Past Debates
TUESDAY APRIL 13, 2010
NYU SKIRBALL CENTER 566 LAGUARDIA PL | RECEPTION 5:45 - 6:30PM DEBATE 6:45 - 8:30PM TICKETS $35-$45
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FOR THE MOTION
MODERATOR
AGAINST THE MOTION
Dennis Avery
Dennis Avery
Dennis Avery
FOR THE MOTION
Dennis Avery
is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Global Food Issues. From 1980-1988, he served as an agricultural analyst for the U.S. Department of State, where he was responsible for assessing the foreign-policy implications of food and farming developments worldwide
Blake Hurst
Blake Hurst
Blake Hurst
FOR THE MOTION
Blake Hurst
and his wife Julie raise corn and soybeans with 7 family members on a farm in northwest Missouri. They've farmed for over 30 years. Hurst is also a freelance writer, and has had articles published in numerous periodicals, including the Wall Street Journal, Wilson Quarterly, and the American.
John Krebs
John Krebs
John Krebs
FOR THE MOTION
John Krebs
Krebs is the principal of Jesus College, Oxford, and is the former chairman of the Food Standards Agency in the UK. He was appointed to the House of Lords as an independent crossbencher in 2007.
John Donvan
John Donvan
John Donvan
MODERATOR
John Donvan
is a correspondent for ABC News Nightline. He has served as ABC White House Correspondent, along with posting in Moscow, London, Jerusalem and Amman.
Dan Barber
Dan Barber
Dan Barber
AGAINST THE MOTION
Dan Barber
is the executive chef and co-owner of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns. As a board member of the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, Dan works to bring the principles of good farming directly to the table.
Urvashi Rangan
Urvashi Rangan
Urvashi Rangan
AGAINST THE MOTION
Urvashi Rangan
is the project director for Consumer Reports GreenerChoices.org and Consumers Union’s senior scientist for Policy Initiatives.
Jeffrey Steingarten
Jeffrey Steingarten
Jeffrey Steingarten
AGAINST THE MOTION
Jeffrey Steingarten
trained to become a food writer at Harvard College, Harvard Law School, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Harvard Lampoon. For the past eight years he has been the internationally feared and acclaimed food critic of Vogue magazine.


Eating organic used to be a fringe commitment. Not anymore. The idea that the adage “you are what you eat” actually has merit – that America’s industrialized food system is making consumers – literally, consumers – obese, diabetic and primed for heart disease – has converted millions of us into pursuers of the American Organic Dream: Eat Organic To Live Longer and Better.

But many aren’t buying it. Most consumers, for example. Although sales of organic food increased sixfold over the last decade, organics are still a tiny fraction of the food Americans eat. Perhaps that’s because organic food can cost up to twice as much as conventionally grown? Perhaps it’s because – as critics of the organic food movement argue – there’s just not a lot of solid evidence that going organic makes you any healthier. This side says the race by food makers to slap labels like “farm-grown,” “free-range,” and “all natural” is more about catching a fad than upgrading our food in any meaningful way.

Should we all go organic, and pay the extra that it costs, because few things are more important than our health? Or is the organic movement, and the firms cashing in on it, hawking a hoax, or at least grossly overstating the biological benefits to be had when the chicken that we eat is raised with some more legroom?
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MODERATOR
John Donvan is a correspondent for ABC News Nightline. He has served over a career of more than two decades in the following capacities for ABC News: chief White House correspondent, chief Moscow correspondent, Amman bureau chief, Jerusalem correspondent and correspondent for the ABC News magazine Turning Point. Donvan’s most recent major assignment was covering the war in Iraq as a unilateral reporter, for which the Chicago Sun Times named him one of the ten war stars.

FOR THE MOTION*
Dennis Avery is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Global Food Issues. From 1980-1988, he served as an agricultural analyst for the U.S. Department of State, where he was responsible for assessing the foreign-policy implications of food and farming developments worldwide. At Hudson, Avery continues to monitor developments in world food production, farm product demand, the safety and security of food supplies, and the sustainability of world agriculture.
Blake Hurst and his wife Julie raise corn and soybeans with 7 family members on a farm in northwest Missouri. They’ve farmed for over 30 years. The Hursts also own and operate a greenhouse business with their daughter and son-in-law. Hurst is a freelance writer, and has had articles published in numerous periodicals, including the Wall Street Journal, Wilson Quarterly, and the American. The Hursts have 3 children and 4 grandchildren.
John Krebs is the principal of Jesus College, Oxford, and is the former chairman of the Food Standards Agency in the UK. He was appointed to the House of Lords as an independent crossbencher in 2007. Lord Krebs is a trustee of the Nuffield Foundation, chairman of the UK Science and Technology Honours Committee and chairman of the Royal Society’s Science Policy Advisory Group. He sits on the UK Climate Change Committee and chairs its Adaptation Sub-Committee.

AGAINST THE MOTION*
Dan Barber is the executive chef and co-owner of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns. As a board member of the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, Dan works to bring the principles of good farming directly to the table. Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns both received Best New Restaurant nominations from the James Beard Foundation. In 2006, Dan received the James Beard award for Best Chef: New York City, and in 2009 was named James Beard’s Outstanding Chef.
Urvashi Rangan is the project director for Consumer Reports GreenerChoices.org and Consumers Union’s senior scientist for Policy Initiatives. She serves as a spokesperson for Consumer Reports in the areas of sustainable production and consumption practices, organic food standards, food safety issues, pollution, toxics, and environmental health concerns. She received her Ph.D. in Environmental Health Sciences from Johns Hopkins University in 1995; her post-doctoral work at the Environmental and Occupational Health Science Institute.
Jeffrey Steingarten trained to become a food writer at Harvard College, Harvard Law School, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Harvard Lampoon. For the past eight years he has been the internationally feared and acclaimed food critic of Vogue magazine. He is also the author of It Must’ve Been Something I Ate and The Man Who Ate Everything, named food book of the year by the British Guild of Food Writers and awarded the 1998 Julia Child Book Award for literary food writing.

FALL 2010 MOTIONS UNDER CONSIDERATION:

US airports should use racial and religious profiling · Cyber security must trump internet freedom · Obama is right to bash the banks · Same sex marriage is a constitutional right · Evangelical Christianity is a force for good · Treating terrorists as common criminals threatens national security ·  Long live death panels: We must ration care to the terminally ill · Campaign finance restrictions subvert democracy · Abolition of nuclear arsenals makes the world more dangerous · The Mideast peace process is a waste of time · It’s unethical to design our children · Obama’s America can declare victory over racism · America is spending too much on defense · American popular culture has been systematically degraded · Campus liberals squelch fair and balanced discourse · Celebrities have no right to privacy · Politicians have no right to privacy

*All Panelists are subject to change without notice

We have moved to a new venue: NYU SKIRBALL CENTER (566 LaGuardia Place)      Reception 5:45 - 6:30PM      Debate 6:45 - 8:30PM      Tickets $45
The pre-debate reception offers an opportunity to meet other New Yorkers and mingle with the evening's panelists. Enjoy complimentary wine and soft drinks in the Skirball Center lobby from 5:45 - 6:30PM and gain priority access to the auditorium. Doors open at 6:30PM for debate-only ticket holders.

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