For more from this intriguing article, see:
"The Unplanned Church: How a Brazilian congregation finds renewal by interruption"
link: HERE
Juan de Flandes, Christ and the Caananite Woman, c. 1496
Thoughts about what it means to pursue a life that includes faith, justice, peace, integrity, and sustainability.
7 “But ask the animals, and they will teach you, or the birds in the sky, and they will tell you; 8 or speak to the earth, and it will teach you, or let the fish in the sea inform you. 9 Which of all these does not know that the hand of the LORD has done this? 10 In his hand is the life of every creature and the breath of all mankind. 11 Does not the ear test words as the tongue tastes food? 12 Is not wisdom found among the aged? Does not long life bring understanding?
Job Ch. 12
10 August 2009
Most people in the USA, when they think of a farm, probably think of a farm much like my family's. Although our farm has been planted in pasture for some time, prior to that the fields were terraced and plowed.
Regardless of its size, whether 20 acres or 2,000 acres, the main thing (I think) is that most people in the USA think of a "farm" as a place where a family lives and makes a living from working the land. Unfortunately, one can no longer assume that the food one eats comes from such a farm.
The big picture is that in the USA, small family farms are becoming extinct. What has taken their place are huge corporation-owned mega farms. At some of these farms, for example, as many as 20,000 hogs are housed in one spot.
My personal belief is that if ordinary consumers knew what conditions are really like for animals on these farms, they would never purchase meat produced on them. The animals are fed hormones and antibiotics that artificially cause them to gain weight faster; but that's not the worst of it. Rendered parts of dead animals are mixed back into the animal feed, forcing the animals to eat things that God (and their vegetarian digestive systems) never intended.
Think about it this way: if the difference in price between the "all natural" chicken and the "ordinary" one is 50%, ask yourself what led to that price difference. The difference is a monetary quantification of difference in quality between those two animals' feed and living conditions. That difference in quality also translates into what goes into, and becomes part of, your body. Do you want antibiotics, growth hormone, and antibiotic resistant bacteria to become part of what goes into your own body?
For commodity crops like corn and beans, fields on industrial, mega-farms are sprayed with herbicides that kill all plants. The fields are then sown with seeds from crops that have been genetically modified so that only that the type of seed is resistant to the herbicide. It is a realistic fear that one of these freak genes may make its way into a weed plant, resulting in a weed that is resistant to all efforts to control it.
These mega farms also utilize only certain varieties of seeds that are grown specifically to optimize production and ship-ability. Tomatoes and peaches are two crops that immediately come to mind when discussing shipability. Delicate or unusual varieties such as Georgia Belle or Cherokee, which don't ship well, will never be found in a megafarm. This reduces genetic diversity of the seed stock, ultimately making the food supply more vulnerable to various blights and diseases.
It is also argued that corporate megafarms have little regard for workers and communities. They are highly mechanized and employ as few workers as possible. Moreover, U.S. migrant worker policy allows corporations with the wherewithal to import alien workers, who are then exempt (to their own detriment) from laws which protect citizen workers. Industrialized farms treat each worker as one cog in an assembly line, having that worker do the same work over and over again for a low wage. As such, workers require little training and are more expendable. These low wage workers also have few protections that were traditionally afforded to workers in other industries.
Mega farms have the same effect on small time farms that Wal Mart has on its small time business, except that Wal Mart is subsidized by American consumers rather than the U.S.Department of Agriculture.
U.S.Department of Agriculture subsidies flow disproportionately to megafarms, reducing the production cost of commodities like corn and milk. As a result partly of U.S. farm subsidies, it's cheaper to buy a fully processed McDonald's hamburger than it is to purchase a wholesome all-vegetable meal grown on the more environmentally friendly, "green" family farm next door.
That's a gross oversimplification of the situation, of course. Additionally, it paints the picture with a very broad brush stroke. Some family owned farms are quite large, and some use sustainable, environmentally friendly agricultural practices (though they are few and far between).
My main goal here not to provide painstaking detail but rather to paint with a broad brush, get you thinking, and to provide a starting point for further research (if you are interested). But here is the meat of this blog post, the
STATISTICS
One web page (click HERE), states (with supporting footnotes) the following facts:
A study by U.S. Department of Agriculture which shows the big picture is titled “A Time to Act: A Report of the USDA National Commission on Small Farms,” January 1998 (click HERE). It recommends specific policy goals as being:
Here are some interesting facts from this report:
I have mentioned that industrial agribusiness is very different from small family farming. A web link which compares and contrasts sustainable versus industrial farming is HERE.
And now for what I hope will be the most helpful:
WHAT YOU CAN DO, HERE AND NOW!
Consumers
If you're a consumer, purchase in-season vegetables that are produced locally by a small scale producer. Organic is best. Ask your grocery store to support local agriculture by selling locally grown goods. When a sign in your local supermarket says "grown locally," ask them "WHERE?" (Also, ask your local grocery store to use environmentally friendly packaging materials.)
It will cost more. If you think about it, this is one area where you really want to pay for quality. Would you rather eat food that has been grown on a large, mechanized industrial complex using lots of chemicals at great damage to the environment and to local people or would you rather support your local community in sustainable way of living?
This leads to another issue. Good food is expensive. Ask your local farmer's market to arrange to accept food stamps. Otherwise, eating healthy will only be an exercise for the wealthy.
Farmers
If you are a small farmer struggling to make it, and trying to find ways to stay on the farm, my sympathies are with you. My personal belief is that the way forward must include educating consumers about the benefits of buying locally produced goods from small family enterprises.
One successful co-op is Organic Valley Farmer's Cooperative. Their web site (HERE, and specifically http://www.farmers.coop/resources/farmer-links/ ) gives information about the products they produce and what it takes to join.
Another excellent web site is posted by the Koinonia community (click HERE ). This site even has links to videos which may give you ideas about what to farm, practical tips on running a farm, and even videos devoted to how to market your farm products.
A video worth watching
Last but not least, here is a trailer for a new video about industrial farming, called Food, Inc. The web site for this video belongs to a group called Hungry For Change. This is a documentary devoted to showing how "our nation's food supply is now controlled by a handful of corporations that often put profit ahead of consumer health, the livelihood of the American farmer, the safety of workers and our own environment." I just watched the film, and it is quite enlightening. If, after seeing the trailer, you would like to see the movie, click HERE for show times.