Torakus wrote:
I am glad you posted that. I looked around San Diego and I found exactly what I thought I would find. The food deserts are bullshit (at least for San Diego). Almost every single one of these deserts are in unpopulated areas. San Diego Airport, Naval Amphibious Base, Sea World, Marine Corps Air Station Miramar (which is also bullshit, because it has the largest Commissary in the area), UCSD Campus in La Jolla (give me a fucking break), Mount Helix (oh the poor rich of Mt. Helix are in a food desert) etc, etc. Aside from Imperial Beach and Paradise Hills, the deserts are all in upscale neighborhoods, industrial districts where there are no homes, university campuses, parks or large empty military reservations.
I am not saying that these deserts don't exist in other areas, but if calling the runways and landfill at MCAS Miramar a food desert is an indicator I would say the entire study that produced this map is flawed.
Tora
Since apparently anecdotal evidence > all else, I'll provide Omaha as a counter example, given it's where I live. Nearly a third of the city has no reasonable access to grocery stores. I've lived literally all over this city and surrounding communities, and from personal experience the deeper you get into the impoverished areas the farther away food (Not just grocery stores - food period) actually is from you. At more than one of the locations I lived, the nearest gas station or fast food joint was about 3 miles away, while the nearest grocery store/Super Wal Mart was more than 10 miles away. Compound that against Omaha's inexcusable public transit, and the fact that the areas I'm referring to are about as dense as anywhere else in the city (Much denser than the upper class neighborhoods, but that goes without saying) and you might actually be able to see where I'm coming from.
And quite frankly, it's downright retarded to suggest that nowhere in America does anyone have difficulty accessing food. Nor am I suggesting that we literally have 13m starving people, or even that we have 13m people who have significant difficulties keeping their kitchens stocked. But like I said before, when someone doesn't have their own vehicle, when they're operating on a budget so tight most of us here can't imagine it, and when they're so old or infirm that they can barely shuffle down a sidewalk, the grocery store that's 10 miles out may as well be on the moon. And I have personally assisted neighbors in this situation. I know it happens, and if you're to any degree honest you cannot deny that out of those 13m people at the very least
a few of them are likely to find commuting to the grocery store and back practically impossible.
And Embar, having grown up in the midwest you know that there are a lot of people out here who aren't near anything whatsoever, so I really don't understand what point you're trying to make regarding density. Does lower population density somehow affect how easy or difficult it is to acquire and transport food?
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