Food Fraud
Each year the organization that publishes the Standardized Kanji Test announces the "kanji of the year," the character that best sums up the events of the past twelve months. Previous characters have included inochi (life) in 2005 to mark the terrible young lives lost in suicides that year, tora (tiger) due to the historic Hanshin Tigers' victory in the Japan pennant, and ikusa (war) in 2001, when the U.S. invaded Iraq. The kanji of the year for 2007 was nise (nii-SAY), meaning "fake" or "fraud," due to the large number of food-related scandals that became news, including a famous restaurant caught labeling normal meat as high-grade Kobe beef and serving leftovers to customers, a confectionery company that sprayed water on stale slices of cake so they'd look fresh enough to sell, and Hokkaido-based "Meat Hope," which despite its awesome name got in trouble for intentionally mis-labeling its products. So far, 2008 has been more of the same as food scandals continue. The most egregious one so far has been a company called Mikasa Foods, which bought inedible rice that had been contaminated with pesticides and seawater (it said) for use in glue production. In reality, it relabeled the rice and sold it to more than 370 companies, which used it to manufacture everything from food to sake to beer and more -- bleah.




7 Comments:
And yesterday, one of the companies involved with the rice purchase committed suicide by hanging himself. Poor guy.
9:52 PM
reminds me of the news from China, where they got caught putting melamine in baby formula. apparently, this makes the product test higher for protein content. shameful.
5:00 AM
Not to be a stickler but the Iraq war didn't start until 2003. The war in Afghanistan did start then though. I think that's what you meant. Al
1:39 PM
Ack, you are right! Thanks for the correction.
4:10 PM
the worst part with food fraud is the u.s. has been putting chemical additives in our food for along time and people get addicted to everything!
8:52 PM
Yes, I was going to add something about, the fact that there are scandals is a good thing, meaning that at least the system is working to find this kind of stuff. In the U.S., where, say, newspaper X *will not* write a bad story about what Monsanto is doing this week, we're all kind of, well, f*cked.
10:31 AM
Peter,
Am I right to assume that this picture:
http://xs131.xs.to/xs131/08393/japan_1898794.jpg
and the one on top are the same location (Kyoto). (Also personal picture, hence faces blurred)
5:58 AM
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