Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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By Joel SalatinComments before the Virginia Senate Subcommittee Hearings
July 29 , 1997I turned 40 this spring and in my lifetime I have gone from
selling uninspected fresh beef, pork, rabbit, chicken, yogurt,
butter and cottage cheese at the local curb market to being
unable to sell any milk products, and pork and beef only after
they are exported from our county and reimported.I've watched as dozens of small neighborhood meat and
poultry processing facilities have closed down. At the same
time, I've watched thousands of farmers go out of business as
the farmer's share of the food dollar has dropped from 35
cents per retail dollar just a couple of decades ago to less
than nine cents today.I've seen centralization in the poultry, beef and pork
industries increase environmental problems and shove the
issue of food-borne illnesses and death to the front pages of
magazines and news programs. A strong consumer backlash
is creating a huge opportunity for creative alternatives that
produce stronger rural economies, more nutritious food and
more environmentally friendly modeling.Our farm, Polyface, Inc., is a multigenerational farm,
producing salad bar beef, pastured poultry and eggs, range
rabbits, pigerator pork, vegetables and forestry products,
marketing everything to abut 400 patrons we like to call
"cheerleaders." We use no chemical fertilizers, pesticides,
herbicides and do not administer vaccines, medications or
growth stimulants to our livestock. Our patrons enjoy
purchasing meat and poultry from a nonindustrial, humane
production model while we enjoy producing food that is
superior to supermarket fare.But even now, as we speak, government agents are trying to
find out the names and addresses of our patrons. Why? Our
patrons have sought us out, exercising informed freedom of
choice and they are happy. We have seen the conventional
approach and followed an exhilaratingly different path. Why
can't farmers and their friends who choose to build a
relationship over their food purchases do so without
government agents denying these freedoms?What we want is legislation that will allow all agricultural
products processed and marketed on the producing farm to
be exempt from government inspection.The current prohibition against being able to sell a pound of
sausage to a neighbor or fellow church member after a
Thanksgiving hog killing has nothing to do with food safety,
but with denial of market access. If food safety is the real
issue, why is it perfectly fine to give this harmful food away?We can give away anything, including milk, butter and cheese.
If these things are so harmful, shouldn't it be illegal to even
give them away? After all, would we allow someone to give
away drugs? On other harmful substance prohibitions exist
equally for both buyer and seller. In this case, it's perfectly
fine to buy it and feed it to your children and their friends—
it's just illegal to sell it. Isn't that ridiculous?In fact, we can even go shoot a deer on a 70-degree
November day, drag it through the dirt and leaves for two
hours, throw it on the hood of a pickup and drive, in the
blazing sun, to a neighborhood abattoir, then give the meat to
all the neighborhood children, but we can't take a prime,
coddled beef to the same abattoir and sell it to our mother-
in-law. Folks, we are insane if we think this issue is a matter
of food safety.The entire food safety issue is a smokescreen invented by
bureaucrats and academic eggheads, not to mention
corporate executives, who fear a little competition or a little
loss of power.A friend of mine near Richmond, tired of stockyard prices for
his calves, tried to put in a little facility to sell to his neighbors
and friends. He finally gave up after two years. It would have
cost nearly $300,000 in order to sell one pound of hamburger
to his pastor. Folks, that is ridiculous.Many of you senators have told me, with a twinkling wink of
the eye, that you purchase some sausage from fellow Ruritan
or church membership, or you buy butter from a neighbor
who milks a family Jersey cow. That's nice for you, but try
being the farmer who answers the door to a badge-waving,
accusing government agent and see how funny it is.As our food production system moves farther and farther
away from natural, size-appropriate models and embraces the
mega-factory industrial concept, problems of humane animal
treatment, smells, environmental degradation, petroleum use
and packaging become greater. As strange as it may sound,
some folks want something else besides irradiated,
genetically-engineered, amalgamated, extruded pseudo-food
from Archer Daniels Midland and they should be able to
access that type of product.The current food giants started a couple of decades ago from
the tailgate of a pickup in the backyard of the farm, offering a
creative alternative. As they grew and shipped all across the
country, we made regulations to keep them in line. Today,
many new creative alternative producers stand poised and
ready to meet the new demand for something better than
factory food, but the new products must go through a
regulatory gauntlet that precludes 99 percent of them from
ever reaching consumers. We have not had a free market now
for a very long time and it's time to unleash the
entrepreneurial creatively of the countryside on our
neighborhoods.Eliminating the risk of a wrong choice inherently eliminates
the ability to make a creatively positive choice, but if we
attempt to protect everyone from ever making an incorrect
decision, we must eliminate decision-making ability from
everyone. Hand-in-hand with liberty is the ability to make
decisions, and if all our decisions are proscribed by the
government, what kind of choices will we have?I for one do not believe that government officials, wined and
dined by lobbyists and corporate giants, will attempt to
preserve diversity in the market place. Diversity is hard to
regulate. It drives bureaucrats nuts. And yet that is the very
essence of freedom. ...http://www.westonaprice.org/farming/small_farms.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
By Joel SalatinComments before the Virginia Senate Subcommittee Hearings
July 29 , 1997I turned 40 this spring and in my lifetime I have gone from
selling uninspected fresh beef, pork, rabbit, chicken, yogurt,
butter and cottage cheese at the local curb market to being
unable to sell any milk products, and pork and beef only after
they are exported from our county and reimported.I've watched as dozens of small neighborhood meat and
poultry processing facilities have closed down. At the same
time, I've watched thousands of farmers go out of business as
the farmer's share of the food dollar has dropped from 35
cents per retail dollar just a couple of decades ago to less
than nine cents today.I've seen centralization in the poultry, beef and pork
industries increase environmental problems and shove the
issue of food-borne illnesses and death to the front pages of
magazines and news programs. A strong consumer backlash
is creating a huge opportunity for creative alternatives that
produce stronger rural economies, more nutritious food and
more environmentally friendly modeling.Our farm, Polyface, Inc., is a multigenerational farm,
producing salad bar beef, pastured poultry and eggs, range
rabbits, pigerator pork, vegetables and forestry products,
marketing everything to abut 400 patrons we like to call
"cheerleaders." We use no chemical fertilizers, pesticides,
herbicides and do not administer vaccines, medications or
growth stimulants to our livestock. Our patrons enjoy
purchasing meat and poultry from a nonindustrial, humane
production model while we enjoy producing food that is
superior to supermarket fare.But even now, as we speak, government agents are trying to
find out the names and addresses of our patrons. Why? Our
patrons have sought us out, exercising informed freedom of
choice and they are happy. We have seen the conventional
approach and followed an exhilaratingly different path. Why
can't farmers and their friends who choose to build a
relationship over their food purchases do so without
government agents denying these freedoms?What we want is legislation that will allow all agricultural
products processed and marketed on the producing farm to
be exempt from government inspection.The current prohibition against being able to sell a pound of
sausage to a neighbor or fellow church member after a
Thanksgiving hog killing has nothing to do with food safety,
but with denial of market access. If food safety is the real
issue, why is it perfectly fine to give this harmful food away?We can give away anything, including milk, butter and cheese.
If these things are so harmful, shouldn't it be illegal to even
give them away? After all, would we allow someone to give
away drugs? On other harmful substance prohibitions exist
equally for both buyer and seller. In this case, it's perfectly
fine to buy it and feed it to your children and their friends—
it's just illegal to sell it. Isn't that ridiculous?In fact, we can even go shoot a deer on a 70-degree
November day, drag it through the dirt and leaves for two
hours, throw it on the hood of a pickup and drive, in the
blazing sun, to a neighborhood abattoir, then give the meat to
all the neighborhood children, but we can't take a prime,
coddled beef to the same abattoir and sell it to our mother-
in-law. Folks, we are insane if we think this issue is a matter
of food safety.The entire food safety issue is a smokescreen invented by
bureaucrats and academic eggheads, not to mention
corporate executives, who fear a little competition or a little
loss of power.A friend of mine near Richmond, tired of stockyard prices for
his calves, tried to put in a little facility to sell to his neighbors
and friends. He finally gave up after two years. It would have
cost nearly $300,000 in order to sell one pound of hamburger
to his pastor. Folks, that is ridiculous.Many of you senators have told me, with a twinkling wink of
the eye, that you purchase some sausage from fellow Ruritan
or church membership, or you buy butter from a neighbor
who milks a family Jersey cow. That's nice for you, but try
being the farmer who answers the door to a badge-waving,
accusing government agent and see how funny it is.As our food production system moves farther and farther
away from natural, size-appropriate models and embraces the
mega-factory industrial concept, problems of humane animal
treatment, smells, environmental degradation, petroleum use
and packaging become greater. As strange as it may sound,
some folks want something else besides irradiated,
genetically-engineered, amalgamated, extruded pseudo-food
from Archer Daniels Midland and they should be able to
access that type of product.The current food giants started a couple of decades ago from
the tailgate of a pickup in the backyard of the farm, offering a
creative alternative. As they grew and shipped all across the
country, we made regulations to keep them in line. Today,
many new creative alternative producers stand poised and
ready to meet the new demand for something better than
factory food, but the new products must go through a
regulatory gauntlet that precludes 99 percent of them from
ever reaching consumers. We have not had a free market now
for a very long time and it's time to unleash the
entrepreneurial creatively of the countryside on our
neighborhoods.Eliminating the risk of a wrong choice inherently eliminates
the ability to make a creatively positive choice, but if we
attempt to protect everyone from ever making an incorrect
decision, we must eliminate decision-making ability from
everyone. Hand-in-hand with liberty is the ability to make
decisions, and if all our decisions are proscribed by the
government, what kind of choices will we have?I for one do not believe that government officials, wined and
dined by lobbyists and corporate giants, will attempt to
preserve diversity in the market place. Diversity is hard to
regulate. It drives bureaucrats nuts. And yet that is the very
essence of freedom. ...http://www.westonaprice.org/farming/small_farms.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
