Oh... believe me... I know how bad 99% of all coffee in the US really is.
I'm not arguing that point - I'm in fact one of the ones who bitches about it most frequently.
I'm just asking for some sensitivity about the issue. I know that the vast majority of coffee available commercially is terrible. I know that most coffee businesses care less about quality than about their neon signs. But it's hurtful and insensitive and really does not help the situation to say things like:
To me it is a sad commentary that a well trained person can pull a better shot on a Krups Gusto than a "pro" can pull on a La Marzocco Linea.
and
The irony is those who have the 5 figure machines can only make swill!
and
We may be the only true baristas left with the move to putting in the super-auto machines and hiring people that could care less about coffee.
These sorts of statement are the equivalent of what you used to hear from folks in the SCAA about the ignorance of consumers, about how laughable home espresso and the "alties" are, etc.
Neither are true - both are insensitive and disrespectful.
Professional baristas are, in fact, working incredibly hard to try and change the situation in the US. This is, in essence, the goal of the BGA. There is little doubt that the barista jams and education sessions, coupled with the BGA booth at the SCAA show and demos and training sessions has had a direct impact on the spread of good coffee. But the BGA has been around less than 2 years and has had to overcome a lot of barriers due to various SCAA stuff. There is progress - but it's slow.
As for certification... well... I'm the wrong person to ask. I am deeply opposed to such an idea. It's to my mind a bureaucratic solution that is unlikely to work and more likely to do damage than anything else. I look at Transfair or any of the SCAA "certification" programs and shudder. Instead, I'm hoping we continue to organize and educate and agitate. It's been working so far. Just give us a little time. We've got decades of miseducation and misinformation to overcome and the big coffee companies are doing their best to counter any push towards true quality. It's going to be an uphill battle, and I doubt we'll ever represent more than 10% of the market. But that's 10 times what it was when we started.