According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 30-40% of our food supply ends up in landfills. That’s equal to about 133 billion pounds, and $161 billion worth of food. 27-year-old Cameron is trying to change that statistic by only cooking with ingredients he harvests from the trash.
“The first time I opened up the dumpsters, it was like opening up a treasure chest,” Cameron said in a Facebook video produced by 60 Second Docs. “I just had this idea. I’m pulling all this food out of the dumpster and my mom knows how to cook really well, so let’s try something cool.”
After making sure the item of food is “scrubbed clean” to keep bacterial infection at bay, Cameron and his mother whip up tasty-looking dishes and donate their unused food goods to local shelters and charities. “Not once have I ever had any food poisoning,” Cameron assured the viewers.
“I just want people to start rethinking food,” he said. And after seeing how Cameron eats these days, we’re definitely rethinking food in more ways than one.
everyone stop what u’re doing and check out FREEGANISM https://t.co/y7Zzx00Qs1
— mira 𓆈 (@M0THERMIRA) July 14, 2019
Basically, those who follow a freegan lifestyle often find their food goods in the trash, just like Cameron. It’s a great way to make the most of the food waste issue in America while saving big time on groceries.
Preaching freeganism to uninterested bar patrons as I fill up on stale popcorn and swipe an unattended drink
— Attica! Attica! (@Almighty_Prismo) July 10, 2019
“Despite our society’s sterotypes about garbage, the goods recovered by freegans are safe, useable, clean, and in perfect or near-perfect condition,” freegan.info states, “a symptom of a throwaway culture that encourages us to constantly replace our older goods with newer ones, and where retailers plan high-volume product disposal as part of their economic model.”
For many, freeganism is an appealing lifestyle. Not only are you saving money, but you’re actively choosing to not give into troublesome politics while helping reduce the amount of food waste in landfills.
Have finally found an '-eganism' I can get behind: 'Freeganism: buying as little as possible and making use of recycled or discarded goods and materials, in an effort to reduce waste and limit environmental impact.' #sustainuary
— Kristen Reyher (@Reyher_UofBVet) January 20, 2019
My shopping receipt is almost a meter long.
— Renata Varea (@rravfj) April 18, 2019
I think I might start to seriously consider freeganism 😭😭
#RelationshipGoals, TBH. Obviously, freeganism brings couples together.
Phone sex is cool, but talking with your girl about freeganism and society issues it’s the real turn on. 🤤
— siuvz (@yagirlsiuvs) April 4, 2019
Phone sex is cool, but talking with your girl about freeganism and society issues it’s the real turn on. 🤤
— siuvz (@yagirlsiuvs) April 4, 2019
Obviously, freegans aren’t following this account. They definitely would.
2019 goals: full-time freeganism
— dr. jay, ph. d. Basketball Ethics (@denvermayor) December 6, 2018
So perhaps you don’t rifle through dumpsters in search of ingredients for your next meal. But perhaps you will begin to think differently about buying, eating, and discarding food.
We’re not entirely sold on the idea, but we have to give major kudos to Cameron for doing what he can to make a difference.
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