Internets Press | Our Mission

Every child deserves to know the foods that nourished their ancestors and the forces that changed the modern food environment.

Every child deserves to know the foods that nourished their ancestors and the forces that changed the modern food environment.

Every child deserves food memory

Children inherit more than genes. They inherit language, stories, recipes, ceremonies, gardens, fishing traditions, farms, markets, and family meals. Modern children often learn the brands of sugary drinks before they learn the names of local roots, greens, beans, grains, fish, fruits, and fermented foods. That loss is cultural as well as nutritional.

Teach without shame

Children should not be blamed for eating what is marketed to them, sold near them, or served to them. A Mission approach teaches the environment around the child: advertising, convenience, portion size, sweetened drinks, refined starches, and the disappearance of traditional meals. The tone should be protective, curious, and hopeful.

Make ancestral foods visible again

A child who can name a traditional food can ask for it, draw it, taste it, grow it, cook it, and hear stories about it. Schools and families can build lessons around local foods, migration, grandparents, geography, and seasonal meals. The lesson is not nostalgia. It is literacy: children should understand the difference between foods that carried communities for generations and products engineered for constant consumption.

A child can change a household

When a child learns why water matters, why sugar drinks are different from whole fruits, or why a grandparent’s food knowledge is valuable, the lesson can move home. A child can ask one new question at dinner. A child can help plant one seed. A child can remind an adult that health is a family project.

What a community can do now

  • Ask children to interview a grandparent or elder about foods eaten in childhood.
  • Create a classroom wall map of traditional foods by region, island, village, or country.
  • Replace one sugary drink activity with a water-first challenge.
  • Use drawings, tasting tables, gardens, and story circles instead of fear-based messaging.

Mission CTA

Explore the Food Library

Supporting pages for this Mission goal


Science and Mission work together

Mission pages focus on prevention, education, food culture, and community action. Clinical pages focus on diagnosis, biomarkers, professional education, and disease management.

Looking for physician-level evidence, diagnostic tools, or clinical references? Visit Clinical Resources.

Want the mechanisms? Visit Metabolic Science for fructose metabolism, liver pathways, uric acid, insulin resistance, and disease biology.

Educational note: This page is for public education and community planning. It does not diagnose or treat disease. People with medical questions should work with qualified healthcare professionals.

Supporting pages for this Mission goal

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