Today I passed by Aldi, also on my way home from work - I did a half day today

I found an abundance of carrots, parsnips, something else I forgot but no broccoli, same size packaging as Asda, all produce of GB ... at 19p!
I start to feel for the farmers: as a backyard small scale veg grower myself, I know how much work it takes to get a harvest, even taken in account the milder English climate, milder that Scotland I mean.
Tbh, I was never a great buyer of fruit and veg since moving to Scotland, apart from salad stuff and the usual potatoes and onions.
The reason was (is!) the bland taste compared to the freshly harvested produce abroad I was used to.
Of course I understand that due to our climate produce needs to be imported, harvested unripe because it needs to stay fresh during transport.
Anyway, I have developed a health condition that means I need to eat lots of leafy greens and brassicas, or take calcium supplements. Why taking a pill if you can eat food instead?

I'm forever searching for nice veg now, need to buy lots because they don't fill me like a carbonara would

At the same time I was told about my health condition, I was made redundant, so I had more than a year of lockdown to plan our building's communal backyard renovation: I decided I wanted to focus on growing vegetables organically.
I researched it while I was unwell and unemployed to boot lol, and I have decided to follow the no dig method by Charles Dowding and the small plot growing tips by Huw Richards.
They both grow organic veg in a climate similar to mine.
Meantime, I also got volunteering with the local foodbank and with a few other community gardening projects.
This is the background of my interest in commercial veg growing.
Let's not start this carry on!
Broccoli is economics in this instance.
Granted, economics and politics go hand in hand, but I don't think Conservative broccoli are more ethical or organic than Labour broccoli. Over to NACA with political broccoli, please
I think you are right. I think it's the supermarkets that create the standard of certain goods, then after a while the public demands it, well, as a standard.
Taking, again, veg as an example, surely the elderly buyers must remember the times when you bought a head of lettuce, you had to wash it and chop it.
Yet, I see many elderly shoppers picking bags of chopped, washed salad bags, at a dearer price that a head of lettuce.
Convenience? Habit, availability?
My veg growing hero Charles Dowding often says his farm makes lots of money from salad bags for supermarkets.
He grows tender leafy greens, his workforce goes around each plant daily picking leaves, they mix them, wash them, spin them, bag them.
Picking lettuce leaves one by one so not to kill the plant, for come again produce, is backbreaking work!
Are salad bags ethical? Are they environmentally friendly, all bagged up, with a shorter shelf life than a whole head of lettuce?
I am going to try this season, not sure if it will work for me, but I'll give it a bash, maybe with carrots, potatoes, parsnips in tubs, covered. I think left in the ground here they would freeze.
We are a capitalistic society, no matter who is the political party in government the system will still be driven by profit, imo.
I remember, many years ago I worked for Asda for a while, when it was the cheapest, before Aldi and Lidle came to play on the market.
I remember my colleagues complaining about some benefit reduction that I, as a new start, wasn't getting anyway.
I wanted to say: what do you expect, we shop here because it's cheap, but the biggest cost for a business is the workforce, how do you think they sell so cheap?
Of course, I shut up

For things to change, the public needs to be aware of the consequences of 20p broccoli.
Like
@gbb said, though, will the public care?
Imo, many people have more pressing issues that affect them personally to care much about a vague idea of fairness for farm workers.
I can say for certain "I will never buy 20p Spanish broccoli again" BUT: I don't have dependants, I choose to work lots of hours so I can choose to buy 90p British broccoli in Tesco and Fair Trade coffee at the Coop.
I am their community champion for my area, get a Coop discount, still Aldi's coffee is cheaper.
But I am lucky I can afford to buy Fair Trade, so I do.
I did attend a Fair Trade zoom once, the producer was asked how can people that are on a budget help Fair Trade?
The producer said "those that can afford it, should buy it"
It seems we need a Veg Fair Trade movement!
Sadly, this is true where I live, more some of us clean up, more other people litter.
One time, after a clean up event, someone posted on our FB page "the council should do it"
Nay, the community should not litter, I was going to post, but I didn't

A nearby community gardening group keeps getting vandalised, their aim is to make the local park look nice.
Often, after they have raised money for a project, it gets vandalized before they can complete it.
Sadly, it seems lots don't. I guess it's depending on the area one lives in, though.
Thanks for this info, I didn't know that.
I haven't been to mainland Europe for a few years now, before I came to live in the UK I used to food shop at the local open air market.
Before Corona, I went to visit family in Germany: they took me to Aldi, looked just like my local one