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Environment

Is Corn Leading Us Towards Social Change or Ecological Disaster?

By George Naylor, Movement Vision Lab. Posted March 3, 2008.


Understanding corn could be the key to social change that saves the planet and helps us create democratic communities and local food supplies.
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Understanding corn could be the key to social change that saves the planet and helps us create democratic communities and local food supplies. Or, left to the philosophy of corporations like ADM, Cargill, Monsanto and DuPont, ignorance and inaction will make corn, a gift of Mother Nature and ancient civilizations, a curse to destroy ecosystems around the world and add to the problem of global warming.

In recent years corn became a topic of concern thanks to the writing of Michael Pollan in the New York Times Magazine and his best-selling book, the Omnivores Dilemma (I am the featured corn farmer in this book.) The corn we're talking about is harvested as a grain, not the sweet corn for summer picnics. Ancient societies in Mesoamerica worshipped corn because it could be stored from year to year in reserves to prevent famine in case of crop failures. The natural co-evolution of corn (like wheat, rice, or soybeans in other civilizations) involved saving seed that seemed to exhibit the best characteristics for yield, adaptability, and usefulness.

The basic problem with corn and its companion crop, soybeans, is that they required destroying the natural prairie which allows for soil erosion. Also, these crops, using fossil fuel intensive techniques and fertilizer, can produce more simple protein, carbohydrates, and oil per unit of land and labor than any plants on the planet. They can be shipped almost anywhere and used for livestock feed, corn sweetners, vegetable oil, processed foods, industrial inputs and many other uses. Without proper government policy, the natural tendency of the "free market" is for these crops to be planted horizon to horizon in a virtual monocropping system. Another consequence is the tendency for intensive livestock production using corn and soybeans as livestock feed, rather than extensive production on family farms with soil conserving crop rotation and waste recycling.

In the United States, with its vast land resources including the deep rich prairie soils and cheap fossil fuel, the industrial revolution allowed the exploitation of these resources along with the productivity of crops like corn and soybeans to industrialize our food supply. Railroads, highways, refrigeration, and many forms of corporate-controlled technology created an abundance of food without most people recognizing the costs to society or the environment in the process. Despite many economic catastrophes through the years, it wasn't until the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl that the federal government in Roosevelt's New Deal finally stepped in to remedy the inevitable problem of over-abundance--low commodity prices and soil and water degradation.

Giant agribusinesses who process and export food or who provide technical inputs to corn and soybean production would rather have the "free market" lead to overabundance because it improves their bottom line. Other corporations like cheap food to feed their workforce and to displace rural people to become members of that work force. This is why these corporations used their political power to end New Deal farm programs and usher in "globalization" under various free trade agreements like the WTO and NAFTA. Rather than requiring corporations to pay fair prices to farmers, recent farm bills substituted billions of taxpayer dollars paid to crop producers (subsidies) just to avoid a collapse of the farm economy. Globalization extended the process of industrialization, rural displacement and land degradation internationally. So while it seems that "subsidies" benefit farmers and cause over production, it's the corporations who benefit and actually require taxpayers to finance the destruction of diversified family farms around the world.

The democratic and environmental answer to the undemocratic free market is the concept of Food Sovereignty championed by the international movement of farmers, peasants, and farmworkers called La Via Campesina. Food Sovereignty requires democratic policy to assure fair prices to farmers and wages to farm workers, the avoidance of wasteful overproduction, control over cheap, low quality imports, provision of food security reserves, conservation of land, water, and biodiversity, social control over potentially disastrous technology such as genetic engineering, and facilitation of local food production.

The farm bills recently passed in the House and Senate and proposals from the Bush administration still enshrine the downward spiral of the global free market. There will be no price floor under commodities, no food security reserve, no control over cheap imported commodities for the industrial food and agrofuel system. Providing for conservation and local food system will be a difficult if not impossible task. But if we want our food to do what it's supposed to --- feed people, not greedy corporations --- we need to prioritize Food Sovereignty today.

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See more stories tagged with: food politics, corn, michael pollan, food sovereignty

George Naylor raises corn and soybeans on his 470 acre family farm near Churdan, Iowa. He recently completed his fourth and last year as president of the National Family Farm Coalition. Naylor is a member of Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement. He and his ideas are featured in Michael Pollan's best-selling book, The Omnivores Dilemma.

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Realistic Solutions Please
Posted by: RealisticSolutions on Mar 4, 2008 3:44 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Utopian ideals sound nice, but lack the substance of realistic solutions to our current and future societal food demands. I challenge this author’s idealistic views that the government should step in and extend a panacea of programs to avert “ecological disaster.”
(1) "Proper government policy" (if such a thing were to even exist) to counter balance free market forces by its own definition will produce wasteful production, not the contrary. I agree that through industrialization we have a highly refined, very efficient production-to-plate food system. That in itself provides more food security to our population than any government program could devise.
(2) The problems of the Dustbowl were created by a farm structure that was far more "family farm" intensive than we currently have, therein questioning the idealistic claim that more family farms is the solution to environmental problems caused by agriculture.
(3) Over-abundance / low commodity prices is not the current problem of global food production, nor will it be, as the population grows by 50% over the next 40-50 years and becomes more affluent affording diets that are more protein rich.
(4) I find it ironic at best and a diversion tactic at worst to point the finger of “greed” at corporations, when it is for the author’s own interests that he is advocating above market prices ("fair prices"), as consumers pay higher prices for their food.
Improving agricultural productivity is the only realistic medium through which ecological disaster will be averted. Capitalistic innovations offer our best probability of those being realized, not reactive and protectionist government interventions. The later of these will inevitably produce that exact thing that they advocate to avert.

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» RE: ealistic Solutions Please Posted by: progressiveview
Corporate Solutions? Corporate problems.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Mar 4, 2008 12:56 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Idealistic? For whom? We only get as good a gov't as the people who run it.
The creation of a synthetically fixed nitrogen process in 1920 paved the way for 2 billion extra people on this planet.
Such industrialization has produced a product service orientation removed from the farm product itself. GMO creations that can withstand the dangerous pesticides,fungisides and the altered produce untested in its effects on the environment,farm animals & our own bodies too. The FDA ostensibly to regulate the industry and to protect the people now is perverted, severely underfunded and run by those who are inimical to any type of regulation.
When agribuisiness became corporatized variety of plants grown,cows,pigs and chickens became homoginized in their genetic outlook. The achillies heel of the first and second "Green revolutions" was that the so-called super crops were nearly identical genetically and therefor wiped out by just one pest.
The goals of corporate agriculture is the easiest,cheapist way to produce food-which is antithetical to its and ultimatly our own survival.
Idealistic? The corporations are living their idealist dream. And are working to gain control of all food sources and also water. If they do we will all,except the oligarcs of course,live lesser lives and shorter ones at that.

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HEMP!
Posted by: garry minor on Mar 4, 2008 3:26 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anything made from oil, coal, timber, or cotton can be made ecologically friendly with cannabis hemp.
All paper, plastics, packaging, textiles, fuels, lubricants, plywood, structural components, insulations, many cosmetics, medicines, and health foods can all be made with it. Popular Mechanics wrote that over 25,000 such products were known to us in 1938, a year after it became illegal to grow.
Canvas is Dutch for cannabis. For thousands of years all ships sails, including those of Christopher Columbus, most rope, and many fabrics were of its fibers, which are the longest and strongest in nature.
It was legal to pay taxes with it in Colonial America. The original draft of the Constitution is on hemp paper. The early Pioneers covered wagons were covered with hemp. It is a huge part of our nations history, of our worlds history!
Henry Ford built and fueled a car primarily with hemp, the cellulose plastic panels ten times stronger than steel. Neither he or Diesel intended to run their engines with petroleum. It is at the very minimum four times more efficient than corn, kenaf, or sugar cane for ethanol production. One acre of hemp also equals four of timber for pulp and you harvest it every single year, tree's take a lifetime.
It's seed is the single most nutritious thing you can eat. Our Government even stockpiles it as a strategic food source under Executive order #12919.
It grows with little or no fertilizers, herbicides, or pesticides to foul the soil and water, in climates and conditions other crops won't grow. Almost everywhere from the Equator to the Arctic Circle.
It is without a doubt the only source of biomass capable of ecologically handling our energy, as well as many other needs. Farming six percent of our land could handle our energy reqirements. You can also get pulp, seed, and fiber out of the very same acre!
Medicinally it will become a wonder plant once people learn the Truth. All mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles have cannabinoid receptors throughout their body that work independent of those that govern the heart and breathing. This is why cannabis cannot kill you.
THC was clinically proven to destroy tumors by Dr. Manuel Guzman at Complutense University of Madrid Spain in 2000, our Government knew this fact in 1974. In 2006 at the Memorial University of Newfoundland, Dr. Xia Zhang discovered that unlike most substances that destroy brain tissue, cannabis actually promotes the growth of new brain cells. It has since been found to possibly prevent Alzheimers as well. In Canada and Europe it is being used to treat Alzheimers, MS, autism, epilepsy, diabetes, obesity, arthritis, chronic pain, migraine, nausea, herpes, cystic fibrosis, glaucoma, asthma, emphysema, Parkinsons, Huntingtons, Tourettes, Crohns disease, and more. Here at home our FDA still refuses to allow testing.
Currently China is growing 40% of the worlds industrial hemp, and developing new technology for plastics, textiles, plywood, fuel, and more that will keep the U.S.A. at a deficit for years to come. In fact the United States is the only major nation still demonizing the most useful plant on the planet, to Canada's delight.
Hemp industrialization in the United States will create millions of Earth friendly jobs from the farm, to the factory, to the laboratory. It will begin a redistribution of wealth, and promote social harmony. Wow, just think if we stop attacking and bullying other nations for their resources. We may even be liked.
Imagine!!!

Food, fuel, shelter, medicine, pleasure, spirituality, unity!
The Tree of Life! Kaneh bosm, cannabis, hemp!
www.thc-ministry.org

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Pardon me for common sense
Posted by: rickiey on Mar 9, 2008 4:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But the solution is a technology we already have.

Nuclear power is proven.
It is proven safe in reactors designed for generating electricity (it is unsafe in reactors designed for creating plutonium, like chernobyl)
And if we recycle the waste, the waste becomes a source of energy as well.

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how
Posted by: how on Mar 11, 2008 12:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
corn is not sugarcane. brazil converts sugarcane into fuel , which allows them a practical way to produce ethanol. only a fool would think that corn would be suitable to produce ethanol. why? because brazil is located in a tropical climate , and we are located in a sub tropical climate. also if we were to concentrate on huge crops of corn , we would slowly allow for soil erosion , plus soil exhaustion. this is how ignorant neo-conservatives are. someday history books will report on the failure of reagon/bush and 100% capitalism. america will suffer , and deserve to , as it was the people who elected these idiots .

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