“Farming” today is all about economy of scale, return on investment, and maximizing efficient production. This technologist utopia and the “get big or get out” logic of modern agribusiness is propped up by taxpayer-funded government subsidies. And what do we get for it? Are we healthier as a result of this mass production? We pay money, through subsidies, for our sickness, then become customers for the needed pills.
Dead Grasshoppers...
I just returned from a walk with my wife, Karen, along a nearby rural
road through some farmland. This is the life I know best and cherish the
most, but unfortunately, it is under threat. I cannot help but see many
disturbing signs.
Growing up on a farm, I spent a great deal of time walking along dirt roads,
lanes and fields. That was life, and not only mine, but also the countless
lives around me—swarms of grasshoppers flitting about, birds singing, and,
if at dusk, fireflies lighting up the way and frogs and crickets chortling.
Among the vibrant smells of the grasses and trees, often unique for
different areas, we all moved together.
Today, these roads seem quieter, less alive. The nearby fields are
dominated by unusually straight rows of corn and grains, usually without a
weed in sight. The nearby dairy farm is not the kind of family farm I once
knew, where 15–20 cows were put out to pasture after milking was done.
No—this farm consists of about 7,000 cows, 75–100 workers from Guatemala,
last I heard, and a few thousand acres of corn, grain and alfalfa. The
fields are uniformly expansive and the cows uniformly confined. They are
locked in massive barns, or rather factories, where they sniff what little
outside air they can and pour out the milk 2–3 times a day for the 3–4 years
of their peak production. Then it’s off to market to serve up their meat.
The primary product of this farm is not nutritious food, but massive profit.
This transformation is very personal to me. What’s happened? How did we
arrive to this Brave New World, highly mechanized, organized and streamlined
to increase efficiency of milk and meat production? “Farming” today is all
about economy of scale, return on investment, and maximizing efficient
production. This technologist utopia and the “get big or get out” logic of
modern agribusiness is propped up by taxpayer-funded government subsidies.
And what do we get for it? Are we healthier as a result of this mass
production? We pay money, through subsidies, for our sickness, then become
customers for the needed pills.
I could go on, and will, I hope, with occasional articles over the next few
months until my new book is published (with Nelson Disla). This book is
about how our crises of food, health, medicine and corruption are all
connected, and it draws on my experiences of more than six decades doing
experimental research, lecturing to the public, teaching in academia and
helping to write food and health policy. It’s a book about the science of
nutrition, which is the biological expression of food. It answers the
question—why is nutrition so misunderstood by the public and ignored by the
professions of healthcare? The story begins with history, well over two
centuries ago. It is not simply about “follow the money”—that’s a rather
superficial excuse that too easily dismisses a more meaningful
explanation—but it is about corruption. It’s as much about invisible,
taken-for-granted corruption as it is about blatant corruption, and it’s
about corruption historically entrenched, “scientifically” enforced, and
industry mandated.
It is only by understanding nutrition—honestly, fundamentally—that we will
reach a better understanding of how food, health and a broad spectrum of
environmental issues are connected. This “better understanding” requires
radical reformation. Presently, information on nutrition is controlled so as
to ensure wealth for the few at a cost of health for the many. By “many,” I
mean animals (us, too!), plants and microorganisms—all the pieces of that
thing we once called Nature.
As my wife and I walked along that road, I took a picture of a sign that
tells so much. It advertises how to grow plants for harvest and profit with
the help of a program called “SeedWay”, and a seed source called SmartStax
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SmartStax). It offers “seven [genetic] levels
of protection,” taking “advantage of multiple modes of insect protection and
herbicide tolerance” by applying RoundUp-Ready herbicide to kill all “pest”
life (animal and plant) above and below the soil line prior to planting the
herbicide-resistant seed corn. Pretty deadly, it seems! How did we reach
such a place? Are these not the tools of biological warfare hiding beneath
the pretense of biological feeding?
Source: The New York Times May 3, 2010 article, “Farmers Cope With
RoundUp-Resistant Weeds” and Wikipedia article “SmartStax”
Of course, industry says it’s not so bad, but other sources of evidence
say otherwise. It’s almost impossible to know how lethal such chemicals may
be for other forms of life, including ourselves, in the long run. This, I do
know: roadside grasshoppers and butterflies and worms and bees are
suffering. Just in the short time of my life, I can hear the difference. The
famous Cornell Ornithology Laboratory recently contributed to a report that
finds a staggering 29% decrease in the bird population since 1970, recording
findings right here where we walk, among other observation sites. Larks are
down a staggering 67%. Countless other reports suggest the massive decline
of wildlife populations, including the pollinators so critical to sustaining
life as we know it.
Something is wrong on a social level, too. That big farm—factory—down the
road where we were headed commands all the attention in our community. It
leaves in its wake the barns of yesteryear.
Main Image Credit: Gary Mueller, Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology
Hidden from view are the families who owned those farms with pride and dignity for generations. I know I wander now, but the evidence of something gone terribly wrong is easily seen in so many places in rural America. It is easily seen in our society, our environment, our health. These are not separate crises: they are all interconnected, tethered to an insatiable demand for dietary protein. I look forward to defending this reasoning in future articles and in the forthcoming book.
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
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0 camels / camelids