because Whole Foods is basically on par with your “neighborhood”  Walmart.
There is nothing “neighborly” about Walmart or Whole Foods.
What a joke.
Whole Foods is just another cutthroat Corporate Bully dressed in organic, “let’s save the world”, “buy local” disguise with the shareholders in full throttle, profit taking control.
While Whole Foods is undoubtedly counting on health conscious Moms like me in the neighborhood cha-chinging away at the brand spanking new registers, let me just share with you that you won’t see The Healthy Home Economist browsing the aisles there.
I’ll be shopping at the 2 small, local healthfood stores less than a mile away where I’ve shopped for the past 15 years. Â That’s where my business loyalty lies.
I spend almost all my food money with local businesses and local farms. Â Not Whole Foods.
How could I possibly rationalize shopping at Whole Foods which has recently rolled over on the GMO issue in the United States by suggesting that we all need to “learn to live with GMO’s” by accepting the USDAs proposal for “peaceful” coexistence between organics and genetically modified foods?
Here is Whole Foods’ official statement on the matter:
The reality is that no grocery store in the United States, no matter what size or type of business, can claim they are GMO-free. While we have been and will continue to be staunch supporters of non-GMO foods, we are not going to mislead our customers with an inaccurate claim (and you should question anyone who does). Here’s why: the pervasive planting of GMO crops in the U.S. and their subsequent use in our national food supply. 93% of soy, 86% of corn, 93% of cotton, and 93% of canola seed planted in the U.S. in 2010 were genetically engineered. Since these crops are commonly present in a wide variety of foods, a GMO-free store is currently not possible in the U.S. (Unless the store sells only organic foods.)
Since the U. S. national organic standards do not allow the use of GMO ingredients and practices in the growing or production of organic foods, choosing organic is one way consumers can avoid GMO foods. The other is through labeling, of which we are strong supporters.Â
Hey Whole Foods, here’s a novel idea:  How about selling only organic and local foods then? That would solve the problem nicely wouldn’t it?
I don’t know about you, but that statement screams “sell-out” to me. Even more damaging, Whole Foods recently endorsed the peaceful coexistence option with regard to GE alfalfa rather than an outright ban. The unrestricted planting of GE alfalfa that starts as early as this spring threatens the entire grassfeeding dairy industry over the long term as alfalfa hay is an integral part of winter feeding.
Whole Foods is all about corporate profits and management can shade it and couch it any way they like, but the message is loud and clear: Â corporate profit and shareholder gains are more important than sticking to the basic sustainability ideals Whole Foods was founded upon.
Do you want your neighborhood healthfood stores and farmer’s markets to suffer revenue losses from business ruthlessly stripped away by a Whole Foods coming to town?
If not, you can choose to stay away like me and treat Whole Foods like just another supermarket or Walmart: Â a place of last resort where budget dollars are rarely if ever spent.
Note: as of July 2012, it appears that Whole Foods is still sourcing much of its “organic” produce from China which provides further verification of the video below.
In addition, as of June 2015, Whole Foods’ new veggie rating system can rank conventional produce grown in another country ahead of organic, local produce!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Cheryl Bentfield Montgomery via Facebook
Whole Foods is NOT anything like Walmart.
Anne Ahern via Facebook
This happens almost everywhere….just a little more shocking that it would be this store. Goes to show that you should always read the package before you buy something you will be ingesting! Common sense lol.
Ed Rollberg Jr via Facebook
http://www.infowars.com/youtube-censors-organic-spies-video-exposing-whole-foods-employees-lying-about-gmos/
Laura Blair via Facebook
i went to the whole foods in vegas on tuesday. i got a sliced cheese, sliced turkey, a small bottle of yellow mustard, a loaf of gluten free bread and a bottle of sweetener-free ketchup and a bottle of milk. $50.
Ed Rollberg Jr via Facebook
you might find this interesting. http://www.infowars.com/whole-foods-confirms-it-knowingly-sells-products-containing-monsantos-gm-corn/
Sheril Carey via Facebook
Thank you for sharing your perspective on this with me! I have always had a certain realization that whole foods was BIG business which caused me … Well a little discomfort. I’m not one to demonized success, but on the other hand there is so much benefit from local farms and from small businesses staying in our communities, that I don’t want to see them all disappear. As each small company whose products I had benefitted from got bought out by big AG or even by the supposedly more natural version of big AG and the formulas that helped us changed or were discontinued. The more my discontent grew with that BIG factor. I am now a supporter of local because it works so much better for my family. And there is literally only one product left that I want from whole foods. I think I’ll ask one of the lovely people at my local Raisin Rack if they can get me the Erivan yogurt. Or maybe I’ll find a way to replace it and work from a yogurt starter when I make my 24 hr yogurt.
Janet Grear via Facebook
@elisa I can say that my whole foods is 100% better products than the other stores around me. I can guarantee that I am getting a better product by looking at what I am buying and knowing that I cannot get it any other store that is near me. THAT is why I shop there….FYI
Janet Grear via Facebook
To compare whole foods to Walmart is just not valid! I could go on and on all day about how much the whole foods in my area has helped me shop easier for my gluten free family. Walmart on the other hand is a huge problem for the world, to put whole foods in the same sentence as that store is just out of line. Business needs to make profit and that is the idea when you start a business. I work for a small family business and I can tell you that the owner is completely motivated by bringing in as much traffic as possible….while trying to give her customers the best she can.
Elisa Bieg via Facebook
Extremely disappointed in Whole Foods!! Why would one shop there if there is no guarantee that the products are any better that at any other (much more affordable) grocery store? SHAME.
Margaret Fulmer Wolf via Facebook
It is the only place I can go in my area to buy organic veggies and fruit. I also do purchase organic bulk items. Sometimes you have to weigh what is more important to you, eating a healthy diet, or making a point. I am choosing health.