I recall my high school freshman English teacher telling me about "The Jungle". She made the story sound so fascinating that I went to the library and pulled it out that very day. It was, without a doubt, the most incredibly depressing story I had EVER read. It was a soap opera without escape, and the hardest thing about the story was that the issues were very real and still relevant. I think that I was the only one to take the bait and get the book in my class, and I wrote a scathing book report about it. My English teacher laughed at me and said that she expected to see me standing in the center of a political rally in twenty years. I didn't wait anywhere nearly that long.
Going to school in Hyde Park, the one thing we all knew about was the fact that the Swift family lived there and had a mansion in Kenwood that is still the envy of . They were the most well known meat packers in the United States - when you hear the name Armour Swift Eckrich, think about the fact that food comes from Chicago, that's one reason why it's so good! We used to pass by the Swift mansion when we had a lesson about the wealthy families of Hyde Park.
The Jungle is actually a pretty quick read because there is so much tragedy in it that you are turning the pages to see when something decent is going to happen. There are some stretches that make you want to toss the book on the ground. There is, however, something that keeps this book close to my heart at all times - the Food and Drug Administration. Let me toss a quick "We missed you" out to the food inspection team that was off during the government shut down.
In The Jungle, a man is getting married in Chicago and begins working in various difficult jobs for people who speak little English and have little to no education. One of the jobs was working in the meat packing industry. The story was written at the beginning of the previous century, and was met with extreme indignation by the establishment. Upton Sinclair was so widely denounced, he must have felt like Clinton during his time in the White House. Eventually, Sinclair's tome of a decadent world of capitalistic degradation and oppression caused the passage of laws that would lead to a safer food supply and better working conditions.
I encourage everyone to set aside a weekend and break out the old classic. Some of you will become vegetarians if you never read this book before, but let me caution you that one of the most dangerous outbreaks of food poisoning recently was related to cantaloupe. Maybe we just need to concentrate on making sure all of the food is fit to eat. I'd hate to see a world where we couldn't trust anything we put in our mouths - would you?
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