• @pingvenoOP
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      -11 year ago

      Yes, that should absolutely be included as part of an “all of the above” strategy. That said, that rice still retains its other problems, like the poor nutritional value of white rice. It may also have another issue that wasn’t included in the article, a tendency to absorb and retain certain toxins like arsenic.

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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        31 year ago

        Rice is a staple food for a lot of cultures, and telling people to not eat rice is a chauvinistic and frankly racist solution. Precisely what you’d expect from a publication like the economist/

        • @pingvenoOP
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          01 year ago

          Then let people choose how much rice they want to eat instead of subsidizing only rice. Many alternative grains are already part of the culture at every point along the income spectrum. For example, sorghum’s largest producer is Nigeria, with the other large producers being the US, Sudan, Mexico, Ethiopia, and India. Governments can promote these more nutrition and climate friendly grains without forcing anyone to do anything.

            • @pingvenoOP
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              -11 year ago

              I was contrasting it with your claim of “telling people to not eat rice”. Governments can recommend that people not eat as much rice and then simple not put their thumb on the scale.

              But now that you mention it, the current effect is that poor people are forced to eat rice. When governments buy up rice and give it to poor people for free, the poor people have little choice but to eat the less nutritious rice. It is similar to how the US subsidizes corn.