Big Sugar: The Other White Powder peels back the glossy surface of an everyday staple to reveal a complex, sometimes sinister history that rivals anything associated with other notorious "white powders." Tracing sugar's evolution from an exotic luxury to a global dietary mainstay, this book shows how it reshaped entire economies, fueled colonial expansion, financed wars, and exploited millions of enslaved and indentured workers. Despite its seemingly harmless sweetness, sugar became powerful enough to alter politics, drive social inequities, and impact global health astonishingly.
From the cane fields of the Caribbean and Brazil to modern-day Florida and Louisiana, sugar's profitability has rested on forced labor, relentless lobbying, and worldwide consumption habits we rarely question. You'll discover how European empires-and later the United States-saw sugar as the key to wealth and influence, shaping laws and foreign policies that still resonate. You'll learn about Florida's vast Everglades, where industrial sugar production has led to environmental damage and water pollution, and glimpse the behind-the-scenes deals that keep sugar prices artificially high. Alongside these harsh realities are the individual stories-of enslaved Africans who built colonial fortunes, of modern cane cutters in the Dominican Republic earning only dollars a day, and of whistleblowers who risk livelihoods to reveal grim truths.
Yet Big Sugar is not simply a story of suffering and exploitation. It also highlights how policy changes-like ending protective tariffs, setting sugar taxes, or limiting corporate subsidies-could save consumers billions and help restore natural habitats. Case studies worldwide point to sustainable alternatives and emerging technologies, from stevia cultivation to lab-grown sweeteners, that challenge sugar's monopoly on sweetness. Equally important, the book underscores consumer power: how everyday buying decisions and informed advocacy can push the industry toward greater transparency and responsibility.
This book unearths sugar's long-buried costs-in human lives, environmental losses, and public health crises-and invites us to recognize that the real price of sugar goes well beyond what we pay at the checkout. It is a cautionary tale about hidden influences and an empowering call to action for more balanced, ethical, and environmentally conscious approaches to sweetness in our daily lives.