Let Them Eat Cake!

By : sawadee2000
Views : 496

One thing that's obvious after living in Thailand, and that's The Land of Smiles will throw some extraordinary contrasts your way from time to time. I'm sure you've all heard about the recent "gourmet" that saw the creme de la creme flying into Thailand for a dinner that could have been part of a Fellini movie. The headlines read: "Dinner for US$25,000? Millionaires fly to Thailand for night of gourmet indulgence" BANGKOK, Thailand: It was an evening of utter decadence - a 10-course gourmet dinner concocted by world-renowned chefs at $25,000 (euro19,000) a head. (some excerpts from the article follow)
 
Many of those who attended Saturday night's culinary extravaganza hailed it as the meal of a lifetime. But it's no easy task to eat plate after plate of Beluga caviar, Perigord truffles, Kobe beef, Brittany lobster - each paired with a rare and robust vintage wine.
 
"It's really amazing," said one diner, Sophiane Foster, a wealthy Cambodian who lives in Malaysia, as she eyed the dinner's eighth course - a "pigeon en croute with cepes mushrooms." "But I can't finish it. Your senses can only appreciate so much."
 
"It's surreal. The whole thing is surreal," said Alain Soliveres, the celebrated chef of the Taillevent restaurant in Paris.
 
"Organizers say the event was designed to promote Thai tourism." (You must be fucking joking…my comment.)
 
"On the street, where much of Bangkok's best food is served, the dinner generated talk of over-the-top excess."
 
"That is a waste of money," said Rungrat Ketpinyo, 44, who sells Phad Thai noodles for 25 baht (75 US cents) a plate from a street cart outside the hotel. "I don't care how luxurious this meal is. It's ridiculous."
 
Marc Meneau, the chef of L'Esperance restaurant in Vezelay, France, called it a "culinary work of art."
 
"It's no more shocking than buying a painting that costs $2 million," he said.
 
So much for "lifestyles of the rich and famous." Ordinarily such an ostentatious display of wealth would merely have me shaking my head in wonderment. The fact this was happening now, in the Spring of 2008 casts a more sinister shadow on the event.
 
Folks, the world at moment is teetering on the verge of mass starvation. Hunger of course has unfortunately always been with us. Periodically there have been serious shortages of food, caused by drought, flood, pestilence and of course war. But the scale that the looming disaster approaches dwarfs anything we have known in modern history. I'm talking The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse kind of starvation. The causes of the current crisis are many, poor harvests in parts of the world like India, a dramatic rise in worldwide food prices due to speculators, and even ironically because crops that once went to feed people are now being used to produce bio-fuels! Various wars across Africa aren't helping the situation.
 
If you aren't scared, you should be. People who face starvation are desperate people. They are angry people. They have nothing to lose except their families. Pushed up against the wall they are ready to fight...somebody...anybody! A lot of petty despots around the world may be holding much of the guns, but they won't be able to rely on them forever. Rest assured, there will be incidents that will set off violence on a scale never seen before.
 
Ironically, all this hunger has turned out to be a boom for Thailand. A report on CNN last week said that the price of Thai export rice had risen over 50% in the last month, with even higher prices likely! Never let it be said that Thais aren't an enterprising lot...even the criminals. The report showed farmers patrolling the fields with guns to protect their rice from armed gangs. In the short run these prices are a welcome boon to the country's farmers, who have traditionally worked like dogs for very little money. In the long term though will the price of rice for domestic consumption skyrocket as well? I sure hope somebody in the government is thinking about this potential problem, and not just scheming on how they can profit from it!
 
Probably the biggest factor in the soaring price of food is the $100 + cost per barrel of oil. This affects everything from the cost of fertilizer, to the cost of running farm machinery, to the cost of transporting food. Don't expect any sympathy from the oil producing countries or the big oil companies. Their profits continue to rise at record rates. As long as they can extort more and more money from all of us, they have no incentive to lower prices. In the end though even a simple virus has more brains than these oil executives. A successful parasite is always careful not to kill its host!
 
I haven't the faintest idea what the solution to the current crisis is. I don't think there are easy fixes. But hopefully people who are a whole lot smarter than I am are seriously trying to find some answers. The bomb that threatens to go off has a damned short fuse!
 
I wonder if the folks who attended that gourmet dinner are losing any sleep over the plight of the hungry. Somehow I doubt it. In fact it's more likely that they subscribe to the Marie Antoinette School of Philosophy. If the poor have no bread to eat, let them eat cake!

 

 

© Sawadee2000. All rights reserved by the author.


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Comments / Feedback

Marc Holt
September 11, 2008, 21:27

Ho hum....doom and gloom. Perhaps you should take off your dark glasses sawadee and try your grammar checker.

"Hunger of course has unfortunately been with us." Er...? Come again?

"But the scale that the looming disaster dwarfs anything we have known in modern history." ...another missed word or two?

There are more. These spoiled the read for me already, but then the moralizing and gloomy forecast put the cap on it.
sawadee2000
September 12, 2008, 06:59

I apologize about any mistakes in grammar. I must admit that I just sometimes sit down and write without checking to see if everything is correct.

I don't feel however that I have anything toapologize for about "doom and gloom". As much as I might wish the situation I talked about wasn't so desperate, the reality is truly grim. Tens of millions of people are indeed facing starvation, and most of the so-called civilized nations of the world yawn, and go back to watching the tube. Hey after all these starving masses are just a bunch of ignorent nobodies....and heathens to boot! I do not pretend to know what the governments of the world can or should do to help, but I do know that it is a genuine catastophe that we are talking about. Sorry but I seem to have left my rose colored glasses off these days.
Marc Holt
September 12, 2008, 11:03

No need to apologize for the grammatical mistakes. I pointed them out because we are fellow writers and poor grammar and spelling detract from readability. We all need to proof read our stories if we want to engage the reader. Oh dear! Now I am sounding like Steve Rosse! ;-)

As for the starvation you talk about, I don't deny that there are problems. However, this is a site for Thailand(and Asian) stories. Hardly the forum to discuss international starvation.
sawadee2000
September 12, 2008, 12:12

The only reason I wrote this particular piece was to contrast a bit of gluttony that occured here IN Thailand with what is happening elsewhere in the world.
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