by Pops » Fri 12 Aug 2011, 11:14:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'I')'ve got plenty to say about Pops' apology for industrial ag,
Point that part out to me.
I realize that not condemning modern ag at every opportunity is akin to claiming abiotic oil will save the day. And that if a person attempts to make a nuanced statement on a message board he should expect to make at least a dozen more black and white statements explaining the nuances - so here are some more:
No one here can show me a realistic scenario where small farms will replace big ones in the near future -
Aside from the one I pointed out in my initial post.Believe me, I've tried to find that scenario because it is close to my heart, I've posted about it numerous times here and at my sometimes blog. But just inevitabile as burning every speck of FF, no matter the environmental cost, the more the oil economy fades away, the greater will be the demand for basic staples like beans and bread and the greater the incentive to be as efficient as possible in food production.
Large scale monoculture will become more dominant, not less as the niceties go by the wayside and basic calories take precedence ...
USAID isn't sending sacks of organic baby arugula to Sudan, it's sending veg. oil and wheat.Personally, I thought I made a pretty bold prediction that protein will move off of grain and back to grass and that could present an opportunity for small farmers.
Not as satisfying as idly railing against Monsanto (even that is not as satisfying as it once was as the RR1 gene in corn and beans become public domain) but a little more realistic.
But hey, if a person chooses to believe that tomorrow all modern infrastructure is going to just up and disappear, that FFs will cease to exist or have such a miraculous advantage over animal labor, that the economic advantages of monoculture and mono-infrastructure will become irrelevant and those millions of acres of mega-farms will be split up into 10 acre permaculture plots, well ... I say more power to 'em - just don't bother with the facts because they'll only be distracted!
The reality is not so prosaic, I'm not sure how long the ethanol boondoggle will continue - it seems a price of oil above probably $75 with mandates probably makes ethanol profitable without subsidies. But even if it continues indefinitely population pressure and climate change will ensure less grain will be fed to animals because less people will be able to afford grain fed protein.
http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/31/markets ... /index.htm
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)