Originally posted by: djheater
Whole foods and Trader Joes both sell it in gallons, which is how we buy it.
Originally posted by: LoKe
Spoils faster. Not worth it for them to stock it in large quantities.
Originally posted by: FoBoT
the cows are only half as big as non-organic cows
milk is milk, don't waste your money
Originally posted by: sao123
organic is the business term for lets sell existing products on a different shelf but charge double the price
Originally posted by: sao123
organic is the business term for lets sell existing products on a different shelf but charge double the price
Originally posted by: Aztech
We drink a lot of milk. We're trying to switch to organic, but it's only available in half-gallon containers at all of the groceries near us? It's too expensive to buy it that way. Why do they do that?
Originally posted by: FoBoT
the cows are only half as big as non-organic cows
milk is milk, don't waste your money
I'm afraid your organic milk is far from perfect. It still can contain a small amount of pesticides. No RBGH? Suuure, although some companies will use legal loop holes on that and still claim that they sell Organic Milk (read below).Originally posted by: Throckmorton
Originally posted by: FoBoT
the cows are only half as big as non-organic cows
milk is milk, don't waste your money
Organic milk cows are:
Not pumped full of antibiotics and hormones. This saves you from ingesting unwanted drugs, and helps alleviate bacterial resistance caused by overuse of antibiotics.
Not grown Matrix-esque stalls.
Not fed beef byproducts like blood and bones.
Fed organic crops which means no synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, which are damaging to the environment.
http://www.democracyinaction.o....jsp?campaign_KEY=4756BOYCOTT THE SHAMELESS SEVEN--ORGANIC OUTLAWS LABELING FACTORY FARM MILK AS 'USDA ORGANIC'
While USDA bureaucrats drag their feet on closing key loopholes in national organic organic standards, retailers, wholesalers and major ?organic? brands are continuing to sell milk and dairy products labeled as "USDA Organic, even though most or all of their milk is coming from factory farm feedlots where the animals have been brought in from conventional farms and are kept in intensive confinement, with little or no access to pasture.
The Organic Consumers Association is expanding its boycott of Horizon and Aurora organic dairy products to include five national "private label" organic milk brands supplied by Aurora, as well as two leading organic soy products, Silk and White Wave, owned by Horizon's parent company, Dean Foods. Its time to turn up the heat on the "Shameless Seven.
While thousands of organic consumers and a number of natural food stores and cooperatives have joined the boycott, major national large grocery retailers have ignored the boycott.
Aurora Organic supplies milk for several private label organic milk brands, including Costco's "Kirkland Signature," Safeway?s "O" organics brand, Publix?s ?High Meadows,?Giant's "Natures Promise," and Wild Oats? organic milk. Aurora Organic received a failing grade from the Cornucopia Institute's survey of organic dairies for its practice of intensive confinement of dairy cows. For pictures of Aurora Organic's operations, follow this link. The Cornucopia Institute recently blew the whistle on Aurora Organic's greenwashing and its bogus certification of animal welfare.
Additionally, its been revealed that much of the soy for Dean Food's White Wave tofu and Silk soymilk products are sourced abroad, primarily from Brazil and China. Environmental standards and workers' rights are routinely violated in these two countries.
Originally posted by: lozina
Originally posted by: sao123
organic is the business term for lets sell existing products on a different shelf but charge double the price
Prove the organic milk is the same as the normal crap and you might have a point. You also might put a lot of organic dairy farms out of business. This is not like taking some brand name product and re-branding it under the store's name like they do with sodas and stuff. It's completely different...
All that's really required though is a sense of taste. Have you ever tried organic milk, compare dit side to side to regular milk?
And have fun with all the growth hormones and antibiotics in your regular milk.
Originally posted by: Descartes
If you want to drink organic and support the original point of the organic movement, then buy Organic Valley. It's a farmer-owned coop. Horizon is owned by Dean Foods, one of the companies with an agricultural philosophy that led to the creation of the movement in the first place.
Also, ignore all the ignorants that spout of nonsense about organic. Most are ill-informed on the products, the process and the whole origins of organics in the first place.
Originally posted by: moshquerade
I'm afraid your organic milk is far from perfect. It still can contain a small amount of pesticides. No RBGH? Suuure, although some companies will use legal loop holes on that and still claim that they sell Organic Milk (read below).Originally posted by: Throckmorton
Originally posted by: FoBoT
the cows are only half as big as non-organic cows
milk is milk, don't waste your money
Organic milk cows are:
Not pumped full of antibiotics and hormones. This saves you from ingesting unwanted drugs, and helps alleviate bacterial resistance caused by overuse of antibiotics.
Not grown Matrix-esque stalls.
Not fed beef byproducts like blood and bones.
Fed organic crops which means no synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, which are damaging to the environment.
Not grown in Matrix-esque stalls? Are you sure about that too?
http://www.democracyinaction.o....jsp?campaign_KEY=4756BOYCOTT THE SHAMELESS SEVEN--ORGANIC OUTLAWS LABELING FACTORY FARM MILK AS 'USDA ORGANIC'
While USDA bureaucrats drag their feet on closing key loopholes in national organic organic standards, retailers, wholesalers and major ?organic? brands are continuing to sell milk and dairy products labeled as "USDA Organic, even though most or all of their milk is coming from factory farm feedlots where the animals have been brought in from conventional farms and are kept in intensive confinement, with little or no access to pasture.
The Organic Consumers Association is expanding its boycott of Horizon and Aurora organic dairy products to include five national "private label" organic milk brands supplied by Aurora, as well as two leading organic soy products, Silk and White Wave, owned by Horizon's parent company, Dean Foods. Its time to turn up the heat on the "Shameless Seven.
While thousands of organic consumers and a number of natural food stores and cooperatives have joined the boycott, major national large grocery retailers have ignored the boycott.
Aurora Organic supplies milk for several private label organic milk brands, including Costco's "Kirkland Signature," Safeway?s "O" organics brand, Publix?s ?High Meadows,?Giant's "Natures Promise," and Wild Oats? organic milk. Aurora Organic received a failing grade from the Cornucopia Institute's survey of organic dairies for its practice of intensive confinement of dairy cows. For pictures of Aurora Organic's operations, follow this link. The Cornucopia Institute recently blew the whistle on Aurora Organic's greenwashing and its bogus certification of animal welfare.
Additionally, its been revealed that much of the soy for Dean Food's White Wave tofu and Silk soymilk products are sourced abroad, primarily from Brazil and China. Environmental standards and workers' rights are routinely violated in these two countries.
Originally posted by: moshquerade
I'm afraid your organic milk is far from perfect. It still can contain a small amount of pesticides. No RBGH? Suuure, although some companies will use legal loop holes on that and still claim that they sell Organic Milk (read below).Originally posted by: Throckmorton
Originally posted by: FoBoT
the cows are only half as big as non-organic cows
milk is milk, don't waste your money
Organic milk cows are:
Not pumped full of antibiotics and hormones. This saves you from ingesting unwanted drugs, and helps alleviate bacterial resistance caused by overuse of antibiotics.
Not grown Matrix-esque stalls.
Not fed beef byproducts like blood and bones.
Fed organic crops which means no synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, which are damaging to the environment.
Not grown in Matrix-esque stalls? Are you sure about that too?
http://www.democracyinaction.o....jsp?campaign_KEY=4756BOYCOTT THE SHAMELESS SEVEN--ORGANIC OUTLAWS LABELING FACTORY FARM MILK AS 'USDA ORGANIC'
While USDA bureaucrats drag their feet on closing key loopholes in national organic organic standards, retailers, wholesalers and major ?organic? brands are continuing to sell milk and dairy products labeled as "USDA Organic, even though most or all of their milk is coming from factory farm feedlots where the animals have been brought in from conventional farms and are kept in intensive confinement, with little or no access to pasture.
The Organic Consumers Association is expanding its boycott of Horizon and Aurora organic dairy products to include five national "private label" organic milk brands supplied by Aurora, as well as two leading organic soy products, Silk and White Wave, owned by Horizon's parent company, Dean Foods. Its time to turn up the heat on the "Shameless Seven.
While thousands of organic consumers and a number of natural food stores and cooperatives have joined the boycott, major national large grocery retailers have ignored the boycott.
Aurora Organic supplies milk for several private label organic milk brands, including Costco's "Kirkland Signature," Safeway?s "O" organics brand, Publix?s ?High Meadows,?Giant's "Natures Promise," and Wild Oats? organic milk. Aurora Organic received a failing grade from the Cornucopia Institute's survey of organic dairies for its practice of intensive confinement of dairy cows. For pictures of Aurora Organic's operations, follow this link. The Cornucopia Institute recently blew the whistle on Aurora Organic's greenwashing and its bogus certification of animal welfare.
Additionally, its been revealed that much of the soy for Dean Food's White Wave tofu and Silk soymilk products are sourced abroad, primarily from Brazil and China. Environmental standards and workers' rights are routinely violated in these two countries.
