Is the recession good for agriculture?
The Meatrix - More Comments
The organic friendly, sustainable agriculture people that produced The Meatrix at a cost of over $200 000.00, fail to address many important facts. As I've said before and will say again, with 6.5 billion people to feed, organic farming is out of the question, vegetarianism is out of the question, even restricting the use of hormones, herbicides, large scale animal and crop production and restricting genetically modified crops is out of the question. A new book by Alex Avery called The Truth About Organic Foods contradicts many of the myths about modern agriculture. Myths that are propogated by the media, sustainable agriculture groups, PETA, No NAIS groups, and the producers of The Meatrix.
The Meatrix claims that large scale farming, or Agricorp, destroys the environment. This is complete rubbish. This is an idea that our media have fed to the public through one sensational story after another. The grass fed cattle in The Meatrix produce 40% more CO2 than a feedlot animal that is fed a grain ration. A grass fed animal produces 2X more methane than feedlot animal that is fed a grain ration, and we know that one pound of methane equals 23 lbs of CO2 in terms of greenhouse effect. Ma and Pa`s cow produces much more greenhouse gas than a conventional feedlot animal.
The Meatrix claims that large commercial farms cause water pollution. Large farms are very closely monitored. Although the press would lead you to believe otherwise, one hundred little farms pollute much more than one strictly controlled larger farm.
Let's imagine that every farm was forced to become organic. No hormones, no chemical fertilizer (a misleading term), no GM crops, no feedlots, hog barns or chicken coops. Just to replace the 80 000 000 tonnes of nitrogen fertilizer used worldwide every year, it would require the application of manure from 8 billion cattle! Just to maintain current worldwide grain production, and there are still hungry people. Now here's the catch: there are currently only 1.2 billion cattle on earth. We should all be organic vegans, great idea for the 2 billion left after the worldwide famine.
The Meatrix speaks of sustainable agriculture. Sustainable is great, but the context is wrong. Through modern advances in agriculture, we have been able to feed a worldwide population that is staggering. The sustainable agriculture in The Meatrix is a fantasy, the real world sustainability lies in continuing to produce more food from the same land base, through scientific advancements. To return to the farming methods of the 1950`s would result either in epidemic starvation or the deforestation of many millions of square miles, to cultivate for food. Neither option looks good to me.
The best option right now is what The Meatrix is against. Farmers must continue to produce more from less. More of the best and safest food humankind has ever had, from a shrinking land base. We can feed 6.5 billion people, but not organically, not just with vegetables, not without GMO`s, and not from little Ma and Pa one pig two cow operations. Next time any of you who produced The Meatrix wishes to comment upon the manner in which your food is produced, just imagine what it is like to go hungry. Think hard and then I will expect a humble apology.
Mr.Greenjeans
name: Big-Picture
comments:
Dear Mr. Green Jeans,
We produce way more food than Americans need. Obesity does not come from scarce food supplies.
If people in the USA reduced their meat consumption by 90%, do you think we would need to produce such high amounts of animal products on factory farms?
The food that is being produced in factory farms is not safe for us to eat. To see an additional perspective, check this web site:
http://www.flyingbeet.com/
Here is some information you will find at the web site.
"In 2007 The University of Minnesota completed an empirical study of our "crazy" Veganic claims (see below), and guess what? We were proven RIGHT!
"Organic crops grown using factory farmed manures and offal are now PROVEN to take up the toxic products used in those factory farms! People buying USDA Certified Organic products and thinking they are avoiding the chemicals that poured onto factory farms (and into confinement factory-raised animals) are being horribly fooled. The crazy thing is it is now 2009(!) and no one's changing their practices. I really hope I don't have to update that again for 2010... The claim is that it is too expensive to produce vegetables without using factory farmed animal waste. We don't care. Food grown in America is too cheap. Do you want to submit yourself to decades of low-grade antibiotic, hormone and steriod use? Shouldn't there be a healthy choice for people that want healthy vegetables? And if USDA Organic isn't that choice, then what is?
"If you're worried about chemicals in your food, think twice about buying USDA Certified Organic until the rule are changed or better yet, you take the time to speak with the farmer about how they produce their crops! Don't fool yourself into thinking that crops grown in toxic factory-farmed waste aren't going to suck up those same toxins and deposit them in YOUR body. YOU have the power to change how your vegetables are grown just by talking to your local farmer! When enough people talk to them, they'll listen and change.
"Besides your local farmers' market, consider joining a CSA local to your area, and asking the farmer how they grow their products. (If you are in NY or MA chances are they apply tens of thousands of lbs of factory-farm waste to their fields every year). Get them to make a change to a greener (and more importantly HEALTHIER) way of agriculture! Or better yet, start your own garden and subscribe to practices like those listed in "Growing Green" by Chelsea Publishing.
"Veganic Agriculture
"So what is Veganic agriculture? Basically, for us, it just means that we don't use any slaughterhouse by-products or manures to grow our fruits and vegetables. All vegetables are grown using green-manure-cover-crops and plant-based nutrient sources as well as ground-up rock powders.
"It has become too common for some organic vegetable farms (especially the big ones that now grow most all the organic produce you buy in grocery stores) to rely almost exclusively on slaughterhouse by-products (chicken manure, blood, bone and fish meal) to get nutrients to their plants. The only commercial sources for these products are factory farms, where animals lead miserable lives, and are fed diets of high-pesticide, GMO food, ridden with hormones, steroids and antibiotics.
"These items bio-accumulate in the bodies of the animals and in their waste. To make matters worse, the packed and unhealthy conditions that these animals are forced to live in encourages the spread of diseases that may be transferrable to humans. For example, bone meal fed back to cows has been implicated as a possible cause for the spread of mad-cow disease in Europe.
"The idea of supporting these industries in any way, and putting what we consider to be toxic waste products onto our otherwise clean fields seems completely counter to our goal of organic clean living.
"Before we go any further, it's important to note that not ALL farms using animal waste products are getting them from factory farms! Many (especially smaller) local organic farms have their own well-treated animals, or have access to a neighboring farm's manure. If this is something you are concerned about, just ask your local organic farmer how they handle nutrient needs on their farm. They'll be more than happy to explain it to you.
"Although we do have access to local clean manures, we decided to be 'extremists' and go completely veganic, in part to demonstrate that it can be done. Not having to truck waste to the farm and then use a tractor to spread it saves a lot of fuel and time! It' true that we've had to be a little more careful and long-term thinking in our rotations, but once it was figured it out, it's not hard at all, and the money and time saved more than makes up for the initial planning.
"There is no certification standard for Veganic Agriculture at the present time, but the basic concept couldn't be simpler. Really, we are just "cutting out the middle man." The middle man in this case is the cow, chicken, horse, pig or whatever. What is their manure made from anyway but plant materials? There is no "magic" that goes on inside the animal that makes their manure better for the soil or plants than if we used the base material. In FACT, it is quite the opposite if you are using factory-farmed wastes! Besides disease, pesticide and steroid residue, salts (most especially in chicken manures) are in high enough concentrations that they can salinate heavier soils -disturbing the delicate micro-ecology that is so essential to the long-term health of the soil -and US!
"Vegetable-based amendments, called "Green Manures" on the other hand ENCOURAGE microbial activity. Their carbon-to-nitrogen ratios are much more in balance. While the process is somewhat slower... the net increase in overall Organic Matter can be several times greater when a farmer uses green manures instead of animal manures. We have the soil tests to prove it!
"So why doesn't everyone do it? Historically -for thousands of years- farmers relied on green manures. No one had cows and chickens and pigs in the cramped concentrations they do now... And the transport of those waste products has only been made possible by use of heavy trucks and cheap oil for transporting it. The Chinese of thousands of years ago, ancient Romans, English (starting in the 1600's), and even the Hudson Valley farmers of the late 1800's all studied, actively wrote about, and relied heavily on what we now call "veganic" techniques as a questionably more exciting marketing term.
"There are several ways farmers can apply veganic techniques. We use the simplest and cheapest in part because we have such an excess of good growing soil here. We simply take land out of vegetable production and plant it to green manures. That way we don't have to harvets the green manure -or move it from one field to another, AND we get the benefit of all the root growth, which, depending on the crop, is massive!
"Other veganic farmers might plant a field to a green-manure crop (like alfalfa), harvest it, and spread it onto their permanent growing fields. That works great too!
"2002 Update!
"Research by the University of Washington last year gives more credibility to our nutty purist ideals. Broad-Leaf weed herbicide was applied during reconditioning of a hay pasture. The hay grew over months, and the roots soaked up the herbicide (just like non-organic carrots were found last year to soak up other broad-spectrum herbicides even two years after application). Months of rain and baking sun didn't break the herbicide down... the hay was harvested, sat in a barn, was slowly fed to horses... where the herbicide BIO-ACCUMULATED in their bodies and was then passed in their manure.
"It doesn't end there! This "safe" manure collected until an organic farmer bought it, brought it home, and started composting it over many months. Temperatures up to 180 degrees cooked the pathogens in the manure... but didn't touch the herbcide! Months later when he applied the "black gold" to his fields, some very sensitive broad leaf crops that he happened to be growing died of herbicide damage which started the whole investigation, which has now been replicated.
"The implications are tremendous! These herbicidal products are known carcinogens, and now we can see they do NOT break down enough at the concentrations farmers pour on their fields for weed control. That's herbiced that's going down on fields that grow YOUR (non-organic) food. American Farmers are applying record amounts of chemicals to their fields and YOUR FOOD even as other countries around the world including China, India and Africa are phasing in nationally sponsored programs to decrease pesticide use! Even the World Bank has gotten behind limiting pesticide use on food crops in OTHER countries. Why don't we do it here in the United States?
"Here's a crazy idea for you: Food in America is TOO CHEAP! American farmers -whether they are small farms OR big agribusiness do NOT make enough money on the crops they grow.
"As a result, American farmers can't afford to take a risk on innovative new techniques like Organic (much less veganic) if it might mean a lost or reduced crop yield. Since agro-chemicals and fuel are subsidized for farmers stickig with proven best practices thanks to your generous tax dollars, any rational farmer would be practically INSANE to try organic or veganic methods
"The current toxic condition of our food is a direct result of the American Public's demand for ridiculously cheap food - even as they pay for it with their health and subsidies on the back-end!"
Best wishes to you,
Ms. Big Picture
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