Bananas: nutritious treat or geopolitical nightmare? Jessica Wynn unpeels the shocking truth behind our favorite fruit on this week’s Skeptical Sunday!
Welcome to Skeptical Sunday, a special edition of The Jordan Harbinger Show where Jordan and a guest break down a topic that you may have never thought about, open things up, and debunk common misconceptions. This time around, we’re joined by Jessica Wynn!
On This Week’s Skeptical Sunday:
- The United Fruit Company (later Chiquita) wielded extraordinary power in the early and mid-20th century, orchestrating military coups in Honduras and Guatemala, and influencing US foreign policy to protect its interests. This corporate empire even played a role in events leading to the Bay of Pigs invasion and Cuban Missile Crisis.
- In 1928, Colombian banana workers protesting for basic rights like real currency payment and decent housing were surrounded by military forces and massacred. While the government claimed 47 deaths, other accounts put the toll at around 3,000 — a stark example of the violence underpinning the industry.
- Even today, banana workers face inhumane conditions including chemical exposure, poverty-level wages, and suppression of union activities. The industry has been linked to child labor, sexual exploitation, and human rights abuses across Latin America.
- The banana industry uses more agrochemicals than almost any other crop sector, with about 85% missing their target and contaminating workers, communities, and ecosystems. Monoculture farming depletes soil, threatens biodiversity, and pollutes water systems, even damaging coral reefs.
- Despite this troubling history, consumers can make positive choices by seeking out bananas from ethical producers like Equal Exchange, Coliman, Earth University, and Organics Unlimited/GROW. These brands prioritize sustainable practices and fair treatment of workers, allowing us to enjoy this nutritious fruit while supporting systems that benefit both people and our planet.
- Connect with Jordan on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. If you have something you’d like us to tackle here on Skeptical Sunday, drop Jordan a line at jordan@jordanharbinger.com and let him know!
- Connect with Jessica Wynn at Instagram and Threads, and subscribe to her newsletter: Between the Lines!
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What’s it like to be one of the only Muslim Arab Americans fighting terrorism in the US’ most secret military unit? Find out in our two-parter that begins with episode 978: Adam Gamal | My Top-Secret Fight Against Terrorism Part One here!
Resources from This Episode:
- Bananas | The Nutrition Source
- Hollaback Girl (Official Music Video) | Gwen Stefani
- Go Bananas for…Bananas | Mayo Clinic News Network
- Bananas: Good or Bad? | Healthline
- Imagining the Future of the Banana | National Geographic Education
- Peeling Back the Truth on Bananas | Food Empowerment Project
- The Domestication of Bananas: A Historical Perspective | SAPIENS
- Banana Industry in Central America | Oxford Research Encyclopedia
- United Fruit: A Company Gone Bananas Part I | Lit Up
- United Fruit: A Company Gone Bananas Part II | Lit Up
- United Fruit: A Company Gone Bananas Part III | Lit Up
- Captain Lorenzo Baker, Who First Brought Jamaican Bananas to the United States in June, 1870 | Library of Congress
- The Dark Side of Bananas: Imperialism, Non-State Actors, and Power | Harvard International Review
- The Banana Business: Tracing the Contours of a Tropical Fruit Commodity in World History | Academia
- The Seldom Recorded Life of Minor Cooper Keith | United Fruit Company
- Minor Cooper Keith & Costa Rica: A Biographical Study | Duke University Press
- Who Was The Man Behind The Banana Republics Of Central America? | Timeline
- There Will Be Bananas | NPR Throughline
- Chiquita Banana and the Cannibals | Jersey Coaster
- Fairly Traded Coffee, Chocolate, Tea, and Snacks | Equal Exchange
- Together We Nourish the Future! | Coliman Bananas
- EARTH University Sustainable Banana Production | Livingmaxwell
- Giving Resources and Opportunities to Workers (GROW) | Organics Unlimited
1125: Bananas | Skeptical Sunday
This transcript is yet untouched by human hands. Please proceed with caution as we sort through what the robots have given us. We appreciate your patience!
[00:00:00] Jordan Harbinger: Welcome to Skeptical Sunday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. Today I am here with Skeptical Sunday co-host, writer, and researcher Jessica Wynn. On the Jordan Harbinger Show. We decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. And during the week, we have long form conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes, authors, thinkers, and performers. On Sundays, though it's skeptical Sunday, where a rotating guest, co-host and I break down a topic you may have never thought about and debunk common misconceptions about that topic.
Topics like chemtrails, band foods, GMOs, toothpaste, crystal healing, ear candling, diet, supplements, the lottery and more. And if you're new to the show or you're looking for a handy way to tell your friends about the show, I suggest our episode starter packs. These are collections of our favorite episodes on persuasion, negotiation, psychology, disinformation, crime, and cults and more.
That'll help new listeners get a taste of everything we do here on the show. Just visit Jordan harbinger.com/starts, or search for us in your Spotify app to get started. Today, we're peeling back the layers on one of the most popular fruits on the planet. The banana from smoothies to flambe. Bananas are everywhere, but how much do we really know about them?
Are they ethical? Are they sustainable? Can they be free from chemicals? And what impact do they have on the environment? Well hold onto your bowls of fruit because today we're going deep into the sweet and mushy and surprisingly complex secrets of our slender, yellow friends. Joining me today is writer and researcher, Jessica Wynn.
Jess, welcome to the show. Are you ready to go? B-A-N-A-N-A-S. I think that's how it goes. That's how you spell bananas, correct?
[00:01:42] Jessica Wynn: I, I am so ready. Who doesn't love a good banana? Right? But it turns out bananas have a shady side.
[00:01:50] Jordan Harbinger: Don't tell me bananas are bad for you because I got a whole bowl of these things sitting here and they're gonna be brown in 20 minutes or whatever.
They, however long they last,
[00:01:58] Jessica Wynn: health wise, not at all. They're packed with fiber, potassium, vitamin C, b six, and they're great for the gut and heart. They're like, nature's candy, that also happens to be good for you.
[00:02:10] Jordan Harbinger: Okay, so this is not about health,
[00:02:13] Jessica Wynn: correct? It's not about your health anyway. The only health related downsides are they're high in carbs, so maybe skip them if you're on a keto kick and they don't mix well with a few medications, but that's hardly the banana's fault.
It's rare, but some people are allergic. It's less than 1% of the population though. So the world's love of bananas is thriving and of all the varieties, we only eat one type of banana.
[00:02:42] Jordan Harbinger: Banana used to be my go-to pre-workout snack. But wait, so one type of banana, like one species. That seems weird. 'cause don't we have hundreds of different kinds of apples and oranges.
For example,
[00:02:53] Jessica Wynn: thousands of banana varieties grow, but the Cavendish banana is the only one that makes it to the grocery store. It's the global standard and they are the world's
[00:03:04] Jordan Harbinger: easiest food to undress. One quick peel, man. You're in business.
[00:03:07] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, I mean, that's true. Bananas are pretty sexy. They're like nature's fast food served in biodegradable wrappers.
[00:03:16] Jordan Harbinger: I suppose that's a bonus. 'cause we eat what millions of bananas every year.
[00:03:20] Jessica Wynn: Billions with a B. There's over 100 billion bananas eaten worldwide every year, and they've been around forever. Evidence of bananas. Dates back to sixth century BCE in Papua New Guinea, but likely thousands of years earlier in Asia and Northern Australia.
[00:03:39] Jordan Harbinger: So they're not native to the us. Like they seem very tropical.
[00:03:42] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. In fact, they were considered exotic in the west for a long time. There's some debate about when they first made it to Europe in the 15 hundreds. Magellan even wrote letters home describing bananas as quote, like a really long fig. Wow.
Not even close,
[00:03:59] Jordan Harbinger: first of all, not even remotely the same thing. Is that a really long fig in your pocket or, yeah.
[00:04:05] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. Long fig hammock doesn't quite work
[00:04:08] Jordan Harbinger: either. No, it does Not long fig hammock.
[00:04:11] Jessica Wynn: But yeah, as Europeans colonized tropical regions, bananas became more and more desired, but transporting them pre refrigeration was obviously pretty tricky.
[00:04:21] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, I can imagine opening up a box of squishy brown bananas after. However many days it took to get to America or Europe From my boat. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:04:32] Jessica Wynn: Thankfully, the 19th century brought steamships, railroads, and refrigeration, so the luxury of bananas became more accessible. In 1870, a guy named Captain Lorenzo Baker shipped the first bananas from Jamaica to Philly, kicking off the Banana Empire,
[00:04:51] Jordan Harbinger: Philadelphia Bananas.
[00:04:53] Jessica Wynn: This is a nice ring to it. Baker made waves. In 1876, he took a banana tree to the World's Fair, and it was a hit. Unfortunately, it was overshadowed by something called the telephone. Mm. But still, he created enough buzz to set up the first commercial banana farm in the US in Florida. This led to the creation of the Boston Fruit Company, which in 1899 became the United Fruit Company, which is now Chiquita.
[00:05:25] Jordan Harbinger: I'm just gonna let it go that the Boston Fruit Company was based in Florida, but, okay. So Chiquita came from a bunch of East coast bananas.
[00:05:32] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. And the history's complicated. So this guy Baker and two other banana barons.
[00:05:38] Jordan Harbinger: Wow.
[00:05:38] Jessica Wynn: They controlled the banana trade under the United Fruit Company from 1899 to 1970.
And trust me, this story is, it's slippery.
[00:05:51] Jordan Harbinger: Wait. So just three men monopolized the banana trade and the term Banana Baron makes it really hard to take these guys seriously. But I'm guessing they made hella bank.
[00:05:59] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, banana Bank, Del Monte and Dole, those fruit companies were around, but they focused on canned foods and pineapples.
No one messed with the United Fruit Company and their bananas.
[00:06:11] Jordan Harbinger: Well, how did UFC, can we call them UFC or is that gonna get confusing with the fighting league?
[00:06:16] Jessica Wynn: This UFC is way more crazy than a cage match. In 1871 as Baker's Bananas, were making waves in Philly. This guy named Minor Cooper Keith.
[00:06:29] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. Does not sound like a real name at all, but continue.
[00:06:34] Jessica Wynn: Minor Cooper, Keith. He left Brooklyn for Costa Rica because his uncle,
[00:06:39] Jordan Harbinger: oh, tell me his name was Major Cooper Keith.
[00:06:42] Jessica Wynn: I'm not sure. I'll have to check on that. But anyway, he was also involved in the railroad industry and he brought Miner and his brothers to help build a railroad through the raw jungle. Had no experience, just thought, let's build a railroad through the Costa Rican wilderness.
[00:07:01] Jordan Harbinger: Nothing says great idea like wandering cluelessly into the jungle and being like, let's just transform this landscape. So how did that go?
[00:07:10] Jessica Wynn: Great. I mean, back then Central America had virtually no infrastructure. Building a railroad through the mountains, rainforests and volcanoes of the jungle to the Caribbean coast was a monumental task.
Scorching heat, torrential rain, Costa Rica through every disaster at them, and it was a nightmare.
[00:07:31] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, I've been to Costa Rica in the modern age, and that untouched jungle is crazy. It must have been wild.
[00:07:39] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, I mean, it was brutal for these guys that were falling trees, mosquitoes, tropical diseases, like.
Think Oregon trail levels of dysentery.
[00:07:49] Jordan Harbinger: Ah, dysentery. Yes. The classic monochrome video game killer. I can almost see my half dead caravan forwarding the river and these weird shades of green and black. But what does that have to do with bananas?
[00:08:02] Jessica Wynn: So by 1874 miners, uncle, his brothers, and about 5,000 workers were dead from the harsh conditions.
[00:08:13] Jordan Harbinger: Don't.
[00:08:15] Jessica Wynn: Mine was left alone to run the show, but was out of money and had to figure out how to feed his remaining workers. So what does a guy do?
[00:08:25] Jordan Harbinger: Oh, he went bananas. Yes. Okay. And, but folks, yeah, we plan to overuse this joke throughout the rest of the show. You can count on that.
[00:08:33] Jessica Wynn: How can we not? But Yeah, exactly.
The light bulb went off bananas. They were growing wild all around. So he planted a bunch along the railroad route to feed his workers and maybe sell some too.
[00:08:47] Jordan Harbinger: It's actually not a bad idea. Certainly a better idea than trying to build a railroad through the jungle in the first place.
[00:08:54] Jessica Wynn: Right. It was a fruitful venture by 1890.
Forget about passengers. His trains were exclusively used for banana transport. Exporting bananas was way more lucrative than any passenger fair. Yeah. Right now I can only transport
[00:09:12] Jordan Harbinger: one banana at a time. Yeah, I guess you can't sell your passengers to the highest bidder at the port. You could no longer do that in 1890 anyway.
Gosh. Yeah,
[00:09:24] Jessica Wynn: miner was raking it in, and of course, as any good colonizing businessman does, I. He wanted more than just money. He wanted power and prestige. So he married the daughter of a former Costa Rican president in exchange for negotiating his father-in-law's debt with English banks. He was a big deal, banana baron, all respectable and whatnot, and everyone just forgot about those 5,000 dead workers.
Casualty of progress, I guess.
[00:09:56] Jordan Harbinger: So, I don't know, just hearing that, it really does sound like the president sold his daughter in order for this dude to pay his debt. But we don't have any details, and that's gonna be a hell of a tangent, but that's really what that sounds like. Yeah. Okay, fine. If you can just forget, I owe you a few million dollars.
You can have my daughter. That's what that sounds like. Maybe that was par for the course back then. Anyway, 5,000 dead workers is a bushel of bodies, but again, also probably par for the course back then in a big construction project like this. Railroad through the jungle.
[00:10:25] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, sure. And meanwhile, the banana business stateside was booming.
The United Fruit Company monopolized the banana trade. They built infrastructure and became incredibly powerful
[00:10:39] Jordan Harbinger: capitalism, baby corner, the market control, the infrastructure rake in the profits. We even still to this day say, own the rails. And then it's obviously a railroad metaphor or hat tip to the railroad itself.
[00:10:49] Jessica Wynn: Absolutely. And these three guys who ran the UFC, they controlled everything. Miner owned the railroads in Central America. Preston had a steam ship fleet, and Baker had plantations across the West, Indies and southeast us. So they made trade agreements with companies in Columbia and what is now Panama, and took the banana business from zero profits in 1884.
To a $10 million industry in 1906, that would be $300 million today.
[00:11:21] Jordan Harbinger: Wow. Let me get this straight. These banana tycoons turned a casual fruit snack into a money printer in record time.
[00:11:29] Jessica Wynn: Yes. And they didn't just grow bananas. They made bananas. Cool. Like they lobbied doctors to tell moms to give their babies bananas.
[00:11:40] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. They
[00:11:40] Jessica Wynn: put out cookbooks with banana recipes. They spread banana fever across America. The demand skyrocketed. And that's when the banana boys needed more land
[00:11:52] Jordan Harbinger: banana boys. So they weren't just rich. They were marketing geniuses, which is cool. Who knew bananas had PR campaigns? So weird.
[00:11:58] Jessica Wynn: Oh, definitely.
And they were smart. But here's the kicker. They needed endless land because they were growing bananas like clones to speed up production. I.
[00:12:08] Jordan Harbinger: Clones. What do you mean?
[00:12:10] Jessica Wynn: So genetically bananas are identical clones, which means no seeds, which makes them highly susceptible to disease. So if disease hit one tree, it wiped out the whole crop, and it was cheaper for the UFC to just plow more jungle and plant new banana trees, then protect what they'd already planted.
This led to the development of the disease resistant Cavendish, the same variety we eat today, but also the cause of the destruction of a lot of tropical forest
[00:12:43] Jordan Harbinger: bananas saving us from scurvy, but killing the planet at the same time. I guess it probably is easier to just burn a section of rainforest and plant stuff.
They're still doing that down there
[00:12:52] Jessica Wynn: still. Yeah. And the UFC then, they were crafty to keep local governments happy. They'd offered to build infrastructure in places that had none in exchange for land rights and exclusive trade agreements. Governments rationalize this by saying locals benefited from the infrastructure, but really UFC needed the infrastructure to run their operations.
[00:13:17] Jordan Harbinger: So they're agreeing to build roads for the people that just also happened to be great for moving truckloads of bananas to their trains or whatever.
[00:13:25] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. I mean, was this dishonest or just good business?
[00:13:29] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Can you have one without the other, the line's blurry when profit is involved? Of course you can do both, but it sounds like this was one thing painted over as the other.
[00:13:38] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, and the banana business was powerful. Like I said, the UFC built Central America's Telegraph Communications network. They built a railroad that stretched from Mexico to Guatemala to El Salvador controlled ports all over the Caribbean, and even took over the postal service in Guatemala. Locals there called the UFC company, El Pulpo, which means the octopus because they had their slimy yellow tentacles in everything,
but they were creating jobs. Sure. But the conditions were downright criminal. Like workers lived in filthy dorms on the banana plantations. They paid their workers in company coupons that could only be spent at UFC stores. No actual currency was paid and they couldn't do anything about it because the banana guys were everywhere.
[00:14:32] Jordan Harbinger: That is insane. Sounds like a scam, frankly, not a business.
[00:14:36] Jessica Wynn: I, but I think that was the norm at the time. Let me just stress. The working conditions were horrific. Bananas grow in hot, humid weather, including monsoon season and. Workers weighed through rain and mud daily. So banana bunches are really heavy.
Like we're talking carrying up to a hundred pounds for 14 hours a day with no pay.
[00:15:01] Jordan Harbinger: Geez. So they're essentially slaves. Then
[00:15:03] Jessica Wynn: the conditions were so bad that the life expectancy for men in Central America started to drop, and not just for plantation workers, but for the entire male population, all because of bananas.
And how long did this go on? In 1918, banana workers tried to strike, but the UFC just ignored their demands for years until all this banana drama boiled over 10 years later in Columbia in what came to be known as the Banana Massacre.
[00:15:33] Jordan Harbinger: The Banana massacre sounds like a fruit salad my kids would make. So what happened?
This is gonna be dark and I'm gonna regret that joke, aren't I?
[00:15:40] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, it definitely a brown spot in history. UFC set up one of its plantations in Magdalena Columbia, which. Is a hot tourist spot along the Caribbean coast today. But by 1928, the tension and abuse, it was just too much from wage theft to housing.
And to top it off, UFC bosses were forcing workers', wives and daughters into sex work to secure banana jobs for their husbands.
[00:16:09] Jordan Harbinger: Oh, that is dark. It sounds like everybody had a banana job
anyway, forced into sex work. Wow. The UFC were banana pimps. That is gross. That is gross. Despicable.
[00:16:22] Jessica Wynn: It was twisted. And since UFC owned everything, workers couldn't just pack up and find another job. So they organized again. And on October 6th, 1928, Colombian banana workers handed the UFCA list with nine demands.
[00:16:39] Jordan Harbinger: What were their demands?
[00:16:41] Jessica Wynn: Fair wages paid in real money, not company coupons was at the top.
[00:16:46] Jordan Harbinger: Good idea.
[00:16:47] Jessica Wynn: The other demands were about basic sanitary conditions like clean water and decent housing. Pretty reasonable, but demands also cited Columbia's constitution and called out the UFC for acting like the government.
The UFC didn't like that and they refused to negotiate. So in a classic corporate move, they said, Hey, your subcontractors, not employees. Nothing to discuss.
[00:17:14] Jordan Harbinger: Oh yeah, the original gig workers. That's messed up. Yeah,
[00:17:17] Jessica Wynn: exactly. And to make things worse, the Columbian government passed new laws, making it even harder for workers to protest.
So. When they finally went on strike on November 11th, 1928, the situation escalated quickly. The strike grew into the largest in Columbia's history. The government panicked, arrested hundreds and called in the military to silence the strikers.
[00:17:44] Jordan Harbinger: Ooh, that does not bode well.
[00:17:46] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. It turns out the Colombian military was on UFC's payroll, so they sent 700 troops to confront 30,000 striking workers in the so-called Banana Zone and get this according to the US State Department, there was talk of sending.
Us warships to back them up all over bananas.
[00:18:10] Jordan Harbinger: Wow. Bananas over human rights. That sounds like a recipe for disaster.
[00:18:14] Jessica Wynn: It got ugly. The workers, they sabotaged the railways, crippled the banana trade. They became a revolutionary threat, which scared the living daylights out of the authorities. So on December 5th, they told the protestors there'd be negotiations.
Thousands of workers gathered thinking it was for peace talks, but the banana cops got nervous and a Colombian general declared a state of siege. The military surrounded the unarmed protesting workers, and with machine guns pointed, they gave the crowd one minute. 60 seconds to disperse, then open fire.
[00:18:53] Jordan Harbinger: Oh wow. This is like some Game of Thrones type of scene, right? Like, oh, everyone just gather in one place because we want to talk to you and then murder everyone. Well, did people actually die? I assume they did if they were being shot at.
[00:19:06] Jessica Wynn: Oh, yeah, but the death toll depends on who you ask. The Colombian government said 47 people died, but every other account puts the death toll at around 3000.
I think it was really brutal. And to send a message, the military left nine bodies in the workers' village, one for each of their demands.
[00:19:28] Jordan Harbinger: Just pause for a second and think about how much shooting you have to do to kill 3000 people. There's no way that happened in like a 92nd panic shooting. That's no way.
They sat there and shot people for probably hours. That's really good. Wow. And they left a body in the village that's so psychopathic. It's poetic with the body in the place, but that is so psycho. This is some drug cartel type stuff.
[00:19:50] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. Some historians argue that the political instability in Columbia today and the whole drug trafficking nightmare can be traced back to UFCs.
Colonizing grip on the banana trade, and as for the UFC's founder, our friend, minor Cooper Keith, he died a few months after the massacre, but that didn't stop UFC. So I would like to introduce you to our next Banana character, Sam Zey, also known as Sam, the Banana Man, or. The guy who took UFC's corruption to places even darker,
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Jordan harbinger.com/news is where you can find it. Now back to Skeptical Sunday. This is never ending banana drama, but okay. Wait. This guy was so into bananas. He was known as the banana man. He sounds like a really crappy movie villain. Like whatever, like knockoff Batman comic has the banana man.
[00:23:06] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, definitely.
We should write the script for sure. This guy was born in Russia in 1877, but he was raised in Alabama. And Sam was just obsessed with banana boats in his local harbor as a kid, and when he grew up, he saw a gold mine in what's called the rips, which are the damaged bananas that are tossed aside. He figured that 15% of each banana shipment were rips, so he bought them cheap, sold them to local merchants, and by the age of 21 had over a hundred thousand dollars, or that would be like $3 million today.
[00:23:43] Jordan Harbinger: Wow. So we're talking about a teenage brown banana baron here.
[00:23:48] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. In 1903, Sam, the banana man signed a contract with UFC to spread across South and Central America. In 1905, he launched his own company in Honduras called KO Fruit. And just controlled the infrastructure there.
[00:24:05] Jordan Harbinger: So it sounds like he learned from the industry standard.
It's weird. It's like banana colonialism.
[00:24:09] Jessica Wynn: It is. And when the Honduran government tried to limit the foreign land ownership and raise taxes, Sam wasn't having it. So in 1911, he took drastic measures and went full banana Scarface. He hired a mercenary. You'll love this name, Lee Christmas to overthrow the democratically elected president of Honduras.
[00:24:34] Jordan Harbinger: What is up with the names in this episode? Nobody has a real freaking name. Minor Cooper, Keith Lee, Christmas, and Sam the banana man. And by the way, which sounds like a record you'd find when you're cleaning out your grandmother's attic. So this guy was a mercenary for bananas. How did that work out?
[00:24:50] Jessica Wynn: It worked out really well.
He succeeded. The Christmas guy, toppled the government, put in a puppet leader, and Sam got everything he wanted, land tax breaks and power. He was running the whole country of Honduras as one big banana plantation.
[00:25:07] Jordan Harbinger: So just to be clear, we're talking about a corporate coup against a democratically elected government for bananas.
This is wild.
[00:25:15] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, wild. Um, Sam dominated banana diplomacy in Honduras and Nicaragua. He ended his contract with UFC in 1913, and then his company and UFC, they just played dirty with each other for years. So fast forward to after the Banana Massacre in 1928, Sam, the Banana man's ships were raided and found to have loads of weapons on board, which has never really explained in my research.
[00:25:46] Jordan Harbinger: Okay.
[00:25:47] Jessica Wynn: The US State Department intervened to stop the banana drama and negotiated a merger that let UFC swallow up Sam's company.
[00:25:58] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Swallow those bananas whole. So the US essentially bought out UFC's competition. Smart move. Also getting the government to do it. Okay. So what did Sam end up with?
[00:26:08] Jessica Wynn: He got $30 million, which would be 500 million today.
He got a seat on the board of directors and this made him one of the richest people in the United States. But less than a year later, the stock tanked with the Great Depression. Sam was furious and literally stormed into a UFC board meeting, declared himself the new managing director of operations, and by 1938, he was the president of UFC.
[00:26:38] Jordan Harbinger: Wait a minute. That actually worked. That times were certainly different back then. I can't tell if this guy is a genius or completely out of his tree. Imagine storming into a board meeting and be like, no, I run Tesla now. Sorry. I just, I demand it.
[00:26:51] Jessica Wynn: I think he was a crazy genius. Yeah. But if we fast forward by 1954, UFC was fighting another battle.
And this time in Guatemala, the new president there was Jabo Arbenz and he wanted to redistribute land not being used and land owned by foreign companies. And UFC was not having it. They had 600,000 acres in Guatemala, which is about a quarter of the country, and they weren't using most of the land. They were just hoarding it.
And the Guatemala government offered like 1.2 million for the land. But UFC wanted 16 million. And the US Secretary of State and the CIA director, which at the time were brothers, by the way, the Dullest brothers of airport fame. I guess they advised President Eisenhower, that President r Bens is the problem.
The secretary had ties to UFC. The CIA director owned UFC stock. So it's a whole tangled web.
[00:27:55] Jordan Harbinger: Wait, what? So the CIA gets involved in a banana dispute.
[00:27:59] Jessica Wynn: Oh yeah. They backed a coup called Operation Success.
[00:28:05] Jordan Harbinger: Oh, how very original name.
[00:28:07] Jessica Wynn: The goal of the operation success was to overthrow our Bens, Sam, the Banana man, published a book accusing our Benz's land reform plan of being a communist plot.
And in 1954, if you just whispered the word communism, people would lose their minds. So it was a branding win.
[00:28:26] Jordan Harbinger: Just another play in the banana chess game, I suppose.
[00:28:29] Jessica Wynn: And by June of 1954 UFC backed forces. Think about this. A banana company's forces invaded Guatemala using UFC boats and American planes calling it.
A liberation war against communism and thousands of ar Ben's supporters were rounded up and it took just 12 days for the president to flee. The country was another banana coo in record time and just like that, Guatemala was in chaos. That lasted decades, but it was a success for the UFC,
[00:29:07] Jordan Harbinger: I guess it worked well in Honduras and Guatemala for the UFC at least.
I wanna pause for a second again, and appreciate that a private company armed up and went after a country. Can you imagine if Tesla assembled some special forces commandos, like retired military guys, whatever, and took over an island in the Caribbean or whatever. This is just on another level of crazy.
[00:29:28] Jessica Wynn: Imagine
[00:29:29] Jordan Harbinger: that. Yeah, I actually, I can, I can maybe imagine that particular example happening, right? So where does the banana cap take us next? Well,
[00:29:37] Jessica Wynn: in a bit of deja vu, enter another adored charismatic leader named Fidel Castro. So funny twist, Castro's dad worked for UFC, but Fidel wasn't a fan of UFC's stranglehold on the land.
And in 1959 he took back 35,000 acres and the UFC was like, hell no. And called their CIA buddies, the same Dulles brothers from the Guatemalan invasion.
[00:30:06] Jordan Harbinger: So who knew fruit companies were so connected to the federal government? I guess all you need is a ton of money.
[00:30:10] Jessica Wynn: I know UFC said, Hey, let's get rid of Fidel, so yada, yada, yada.
That's how we get to the Bay of Pig's invasion on April 14th, 1961.
[00:30:20] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. I know we're oversimplifying this, but the Bay of Pig's invasion was at least partly about bananas.
[00:30:26] Jessica Wynn: Yes. Wow. The CIA totally invaded Cuba and UFC's banana boats were the ones transporting soldiers and arms and a hundred ships known as the great White Fleet that were regularly used for transporting bananas and tourists started ferrying troops, weapons and ammunition to overthrow Castro.
[00:30:50] Jordan Harbinger: But the Bay of Pigs invasion was a massive historical failure. So that, guess this is where things go wrong for banana companies.
[00:30:56] Jessica Wynn: Correct. And Fidel caught up the Soviets for backup and boom, we're in the Cuban Missile Crisis.
[00:31:02] Jordan Harbinger: Wow. Slow down. Okay. UFC's Banana Empire. Nearly brought about nuclear war, and all of this is rooted in freaking bananas.
It's intense. People are eating this many bananas. Is it worth the trouble? We're overestimating just how important bananas are to my daily life. The fact that we all went up in nuclear holocaust nearly as a result of these things, Jesus, it's
[00:31:23] Jessica Wynn: so crazy. And UFC and all these dirty dealings, it left them pretty vulnerable after that.
But they still had a lot of power in Central America into the 1970s. The ripple effects from these coups, it's still haunting the region today.
[00:31:39] Jordan Harbinger: I can't believe that bananas, they've literally shaped geopolitics. I had no idea. I feel bad about having sunscreen called Banana Boat now. Guilt by association.
Gotta raid my medicine cabinet.
[00:31:51] Jessica Wynn: Oh, you know, or it's shopping at the store. Banana Republic. That's
[00:31:54] Jordan Harbinger: right. What
[00:31:55] Jessica Wynn: marketing GDS allowed that. It's like,
[00:31:57] Jordan Harbinger: yeah,
[00:31:58] Jessica Wynn: eating at heart attack burgers,
[00:32:00] Jordan Harbinger: that for sure exists. So I'm gonna have to Google that. But if I'm walking into a store named after a political crisis. I want a very detailed explanation of their supply chain.
It's 2025. We can't be messing with it. What is a Banana Republic? Actually? What does that mean?
[00:32:13] Jessica Wynn: It's a pretty offensive term for countries that are politically unstable, have a wealth gap and are run by foreign companies.
[00:32:20] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. So America currently got it. All right. The
[00:32:23] Jessica Wynn: OG of this is the banana industry countries.
In fact, in the seventies, several Latin American banana Republics, they formed the union of banana exporting countries or uep for short, and they aim to take control of their countries back and the local banana trade.
[00:32:43] Jordan Harbinger: So this is opec, but four bananas. Yeah. And so did they take over the banana trade completely?
[00:32:48] Jessica Wynn: Well, they did have help from Hurricane Carmen in 1974, which wiped out a bunch of banana plantations in Latin America, mostly Honduras. And that sent UFC just spiraling. They lost $70 million. What would be. 450 million today and in the company, chaos uncovered a bribery scandal with the Honduran government.
And consequently, in 1975, the then CEO of UFC, Eli M Black, he just jumped to his death from his 44th floor office window. All right,
[00:33:26] Jordan Harbinger: disrespectful. Possibly. But finally, someone with a real name, RIP, maybe he slipped on appeal.
[00:33:33] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. Or he slipped on a lot of corruption. I think what's super weird is he jumped with his briefcase and it scattered documents everywhere that proved he bribed the president of Honduras for lower export taxes on bananas.
This became known as Banana Gait,
[00:33:53] Jordan Harbinger: of course. Wow. So when something is bananas, it's literally referring to all the turmoil and craziness that bananas have caused. I thought it was just a dumb expression that we're overusing in this episode,
[00:34:04] Jessica Wynn: both. But yeah, that's where it comes
[00:34:06] Jordan Harbinger: from. Yeah. So did Banana Gate lead to any actual change in the industry?
Of course not.
[00:34:10] Jessica Wynn: No. And it's not just land battles and political chaos that have an improved working conditions are still today horrible. The big three fruit companies, Del Monte Dole, and UFC, they still squeeze every penny from plantation workers.
[00:34:28] Jordan Harbinger: So it's not just the UFC that's problematic.
[00:34:30] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. There are other fruit companies, so Del Monte Foods and Dole, they both have rich histories, but just not in bananas.
Del Monte formed in 1886 as a premium coffee brand expanded into canned peaches and Hawaiian pineapples, eventually rebranding as the Del Monte corporation in 1967, and they have ongoing human rights violations facing them today. Meanwhile, Dole began in 1899 with a Hawaiian pineapple plantation. And they revolutionized production.
But Dole faces a lot of public health challenges today, including e coli outbreaks in 2005, 2006.
[00:35:11] Jordan Harbinger: Sounds like some poopy pineapples. Yeah.
[00:35:14] Jessica Wynn: Both companies remained major players in the fruit and vegetable industries, but we'd have to do an episode on pineapples for those tales.
[00:35:22] Jordan Harbinger: Man, the banana industry is such a bully.
I really had no idea.
[00:35:28] Jessica Wynn: And there's other banana massacre type stories in the Philippines, Mexico, all over Latin America, where workers face intimidation from the military because of their Banana Union activities, like there's human rights abuses that are rampant in the banana industry. The profits for these companies are not reflected in the workers' wages or benefits.
But they are paid an actual currency now.
[00:35:56] Jordan Harbinger: I suppose that's a plus. Anything with labor has human rights issues, chocolate coffee, basically. If there's a skeptical Sunday about it and it's a food or something that you eat, it's because there's slaves involved. So yeah, I guess I should not be surprised that there's a high human cost to my breakfast.
Banana.
[00:36:12] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. The fruit that keeps on giving, I guess
[00:36:15] Jordan Harbinger: that's right.
[00:36:15] Jessica Wynn: But when the skeletons finally started spilling out to the public. UFC figured a fresh logo would make people forget about all the coups and massacres and paramilitary ties. So in 1990, they rebranded Chiquita Brands International
[00:36:32] Jordan Harbinger: because nothing says forget all of our atrocities.
Like a new label on the same rotten fruit, especially one that's a dancing banana lady if memory serves
[00:36:40] Jessica Wynn: Chiquita translates literally to mean little girl or little lady. So they change their name to Little Lady Banana. Cute for marketing, I guess. But wait,
[00:36:52] Jordan Harbinger: am I crazy? Chiquita was around before the nineties.
I remember seeing it as a kid. I even a little kid watching Sesame Street or something like that,
[00:36:59] Jessica Wynn: right? Miss Chiquita was UFC's mascot for sure, but the company itself was the United Fruit Company until 1990. Miss Chiquita was created back in the 1940s to. Softened UFC's reputation, but that branding didn't age well.
UFC, Chiquita Banana Ads were all about the exotic, and they objectified Latin American women in ways that screamed sexism and colonialism. The original logo was a sexy female banana that it really painted women as passive and consumable.
[00:37:36] Jordan Harbinger: Okay? It's like they thought, what if we made a fruit sexy? We also have to make it sexist.
But sex sells, right? So here we are.
[00:37:43] Jessica Wynn: Right? But the character's first introduction was weird. In 1946, UFC put out a racist animated short called Chiquita Banana and the Cannibals.
[00:37:57] Jordan Harbinger: I have seen that one. We'll link it in the show notes. It is racist as hell.
[00:38:02] Jessica Wynn: Yes.
[00:38:02] Jordan Harbinger: That's about all.
[00:38:03] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. It's like a cartoonish stereotype of an African man shown cooking an Englishman over a fire, and then this Chiquita banana lady interrupts singing.
If you'd like to be refined and civilized, then your eating habits really ought to be revised and suggests a recipe for banana scallops as an alternative to cannibalism.
[00:38:26] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, and people are going, oh, I don't really get it. When you watch this. Yeah, you'll get it. Again, we'll link to it in the show notes.
It's a minute or so long. Just the cartoon image of the cannibal is pretty horrible by today's standards.
[00:38:39] Jessica Wynn: Incredibly. When I went to the Chiquita Company website, they nostalgically have an image from this early ad with text celebrating the short,
[00:38:49] Jordan Harbinger: oh God, that's tone deaf marketing. And that's kind of like if Volkswagen was like, remember when we used to make people in concentration camps build these cars?
That same level of craftsmanship is still running through our veins over here. It's like, Hmm. I thought we were not talking about that anymore, guys. Ugh. So the UFC uses this tropical fantasy to sell bananas while just burying the fact that they were corrupt mass murderers. And this did this work.
[00:39:15] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, like the cookbooks and baby food, it was all about distracting from the horror show behind the scenes.
But the nineties name change to Chiquita did not deter the company from continuing to pull strings in Columbia and journalists unpeeled the facts of Chiquita and her ties to paramilitary groups in Columbia.
[00:39:33] Jordan Harbinger: So bananas in Columbia have a bit of a toxic relationship from the sound of it.
[00:39:36] Jessica Wynn: Oh yeah. And Jaquita likes inexpensive land unida, but to operate safely, they started paying the auto defenses Unidas to Columbia or the A UC, which in English means the United Self Defenders of Columbia.
And they were a far right paramilitary drug trafficking group that came to power in the 1980s. Not only in bed with extremists. In 1998, investigations in the US and Columbia uncovered Chiquita bribing Columbian officials for use of their port while funneling millions to several paramilitary groups.
The a UC were designated as terrorists, and there was just no way Chiquita didn't know that.
[00:40:19] Jordan Harbinger: In Banana Land, though, this is just business as usual from the sound of it.
[00:40:24] Jessica Wynn: PTA's Payments helped these gangs maintain control over the land and suppress union activity. The AUCs Banana division, yeah. Of the group funded by Chiquita was responsible for numerous human rights violations and murders.
[00:40:39] Jordan Harbinger: Wow.
[00:40:39] Jessica Wynn: Over a hundred thousand people were displaced by the violence in Columbia's Yuba region between 1995 and 2006. All thanks to Chiqui's dealings,
[00:40:52] Jordan Harbinger: rebranding won't cover up literal murders, I suppose. Okay. So these investigations, did they lead to stopping anything? I'm afraid to ask.
[00:40:59] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. Well, in 2003, Chiquita testified to the US Department of Justice that, yeah, they knew that a UC was designated a terrorist organization, but they were being extorted by the group.
And in 2004, Chiquita sold its Columbia operations. In 2007, they paid a $25 million fine to the Department of Justice, but none of this money went to victims and no executives went to jail. Meanwhile, Columbia charged 10 shaquita executives for funding the a UC, and the company also faces multiple lawsuits for supporting terrorism war crimes, wrongful deaths.
But it's like Shaquita has been slipping out of justice for over a century.
[00:41:42] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, and you said charged them for crimes. So I'm guessing they're just like, yeah, I guess I won't go to Columbia. I'll just stay in my house in Nantucket and retire. And it's like, okay, as long as you don't go down there, you're fine.
So let me recap. We've got a billion dollar banana empire backed by violence slash murder rebranding with a cartoon mascot to hide a century of abuse, and they just skate by with some fines that go to the US government and not the people who got pushed off their land so that they could grow bananas.
[00:42:08] Jessica Wynn: Exactly Chiquita paid fines here and there. But in 2019, 11 years after the US plea deal, the Colombian trial against Chiquita finally began, and that's still ongoing.
[00:42:22] Jordan Harbinger: Oh wow.
[00:42:22] Jessica Wynn: But just this past June of 2024, after 17 years of litigation, a jury in Florida gave the first set of victims and their families justice with Earth Rights International reporting.
A jury has found Banana Giant Chiquita brands liable for financing the A UCA brutal paramilitary death squad in the name of the banana trade. But no one was sentenced to jail. Chiquita had to pay eight victims' families, a total of $38 million.
[00:42:55] Jordan Harbinger: Geez, that is a slap on the wrist for a massive corporation like this.
[00:42:59] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, and these court cases don't even address other problems of the banana trade, like missing and murdered union leaders, child labor, which is out of control in Nicaragua, and inhumane treatment of women like the Banana Game's. Vicious. Also, we can pay 69 cents a pound at the store. I mean, it's one banana.
Michael, what could it cost?
[00:43:20] Jen Harbinger: $10.
[00:43:22] Jordan Harbinger: You've never actually set foot in a supermarket, have you?
[00:43:24] Jessica Wynn: I don't have time
[00:43:25] Jen Harbinger: for this.
[00:43:26] Jordan Harbinger: You know who won't force your wife and daughter into a banana job? The amazing sponsors that make this show possible. We'll be right back. This episode is sponsored in part by Shopify. You ever try to buy something online and immediately think, yeah, this company is not using Shopify happened to me the other day.
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[00:44:39] Jordan Harbinger: This episode is also sponsored in part by Taylor Brands. You wouldn't believe how many people ask me, Jordan, you're a lawyer. How do I set up an LLC?
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That's T-A-I-L-O-R-B-A, nds.com/jordan three five. This episode is sponsored in part by Airbnb. As a family, we're planning to spend more time away from home and exploring the world. It's been 10 years since we last visited China, and a lot has changed since then. Obviously, we're excited to take my parents on this journey before mobility becomes a challenge for them.
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You can also search for any sponsor using the AI chat bot on the website as well. Please consider supporting those who support us now for the rest of skeptical Sunday, I. Hey, don't bring me into this. I just like eating bananas. I don't want 'em to come from child slavery.
[00:46:54] Jessica Wynn: Right? They do. Child labor is rampant across Latin America and the Caribbean and global trade impacts.
Women, farmers, disproportionately. Women make up the majority of banana farmers today, and on many plantations, they're just trapped in poverty, unable to change anything because of corporate control. So the whole banana industry, it's built on abuse.
[00:47:18] Jordan Harbinger: So workers are making peanuts while big banana rakes in billions.
Nothing has changed even today.
[00:47:24] Jessica Wynn: Exactly. Workers get a fraction of the retail price while companies dodge unionization and lower wages with short-term contracts. So unfair trading practices mean supermarkets pay low prices, which forces fruit companies to pay even lower wages. And working in the banana trade is so bad.
There's a traditional Jamaican work song about how bad it is that we all probably know. That Dayo Banana boat song that was made famous by Harry Belafonte, six foot, seven foot, eight foot punch.
[00:48:00] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, that's dark. Hey.
[00:48:02] Jessica Wynn: I mean, an eight foot bunch would be really heavy. And that guy singing, he wants the tallyman to count his bananas because he's just so tired from working on this banana plantation all day. Listen to the lyrics.
[00:48:16] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. At least he works the night shift. Yeah.
[00:48:19] Jessica Wynn: I mean, the point is you're where there are bananas being cultivated, there are suffering workers, not to mention a ravaged environment, and the banana industry uses more agrochemicals than any other sector besides cotton.
Workers, both children and adults are just regularly exposed to hazardous chemicals.
[00:48:40] Jordan Harbinger: Hey, have a banana and ignore the blood on the peel. We covered it in toxic chemicals. So what are they using on these
[00:48:45] Jessica Wynn: plantation owners spend more on pesticides than they do on paying their workers. And ironically, the environmental degradation alone is threatening the entire banana industry.
It's like this dark underbelly of global trade, and the environment has paid dearly for the love of bananas through deforestation, pesticides, and monoculture.
[00:49:07] Jordan Harbinger: And monoculture is, what is that?
[00:49:09] Jessica Wynn: Monoculture. It's like the ultimate soul sucking farming method. You just grow the same exact crop year after year, and it strips the soil killing, biodiversity, and basically leaving the land trashed, dry, cracked.
It's like ecological destruction at its finest and on a huge plot of land. Only one crop is grown and nothing else can survive. The thing with banana monoculture is it's like the banana equivalent of having no immune system. So like we said earlier, this means that one disease, one little fungal pathogen can wilt the cabin dish out of existence.
And guess what? There is a fungus and it is wiping them out.
[00:49:54] Jordan Harbinger: It was only a matter of time. Okay, so they're at risk of extinction. Is, is that how this works? And I'm over here worried about how quickly they turned brown. I'm looking at these bananas now. I swear they're browner than they were when we started the show.
Probably
[00:50:06] Jessica Wynn: don't be too upset though. The extinction thing is a good headline, but it is a bit dramatic. Bananas will not disappear. We bread the Caven dish and we'll just breed another one more. Resistant to disease. Why don't they just breed more varieties now? Money. Okay. The reality is it's expensive to introduce other banana varieties.
The entire global banana infrastructure is designed around the Cavendish. Everything from how they're harvested to how they ripen during transport. And so replacing it would just be a logistical nightmare, and that's the real problem.
[00:50:44] Jordan Harbinger: I've seen those tiny bananas. I guess you'd have to refit all the cutting machines and the storing machines and the sorting machines if you switch to something like that.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. It's a relief though that we can breed a new variety. But what is the extinction fungus that's killing the caven dish? Is that something interesting to dive into?
[00:50:59] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, well, there's a very long chemical name for it, but we can just call it TR four, and it started hitting bananas in Asia in the nineties and has attacked the banana industry, but it's slowly spreading across the globe, and the whole banana industry has been bad for the environment, bad for the people growing them, and now bad for the fruit itself.
The whole thing's absurd.
[00:51:25] Jordan Harbinger: We are killing bananas in their farmers, and all we gotta show for it is this tiny window where they're perfectly yellow. What a world, man.
[00:51:32] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. I mean, bananas. They're grown and cultivated in order to maximize profits and not to be good bananas.
[00:51:39] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
[00:51:40] Jessica Wynn: But whatever replaces the cabin dish, the average consumer most likely won't even notice the difference, and no matter the variety, there will also be no difference in the vast quantities of pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, and synthetic fertilizers required to maintain a banana monoculture.
These chemicals are usually applied by aerial application or crop. Dusting
[00:52:05] Jordan Harbinger: love a good crop dust. That's how I met my wife. Go on. Oh God, Jordan.
[00:52:09] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. It's estimated that only 15% of the agrochemicals actually land on the crop. The other 85 lands on workers to their homes and other food.
[00:52:22] Jordan Harbinger: And if you're a worker who's probably lacking proper safety equipment, PPE, no shower is gonna help you get that stuff off you?
[00:52:29] Jessica Wynn: Correct. And because other countries regulations are different, one of the agrochemicals commonly used in banana cultivation is Dimo Chloro propane, or DBCP, which has been banned in the US since 1979, but it's still widely used in Latin America. Numerous lawsuits have been brought against banana giants by workers claiming to have suffered serious health effects.
[00:52:59] Jordan Harbinger: Yikes. That's awful for the workers. And it can't be good for the earth either. I know some of these things, they try to make 'em safe or whatever. I just never quite buy it.
[00:53:06] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, for sure. Yeah, you shouldn't. The agrochemicals used in banana cultivation, they damaged the rainforests that border the plantations.
In fact, about 10 years ago, there was a study of spectacle Caymans, which are like little crocodiles.
[00:53:22] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
[00:53:22] Jessica Wynn: And they live near banana plantations in Costa Rica. They found traces of pesticides in their blood, including DDT. And that hasn't been used in the region for years.
[00:53:33] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. DDTI feel like we were talking about that in middle school and then it was like, oh, it's not a thing anymore, so don't worry.
[00:53:40] Jessica Wynn: But DDT is a persistent pollutant, so it lingers in places that it hasn't been used for decades and it was really popular in the banana industry before and that and other chemicals, they get into our water.
[00:53:55] Jordan Harbinger: Of course they do. Yeah. That's the main thing. And we probably water the bananas with water contaminated by other crops.
[00:54:01] Jessica Wynn: Yeah.
[00:54:01] Jordan Harbinger: Nasty.
[00:54:02] Jessica Wynn: Yep. And bananas have a big thirst for water. So they account for a huge amount of water use and contamination since they require a constant level of moisture, like neither too much or too little. Banana fields have channels for irrigation and drainage, which sounds fancy until you realize it's just an elaborate way to cause serious soil erosion.
As a result, agrochemicals and silt are delivered into adjacent waterways. And in the Caribbean where plantations are located along the coasts, this kind of runoff has caused considerable damage to estuaries and coral reefs.
[00:54:41] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Bad bananas.
[00:54:42] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, and the plant waste just as bad. Really like the total volume of plant waste, including stalks and stems produced in banana harvesting.
It's estimated to be about the same as the volume of fruit that actually gets shipped.
[00:54:57] Jordan Harbinger: Oh, sure.
[00:54:57] Jessica Wynn: Often disposed of in nearby streams as it decomposes. That stuff depletes the water and that threatens fish and microorganisms plus up to a third of bananas are deemed unfit for sale, mostly for aesthetic reasons.
Looking unappetizing like those brown ones in your kitchen.
[00:55:18] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, that's right. Yeah. That's a lot of wasted fruit. I know. I'm gonna regret asking this. What about buying organic? Is there a magical banana plantation free of all these banana horrors and pesticides and abuses? I don't even know what it means to be an organic banana.
[00:55:32] Jessica Wynn: What an existential question. Organic bananas may mean workers that are not exposed to horrific chemicals, but they don't typically improve wages or other working conditions for those working on the plantations. And what's the consumer paying for? Really just peace of mind. The chances no chemicals blowing onto wherever your banana grows is minimal.
[00:55:59] Jordan Harbinger: Sure.
[00:55:59] Jessica Wynn: Plus, I don't know if you've ever done an episode on this, but the chemicals are labeled organic, so is your banana.
[00:56:07] Jordan Harbinger: So I basically pay more for fancier chemicals. Jesus. Is there any positivity from buying either fair trade bananas, or is that a feel-good term too?
[00:56:16] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, fair trade. Not as straightforward as it sounds.
Fair trade works on certifications and some certifications. Treat workers rights like optional perks. Congratulations. You're a banana worker, but. Sorry, you don't get any benefits. And unfortunately, some prominent certification systems consider workers' rights to be voluntary elements by the company, not just basic standards that need to be upheld.
Fair trade's like a badge for trying, and it's a bummer. I know, but Fair trade's really just, it's a marketing strategy.
[00:56:53] Jordan Harbinger: So what's the solution? Just buy from small farmer owned cooperatives or something like that, if, how do you find that?
[00:56:59] Jessica Wynn: I mean, you can, they're really hard to find, and that's just how it was set up.
Baker, Preston, Sam, the banana man, they weren't doing environmental impact studies, right. They were just making banana bucks. And as far as money, it's a testament to the history that it's equated with making money. Is
[00:57:20] Jordan Harbinger: money in the banana stand?
[00:57:22] Jessica Wynn: Yeah. So much money in bananas that it's actually in crypto today.
Like just what you thought this couldn't get crazier. There is banana coin and it's a cryptocurrency peg to the export price of bananas, because of course, that's what we need.
[00:57:40] Jordan Harbinger: Seriously, you don't have banana coins loser. I guess if you sold them to buy Trump coins, then maybe you've made some money. Yeah, I don't know how that works.
[00:57:47] Jessica Wynn: No, I, I wish I was smarter about that stuff. I guess every banana coin represents just over two pounds of bananas grown on an ever expanding plantation in lat.
[00:57:58] Jordan Harbinger: I hate that for crypto. I hate it for bananas and I hate it for Laos. Wow.
[00:58:02] Jessica Wynn: I know. I mean, it's not all bad though. Like we love bananas and bananas have made their way.
The beauty regimens. There's banana based face masks that have become popular in recent years. Additionally, using bananas on acne prone skin can be beneficial 'cause it anti-inflammatory properties that can soothe blemishes and irritation. So we're just constantly learning new things about our little fruity friends.
[00:58:27] Jordan Harbinger: I don't know about, uh, banana Facial. Okay, I'm done. But what are the recommendations for eating bananas that I can feel good about?
[00:58:36] Jessica Wynn: So I found the Food Empowerment Project strives to inform people about where their food comes from so we can make the most ethical choices possible. For many bananas are just a reasonably priced fruit that contains beneficial nutrients, but buying conventional bananas contributes to both environmental and human rights abuses.
You just can't get around it. But I still want to eat bananas. I know we all do. And there are brands to look for, like equal exchange, Coleman Earth University. There's a few others, but it turns into a banana scavenger hunt. I wish we could ask the grocer, Hey, could you stock ethical bananas? I'm trying to save the world here.
One fruit at a time.
[00:59:19] Jordan Harbinger: It's a tough life. For bananas, they gotta battle fungal pathogens, military coups. They're used in condom demonstrations in middle schools around the world, as far as I know. And they gotta compete with avocados and eggplants for social media clout.
[00:59:32] Jessica Wynn: We've been making all these puns, but it is worth discussing bananas and pop culture.
They are our most comical food. And when we first chop the idea of this episode, remember like our texts were just a pun battle. Oh yeah. Bananas have been used in pop culture forever.
[00:59:48] Jordan Harbinger: Anything phallic really though? Eggplant emoji. Anyone? Come on. Why would you use that if not for? What is it for?
[00:59:55] Jessica Wynn: Yeah, the bananas, they, they are a symbol of cultural identity.
In Latin American countries, like for example, there's a Puerto Rican artist, Francisco ler, and in his paintings, bananas represent national pride. And of course there's the phallic shape, the visual element that makes them a good topic. In film, TV, art, Andy Warhol frequently used the banana shape as a sex object.
[01:00:20] Jordan Harbinger: And it's funny when someone slips, if you're four, that's
[01:00:23] Jessica Wynn: very, it's very funny. They are used in comedy, right? And memes. There's the dancing banana icon. That's the big widespread meme. There was a French dancer and singer who is pretty popular, Josephine Baker, and she wore a banana skirt costume. In 1927, she did a review, which became a symbol of the jazz age and the roaring twenties, and recently Beyonce, Rihanna, they've played homage.
To Baker's banana skirt, taking back the racist tones of what the skirt meant, and it's endless. There's the imagery in the Jungle Book, Woody Allen movie, bananas to the Banana Boat, and Jaws. Their use in Minions and family guy. Not to mention how many common phrases we use the banana in.
[01:01:10] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Bananas are indeed bananas to prove your point.
But hey, at least they taste good and they make us laugh while we battle the ethics of the whole thing.
[01:01:19] Jessica Wynn: Yes, every time we put a banana in that morning smoothie though, we're blending this history of coups and scandals and human rights violations with a little bit of that entertainment.
[01:01:30] Jordan Harbinger: I suppose so. And there you have it.
Folks who knew bananas were living such a complicated life, they got more going on than I do. So next time you peel your morning banana, remember there's a whole lot more than just potassium in there. Thank you all for listening. Topic suggestions for future episodes of Skeptical Sunday. Show notes@jordanharbinger.com as well on the website.
Advertisers deals, discounts, and ways to support the show all at Jordan harbinger.com/deals. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram. You can also connect with me on LinkedIn. You can find Jessica on her substack between the lines. We'll link to that in the show notes as well.
[01:02:02] Jessica Wynn: I also have a new substack called Where the Shadows Linger, but it's all fiction.
I have a short story collection coming out.
[01:02:09] Jordan Harbinger: I see. Okay. We can link to both and look at the show notes. This show is created in association with Podcast one. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogarty, Ian Baird and Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own, and I'm a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer.
Do your own research before implementing anything you hear on the show. Remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the show with those you love. And if you found the episode useful, please share it with somebody else who could use a good dose of the skepticism and knowledge we doled out today. In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time.
Join us is Adam Gamal, a Muslim Arab American and former Egyptian refugee recounts his rise to become a key operative of one of the US' most secretive military units in this two-part podcast series. In part one, Adam delves into the high stakes world of counter-terrorism and covert operations revealing the personal and ethical complexities of fighting terrorism.
From within the shadows.
[01:03:02] JHS Clip: I came to the US to give me the right to dream. In Egypt, you don't have that option. It's not cliche. I'm not trying to recruit people to join the army, but I was like, here is a key actually to be as American as anybody can argue with you, and it was joining the military. You end up there by, uh, pure determination, by having grit and by being a bit lucky.
So we were basically getting our tasks from Secretary of Defense level, joining special operation command in charge of three main missions, counter narcotic, counter terrorist, and hostage rescue. I believe myself, if my dad did not push me towards like getting the right education, and then maybe I would've went in the wrong direction.
So education gonna help people prosper. They're gonna help people actually critically analyze the information they are receiving. So when somebody's bullshitting them about, Hey, if you go to the bathroom with your right foot, not your left foot, you're going to hell. If you have an educated person gonna look at him and say, you know what, man, this doesn't make any fucking sense.
And then I believe to educating women is crucial because they are raising us. A lot of people spend more time with their moms than with their dad because they nurture us and they do all of these things. So if we have a population of educated women in the Middle East or in any of these countries, I think these countries will prosper and it'll be harder to convince these guys to become terrorists.
Business is war and uh, business is good. When we give people the proper education, we all live a better life.
[01:04:31] Jordan Harbinger: Tune in to uncover his unique journey and critical insights only he can provide. On episode 9 78 of the Jordan Harbinger Show.
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