What is inorganic food? Somekind of geneless food? I'm amazed.
Here the other day I heard a dietist that could solve overweight problems with a diet on synthetic meat. *shakes his head*
But putting language confusion aside Halia has a point. If we use antibacteria on a daily basis, we provoke resistant bacteria. Bacteria has a very elegant way of sharing genes and is not restricted to share within its kind.
If you use antibacterial "X" for three month on a banana farm, and create resistant bacterias, then these bacteria will transfer to your stumick upon intake of the banana and possibly share the resistant genes with your normal flora. That doesn't sound too bad, but there are only a handful of major antibacterial types, so X might be related Y, Z and W - which are used to cure humans.
One antibacteral you've heard of is Penicilin? Which is the best antibacterial we have discovered so far, but many countries have stopped treating their patients with it, because it doesn't work. Spain have reported up to 90% resistance to penicilin!
Though it might sound like an escalating pharmaceutical catastrophe, it is not. It seems unfavorable for the bacterias to posses these resistance genes, and if they are not exposed to the particular antibacterial then they will lose their resistance over time. All it takes is strict govermental control of antibiotics, both for human and in the food industry. Not to mention ban of all imported food that has been treated with antibiotics.
It is possible. Look to the scandinavian countries (and holland.)
The worst place to have resistant bacteria is in hospitals, because people who are there aren't normally capable of fighting back much more than small infections. If foreigners get sick while in Denmark (where I'm from) they will get quarentined. The hospitals take no chances with multiresistant bacteria