This documentary discusses a bunch of illegal activity (including fraud) by a giant multi-national agriculture company and catches admissions from an employee in India on hidden camera. They do things like pay below the legal minimum wage. They also try to hide the names of the tomato seeds from the people who produce them – so they can buy seeds for $115/kg and then sell them in other countries for $67,000/kg. (Prices might be in dollars or euros; I’m not sure.) They also employee illegal child labor, at least via subcontractors, and I assume directly. When you ask the company for an official statement, they lie. Including they interviewed an official who was saying they reduce child labor at subcontractors as far as possible and got it from 10-15% to 1% … but then when questioned about that admission that they see it as part of doing business that can’t be fully avoided, he started saying they have a zero tolerance policy towards it (so lying rather than considering his company’s actions honestly defensible). His answer to the hidden camera video and other evidence was to just deny it by assertion – he knows it doesn’t happen – with no arguments or explanations to say what’s wrong with the evidence, and no attempt to provide any better evidence.
That’s in the second half. The first half talks about how fruits and vegetables today have a lot less nutrition than they used to. Also, hybrid tomatoes today have a lot less nutrition than heirloom tomatoes today.