So What Does it Take
to be a So Called Farmer Today?
And do I really want
to be one?
Conclusion
I have briefly
out lined some of my past heritage, as well as what the modern definition of
farming is and now I want to share with you my thoughts of being a farmer
today. I am not a typical farmer and refused to be seen as someone who follows
the mold set out by corporate farming. I still believe we need enough small farms to offset the effects of
corporate farming would have, if allowed free to roam in a world market. I also
believe we waste to much energy and resources sending food to foreign nations
when we could better use that food at home.
Literally and physically,
corporate farming and the ideal of the American farmer is being shoved down our
throats as we eat more processed foods made from genetically modified organisms
or GMO’s, and these are being produced by the American farmer today to the rate
of 80 percent of our corn and 90 percent of our soybeans are derived from a GMO
process. GMO’s are designed to work with glycol phosphate , a weed killer and
also 2-4 d , one of the so called safe weed killers that made up agent orange
and manufactured by DOW chemical corporation. It is big business for them and
the equipment manufacturers like John Deere who manufacture equipment
specifically designed to monitor production of field crops and application
rates of pesticide and herbicide rates. An exclusive contract specifically ties
you in to reporting field results to them, as well as limits your ability to
reuse any of their seed. GMO’ S are banned as well as glycol phosphate in Europe
because little is known of the long term effect it will have on plants and
animals or the environment and most assuredly us somewhere in that food
chain. Still you cannot pick up a
package of food here in the United States and see where soy beans or corn meal
is not used in processing somewhere down the line. It is fed to our chickens, beef,
hogs, and then shoved down our mouth till we could scream enough. But all you
would hear is gargling noises as we would choke on the stuff if we think about what all
goes into it.
Is this the kind
of farmer I want to be to poison my neighbors, friends, and family and subject them
to a slow lingering death as they grow masses in their body for unknown
reasons? Not hardly. All the while, farmers are competing on a world market to
shove our products down unsuspecting third world markets. Though they are not
as ignorant and backward as we would like to think they are. China one of the world’s
largest markets just recently rejected a shipment of our corn known to be of a
GMO variety and it was sent home supposedly. Leaving the exporter with the tab of
transporting it there and who knows where afterwards, probably Vietnam or somewhere
else as I doubt they brought it back to the United States.
Still if you look
at what they sent them, they sent the best part of our fields; the grain is
where all the nutrients of our production process lies. It is fertilizer the herbicide,
the soil that makes it up and sunlight and water it took to grow it. It also
represents the fuel oil and machinery costs, labor, and the right conditions to
make it all possible. What do they give us back for our effort except cash? You
can’t plant cash, and you can’t eat cash , where are we going to plant in the
future when our fields are just plain worn out. It has happened before in the
cotton fields down south as year after year they planted cotton till he cotton wouldn’t
grow no more. It is going to be the same here with our fields. We apply high
cost fertilizer the same stuff used to blow up the Oklahoma Court house by
Timothy Mc Veigh , and that is Ammonium Nitrate as one of the key ingredients
of providing the necessary nitrogen we need to grow crops. What happens if we
have a disruption in the process or can’t find the necessary ingredients to
efficiently produce these crops? We will have a total melt down of our food
supply here at home and abroad , because we became dependent on corporate America
to provide all our food for us.
We will be
scouring landfills and recycling the human waste we buried there when we burned
it in incinerators because we felt that it was unsanitary to reuse it. Human
waste is also part of the resources we are providing foreign countries when we
sell them our grain. Do you think a Vietnamese farmer who grows tilapia in a
pond somewhere in Vietnam cares one bit where his waste goes when he takes a
dump in the floor of his hut perched over the pond as he chows down on a corn dog?
He has been doing it that way for years and has no inclination to waste
anything. He knows his waste will go to feed the tilapia fish he eats, and soon
he will sweep his catch up in a net and sell it at the market where it will be
packaged for resale back to the U.S.. Oh yeah the third world countries are
giving us back something, a load of crap , we eat heartily when we head out to
Crapshack Joe’s and have the seafood platter. In fact when our soils are depleted
we will be buying off of third world countries who utilize the human waste as a
resource, because there food will be cheaper since it is grown more
organically. Do I want to be a part of this world market? I guess I would if I was
chairman of ADM –Archers Daniel Midland corp., as they know what is most important to their
success and that is consumers eating their crap daily. Archer Daniels Midland
also owns Mc Donald’s as one of its subsidiaries and provides a substantial amount
of corn and soybeans to the food industry and to companies under its umbrella
plus to a lot more that isn’t.
Look at the fuel
costs for something like dog food where we can send the corn to China and
process it into food that makes our pets sick and kills them and ship it back
to your home town, and stock it on shelves in your dollar store for you pets to
eat. Every step of the way we are using fuel to make a twenty pound bag of dog
food, so what does it take 5 gallons of fuel to send it that far and bring it
back and still sell as cheap as they do. I can’t understand why they would want
to do it except dog food manufacturers over there in china are the cheapest
around, if you look at the grain costs plus all he ingredients and figure in thirty
percent profit per bag, still you can hardly afford to sell a bag of dog food
for 7. 50. Still they do. The only thing I know is the Chinese must work for a quarter
a day and all the dog food they can eat. Do I want to be part of this madness
called farming? Not hardly. Somewhere on Wall Street and on Chicago market of
trades and in the boardrooms of capitalist America this all sound good as long
as their profit to be made. But I can’t eat profit when our fields sit fallow
because it doesn’t pay to put seed in them no more, as we have created drought conditions
burning fuel to make food for ourselves and our materialistic needs. That is not the farmer I want to be.
So to be a so
called farmer is not really something I desire to be in any way. To be accused
of being one even pisses me off more. As I don’t really care to become part of
this rat race, I never have. I enjoy my life as it is. Yes I eat some foods I know
or question how good it is for me but I still need to eat. And since we have all
bought into this world market thing, we are limited to our choices at the local
grocery stores. It’s not like we have a local butcher shop specializing in home
grown food anymore. I grow some of my food but like you and as a single person it
is easier just buying into the scheme of things and as there are few choices
for organic and it is much higher in cost. Head to the Raisin Rack and see what
I mean. So I will do what I can and learn to eat in a more healthy way the best
I can, and hope for the best just like the rest of us. That and grow my own
berries for sale to the public. Healthy naturally grown berries right here on
the farm in a pick your own plot. This is the type of farmer I want to be.
1 comment:
Pretty deep for my brain this late so I just agree. Yeah that, Kevin you know farming. I'm leaning towards the medicinal and healthy farming I am pretty well convinced that's the way to go. Nice flowers
Post a Comment