Customer Reviews


4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews

The most helpful favorable review
The most helpful critical review


16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excerpt from Guerrilla News Network review
Excerpted from Guerrilla News Network
([...])

Stan Cox's Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine will be useful reading for anyone who seeks to grab the ship's wheel and to persuade others to join them. His book is a short, readable activists crib which ranges fluently across the environmental costs of bloated corporate healthcare (and the human costs...
Published on April 8, 2008 by T. S. Cox

versus
4 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars More of the "New Eugenics" is Disguised as "Environmentalism"
Blaming our health care crisis on Doctor's who are being too thorough (too many MRI's) is a poor excuse for why health care is expensive. Giving little regard to how prevention is the key to health and well being, Stan Cox has a fight in this book but it is not surprisingly misdirected.
Most of our higher learning has been hijacked by Eugenicists who now call...
Published on April 27, 2009 by S. D. Favis


Most Helpful First | Newest First

16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excerpt from Guerrilla News Network review, April 8, 2008
This review is from: Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine (Paperback)
Excerpted from Guerrilla News Network
([...])

Stan Cox's Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine will be useful reading for anyone who seeks to grab the ship's wheel and to persuade others to join them. His book is a short, readable activists crib which ranges fluently across the environmental costs of bloated corporate healthcare (and the human costs of overprescription and phoney medicalization), to the problem of industrial agriculture and "better living through chemistry."

On healthcare, Cox is unequivocal. Focusing on the U.S., he argues that the healthcare "industry" is hopelessly bloated, noting that, since the 1960s, the average consumption of healthcare products per person has tripled. In a neat turn of phrase, he writes that "for decades, business has been coming up with "solutions" to the problems that result from America's overconsumption of food and underexertion of bodies."

To beef up profits, companies have been hyping minor or non-existent maladies such as "shaking leg syndrome" to extract ever more profit from the American consumer. Yet, unsatisfied with gouging American workers, the same companies have also taken to low-cost production and testing of generic drugs in countries like India, with catastrophic environmental and human results. One of Cox's best sections deals with the region around Patancheru in Andhra Pradesh, which will be all but unknown to most readers. Cox finds devastating water pollution from medical factories and massive damage to local agriculture, another hidden holocaust in the annals of neo-liberal globalization.

Yet healthcare is not seamlessly integrated into Cox's wider narrative - that of the capitalist challenge to the planet's ecology and human society. It remains hard to see how drug production, and the waste resulting from it, could ever have an impact as destructive as nitrate pollution or greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture. Ditto for the effects of the health industry upon American bodies. If Americans wish to waste vast amounts of money on useless drugs and procedures, it is unlikely that this will be a prime cause of eco-collapse. The sedentary and lazy lifestyles of Americans, detached from the land and dependent on industrially farmed produce, may be more significant, but the hyping of ADHD is not related to the looming collapse of capitalist civilization. Not in my book, anyhow, but the same does not hold for agriculture.

Agriculture receives a detailed treatment in later chapters, and as plant genetics is Cox's specialist area, his treatment is strong and chilling. Corporate agriculture, he finds, has massacred rural communities, which now number 450 out of the U.S.' 500 poorest. Converted by the market into factories for processed foods, these rural areas are ironically now often "food deserts" in which fresh produce is harder to find than in urban areas.

Industrial agriculture is hopelessly inefficient - dependent upon continuing injections of natural gas to produce fertilizer, oil for trucks to transport its produce to far away markets while being massively wasteful of the manure that it generates. He calls, not originally, but sensibly, for a more modest, dispersed agriculture in which the 900 million tonnes of manure produced by American farms every year is recycled into the soil. This isn't framed as a utopian dream, but as an essential survival strategy, but Cox argues that the benefits would be very real. Revisiting Patancheru, he cites examples of community driven agriculture which "have beaten back the individual despair that had developed under the brutal logicl of the national and international economy." Yet the case is identical for many American farming families.

Cox makes it clear that the hierarchical and massively unfair economic system which underlies industrial agriculture must be dismantled if a fairer, ecologically sensible world is to be created. He has short shrift for "sustainable development" though - labelling it "code for perpetual growth," which is dead on. What is required, for Cox is a radical downshifting of elite consumption in the developed world and something akin to a "back to the land" movement to localize now dispersed economies and to distribute a safe level of economic surplus to now deprived communities. This is basically eco-socialism, and Cox alludes to eco-socialist thinkers like Joel Kovel and, refreshingly, a side of Karl Marx that few will be familiar with (an afficianado of organic manures and localized agriculture).

Echoing comedian Rob Newman, who penned an acerbic piece in the Guardian in 2006 along a similar theme, Cox concludes by arguing that "before [we] can start designing the kinds of local, regional, and world economies that are needed, we have to acknowledge and act on the fact that in the long run...we cannot have both capitalism and a livable planet." And we can't have reductions in "emissions intensity" or put our faith in miraculous capitalist efficiency either.

As Cox notes, "using efficiency to make growth less destructive is sort of like playing "whack-a-mole" at the county fair. Knock capital out of circulation here, and it will pop up over there." Controlling the beast of capital is Cox's theme, and Sick Planet is an effective call to arms for activists to do just that. Either we do it democratically and rationally, or circumstances will do it for us, bloodily and chaotically:

Provided our species survives, there lies somewhere in its future another stone age, and the faster our economic growth, the steeper the decline will be. The next Stone Age will be more resource poor and probably more toxic than the last, and there will be no shot at a comeback.

Citizens of the United States in particular, should read Sick Planet and then act with conviction and haste if such a situation is to be avoided, but don't bet on it.

Stan Cox paints a picture of the corporate-dominated world as akin to pre-apocalypse Mad Max, yet another movie parallel springs to mind, while we still have a chance to avert disaster. Noting that the average American consumes as much energy as a 30,000 kg primate, Cox summons up the image - which many people will sympathise with worldwide - of a nation of King Kongs, clinging to their Empire State Building and hopelessly swatting the spectres of imperial collapse and ecological crisis.

- Szamko
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars preview the news of the future, August 1, 2008
By 
Patrick Edmondson (L5P- Atlanta, Ga USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine (Paperback)
After reading this book I was very concerned. It sounded a bit radical. Then the news began to reflect the ideas from the book. Very prescient warning, well written and easy to follow arguments backed with data. Read and expand your horizons, Earth needs more people to read this book.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sick Planet indeed, December 20, 2008
This review is from: Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine (Paperback)
Fortunately there are still writers out there, like Stan Cox, who are wickedly, brutally sane.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars More of the "New Eugenics" is Disguised as "Environmentalism", April 27, 2009
By 
This review is from: Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine (Paperback)
Blaming our health care crisis on Doctor's who are being too thorough (too many MRI's) is a poor excuse for why health care is expensive. Giving little regard to how prevention is the key to health and well being, Stan Cox has a fight in this book but it is not surprisingly misdirected.
Most of our higher learning has been hijacked by Eugenicists who now call themselves Environmentalist. Sadly, this book is another part of our mis- educated academic 'elite', who are now devoting much wasted energy into saving the world by planned parenthood, abortion, Genetically modified and altered food (GMO's), and unfortunately the only way to solve it is by letting people die (with poor health care, birth control, and EUGENICS).
It is sorry to see that Stan has been institutionalized in a prestigious line of compulsory mis-education that has been plaguing K-12-Phd programs. I wonder what kind of Franken Foods he created while he was a graduate student-I hope whatever happens with the garbage his Pro-Monsanto based crops create they don't destroy our heirloom (non GMO, natural) crops after cross pollinating. Don't buy this book, stay away from this machine.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine
Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine by Stan Cox (Paperback - March 20, 2008)
$24.95
In Stock
Add to cart Add to wishlist