Anonymous wrote:I just went to Whole Foods (to return some Amazon items) for the first time in quite a while. Maybe I'm just over being let down, but it wasn't as bad as it was right after it was bought out by Amazon. The staff is way less helpful and polite than they used to be, and they were out of some items -- organic broccoli, really?? and celery hearts, and the celery they did have was practically white, not even green -- but overall, it wasn't bad.
I spent $200 and got a lot of groceries, unusual for Whole Foods. I was pleased.
Anonymous wrote:The recent forms of GMO are safe, and completely fine to eat, OP. I avoid artificial sweeteners, preservatives, colors, etc, but GMO is OK. Unrelated to food, but when the time comes, please welcome the use of genetically-modified mosquitoes in your area so that incidences of mosquito-borne diseases can be limited.
- research scientist in biology.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like there's room for another "high end" grocery store to make up for what Whole Foods is lacking these days.
Texas has Central Market (by HEB)
California has Bristol Farms
Time for the east coast to get something.
Anonymous wrote:The recent forms of GMO are safe, and completely fine to eat, OP. I avoid artificial sweeteners, preservatives, colors, etc, but GMO is OK. Unrelated to food, but when the time comes, please welcome the use of genetically-modified mosquitoes in your area so that incidences of mosquito-borne diseases can be limited.
- research scientist in biology.
Anonymous wrote:whole foods has really gone downhill since the amazon purchase. even more so recently. it’s disappointing.
Anonymous wrote:GMOs save lives. Thank God for GMO rice in Bangladesh.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t get all the hate on GMO foods. We have been selectively altering, splicing, and breeding plants since the dawn of civilization. That is genetic modification, just slower. I’d just as soon have scientists doing it selectively in a tested environment.
Yeah, Round up is great, ain't it?