Dairy farming is dying. After 40 years, I’m done.

Guest Post by Jim Goodman

After 40 years of dairy farming, I sold my herd of cows this summer. The herd had been in my family since 1904; I know all 45 cows by name. I couldn’t find anyone who wanted to take over our farm — who would? Dairy farming is little more than hard work and possible economic suicide.

A grass-based organic dairy farm bought my cows. I couldn’t watch them go. In June, I milked them for the last time, left the barn and let the truckers load them. A cop-out on my part? Perhaps, but being able to remember them as I last saw them, in my barn, chewing their cuds and waiting for pasture, is all I have left.

My retirement was mostly voluntary. Premature, but there is some solace in having a choice. Unlike many dairy farmers, I didn’t retire bankrupt. But for my wife and me, having to sell our herd was a sign — of the economic death not just of rural America but also of a way of life. It is nothing short of heartbreaking to walk through our barn and know that those stalls will remain empty. Knowing that our losses reflect the greater damage inflicted on entire regions is worse.

When I started farming in 1979, the milk from 45 cows could pay the bills, cover new machinery and buildings, and allow us to live a decent life and start a family. My father had farmed through the Great Depression, and his advice — “don’t borrow any more than you have to” — stuck with me and probably saved the farm many times over.

We survived the 1980s, when debt loads became impossible for many farmers and merely incredibly onerous for the lucky ones. Interest rates went up , export markets plummeted after a wheat embargo against the Soviet Union, oil prices soared, inflation skyrocketed and land prices began to collapse. More than 250,000 farms died that decade, and more than 900 farmers committed suicide in the upper Midwest alone.

Farmers felt the impact most directly, but there were few in rural communities who were untouched. All the businesses that depended on farm dollars watched as their incomes dried up and the tax base shrank. Farm foreclosures meant fewer families and fewer kids, so schools were forced to close . The Main Street cafes and coffee shops — where farmers talked prices, the weather and politics — shut down as well.

As devastating as the 1980s were for farmers, today’s crisis is worse. Ineffective government subsidies and insurance programs are worthless in the face of plummeting prices and oversupply (and tariffs certainly aren’t helping). The current glut of organic milk has caused a 30 percent decrease in the price I was paid for my milk over the past two years. The new farm bill, signed by President Trump on Thursday, provides modest relief for larger dairy farmers (it expands some subsidies, and farmers will be able to pay lower premiums to participate in a federal program that offers compensation when milk prices drop below a certain level), but farmers don’t want subsidies; all we ever asked for were fair prices. So for many, this is little more than another PR stunt, and the loss of family farms will continue. This year, Wisconsin, where I live, had lost 382 dairy farms by August; last year, the number at the same point was 283. The despair is palpable; suicide is a fact of life, though many farm suicides are listed as accidents.

A farmer I knew for many years came home from town, folded his good clothes for the last time and killed himself. I saw no warning, though maybe others did.

When family farms go under, the people leave and the buildings are often abandoned, but the land remains, often sold to the nearest land baron. Hillsides and meadows that were once grasslands for pasturing cattle become acre upon acre of corn-soybean agriculture. Farming becomes a business where it used to be a way of life. With acreages so large, owners use pesticides and chemical fertilizers to ensure that the soil can hold an unsustainable rotation of plants upright, rather than caring for the soil as a living biotic community.

Those dairy farms that remain milk hundreds or thousands of cows, keeping them in huge barns and on concrete lots. The animals seldom, if ever, get the chance to set their hooves on what little grass is there. Pigs are raised indoors for their entire lives, never feeling the sun or rain or what it’s like to roll in mud.

“I’ve been reading about it,” Trump said to cheers. “That demands really immediately fair trade, with all of our trading partners, and that includes Canada.”

All the machinery has become bigger, noisier, and some days it runs around the clock. Manure from the mega-farms is hauled for miles in huge tanker trucks or pumped through irrigation lines onto crop fields. The smell, the flies and the airborne pathogens that go with it have effectively done away with much of the peaceful countryside I used to know.

What kind of determination does it take for someone young and hopeful to begin a life of farming in times like these? Getting credit as a small farmer is more difficult today. As prices continue to fall, increasing production and farm size is often the only way to survive. But there is just too much — too much milk, too much grain, too much livestock — thanks to tightening export markets and declining domestic demand for dairy products. The situation is great for the processors who buy from the farmers, but it will never give the farmers a fair price.

With fewer farms, there are fewer foreclosures than in the 1980s. But watching your neighbor’s farm and possessions being auctioned off is no more pleasant today than it was 30 years ago. Seeing a farm family look on as their life’s work is sold off piece by piece; the cattle run through a corral, parading for the highest bid; tools, household goods and toys piled as “boxes of junk” and sold for a few dollars while the kids hide in the haymow crying — auctions are still too painful for me.

As I end my career as a farmer, I feel fortunate it lasted as long as it did. Some choices made long ago did keep me ahead of the curve, at least for a while. I always told people that 45 cows were enough for me, and being able to give them names rather than numbers and appreciate each one’s unique nature was important. I remember Adel, who always found her way across the pasture for a good head scratch, and Lara, whose sandpaper tongue always found my face as I milked her.

Cows like these didn’t fit into the “get big or get out ” theory of farming that took over during the 1980s, so over the years, we needed to get better ideas or get out. By switching to organic production and direct marketing, we managed to make a decent living. We also found that this method of farming required good environmental stewardship and direct involvement with our rural community. And, for almost 20 years, it worked.

But organic dairying has become a victim of its own success. It was profitable and thus fell victim to the “get big” model. Now, our business is dominated by large organic operations that are more factory than farm. It seems obvious that they simply cannot be following the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s strict organic production standards (like pasturing cattle), rules that we smaller farmers see as common sense.

Although small organic farms pioneered the concept, organic certification has become something not meant for us — and a label that mega-farms co-opted and used to break us. When six dairy farms in Texas feed their thousands of cows a diet of organic grain and stored forage, with no discernible access to a blade of grass, they end up producing more milk than all 453 organic dairy farms in Wisconsin combined. Then they ship it north, undercutting our price. We can’t make ends meet and are forced out of the business. We played by the rules, but we no longer have a level playing field.

Despite this, I hung on, but I couldn’t continue milking cows indefinitely. Perhaps it’s for the best. A few years before we sold our herd, we had to install huge fans in our barn — the summers were getting too hot for the cows to be out during the heat of the day. Climate change would have made our future in farming that much harder. We could have adapted, I think, but we ran out of time.

They say a farmer gets 40 chances. For 40 years, each spring brings another shot at getting it right, at succeeding or failing or something in between. If that were ever true, it isn’t now. That’s why, after my 40 chances, I’m done.

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110 Comments
Onnie
Onnie
December 28, 2018 5:07 pm

Damn, that was bleak, but excellent. Thanks for sharing.

no one
no one
  Onnie
December 28, 2018 5:46 pm

I second that response.

subwo
subwo
December 28, 2018 5:17 pm

It is a hard life. My grandfather Glenn Bell drowned in 1935 when the republican river flooded south of McCook Nebraska. He and my grandmother owned a dairy farm near the bank of the river. My wife saw his grave along with the millers family next to him last summer. My grandmother went on to own with a business partner and operate the Ravenswood Dairy in McCook. She carried lots of families on the books throughout the depression. Grandma Bell did good after being born in a sod hut in Wisconsin and raising three children as a widow.

http://genealogytrails.com/neb/nebraskaflood250killed.htm

robert
robert
December 28, 2018 5:47 pm

I almost wept when I read this. I’m 80 and grew up on a farm when some of the neighbors still farmed with horses (central Indiana). My family were never dairy people, but we raised beef cattle, hogs, and sheep. We were diversified crop-wise, as were all the neighbors. Had pastures and rotated crops: wheat, oats, corn, soy beans. I farmed till I was nearly 50 and had to leave for personal reasons. By then we were on the CBM rotation: corn, beans and Miami

Chemicals arrived when I was in high school: 2-4-d, brush killer (agent orange cousin), many more. Confinement hog barns were the thing and promoted by Purdue. Also they told us to tear out the fence rows so we could be more efficient. I did. Killed out all the rabbits and pheasants and quail: might have made a hundred more $. I’m sorry for the man who wrote this article and I’m sorry for this nation. I apologize for being a part of the destruction.

After reading the hsf story this morning, it makes you wonder.

no one
no one
  robert
December 29, 2018 8:50 am

I saw that happen all around our little farm, where my father refused to cut down two plots of woodland and almost NONE of the hedge/brushrows. Of course, the government got the last laugh when it declared almost a quarter of that farm to be “protected Wetlands” and any cutting of trees must be approved. That was 1993… another Clinton achievement.

NtroP
NtroP
  robert
December 29, 2018 4:23 pm

robert,

10-4 on the CBM rotation. I live here, and you can literally drive for hundreds of miles in most any direction and see almost no variation from the corn and soybeans. The corn is for GMO processed foods and animal feed. Oh, and let’s not forget ethanol. Soybeans are for tofu and the Chinese and ???
Lots of giant corporate farms, lots of red and green giant machinery, giant corporate hog,turkey and chicken-egg operations, giant ethanol plants, bio-diesel plants, high-fructose corn syrup plants.

On the bright side, I still see some pheasants, even with most of the fence rows gone. And the white-tailed deer seem to thrive. And the grocery prices are still pretty reasonable, even though the product may be slowly poisoning us.

gilberts
gilberts
  robert
December 29, 2018 7:39 pm

Hey, Sir. I want to thank you for your insightful comment. Guys like you are rare and more so every day. I would very much appreciate anything you can offer to share about farming in the pre-Monsanto pre-industrial era. I am not a farmer, but I’m curious about how people did things in the old days. I like old tools, old know-how, and knowing how people did things pre-internet. I think that knowledge is going to become valuable again soon and I want to be able to put it to work for me.

Now that I live out in the sticks, next Spring I’ll be putting in a garden and probably raising a few chickens. I’m already composting in the garage through the winter and it’s surprising how many useful scraps we aren’t putting in the trash now. We have some fruit trees and I want to add a more, as well as a variety of berry bushes, grapes, etc. Despite my career, I would like to make us as self-sufficient as possible.

One of the things I look for are old farm guidebooks, old technical manuals, and old medical guides; the old how-to books printed in the 1800s and early 1900s when people needed to know how to do things on their own and the internet and higher education were not options. There are a lot of useful old books out there if you know where to look. If anyone is interested, here is a useful link to a collection of old books I found last week. Search it for whatever interests you and you will find an incredible variety of books, manuals, monographs, state journals, etc. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/ Here, for example, is a 1917 edition of Productive Farming. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/76003#page/38/mode/1up I know some of the information is out of date, but a lot of the information is valid and it’s a handy idiot’s guide for the ignorant, like myself.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  gilberts
December 29, 2018 8:42 pm

Gilberts, thanks for that link. I’m going to take a look at it.

rosa
rosa
  gilberts
January 3, 2019 8:45 pm

I’m greatly enjoying reading Buffalo Bird Woman’s Garden. I think you would like it too. It’s very detailed descriptions of farming practices of North Dakota agricultural Native Americans

StackingStock
StackingStock
December 28, 2018 5:47 pm

Tough read, God speed to you Sir.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  StackingStock
December 29, 2018 11:19 am

Now who the hell would downvote an honest comment like this?
Ya fuggin’ nog.

As a kid, I grew up with Hoosier farmers as friends. We’d wear out our jeans and gloves baling hay and straw during summer days. It was honest work and it’s a pity people who spent their lives building homes and communities will have to sell and have nothing to show for it.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
December 28, 2018 5:51 pm

Nothing we do anymore is simple or can be remedied with plain old hard work. The largest corporations can afford lawyers to skirt the law and create two teared playing fields. They garner favor with the banks and are extended ENDLESS lines of credit in the form of bailouts and debt restructuring each time they screw up. Capitalism has been hijacked by a combination of corporatism and cronyism the likes of which independent businesses, farmers and entrepreneurs cannot compete with for any length of time.

I and millions of other producers feel the author’s pain. He has nothing to be ashamed of. The deck was stacked against him long ago.

miforest
miforest
  Francis Marion
December 28, 2018 7:16 pm

I agree completely Francis . I think the only good thing to come out of Russia! Russia! Russia! is that it is now clear that we are completely lawless now . they do what they want , fabricate evidence, lie to get warrants, create process crimes. regulate at the behest of donors like the ORGANIC milk rules that advantage corporate farmers and provide no help for the honest like the author.
best of luck to him in his new life.

Martin
Martin
  Francis Marion
December 29, 2018 1:57 pm

Its two tiered, not two teared.

Ginger
Ginger
  Martin
December 29, 2018 4:10 pm

A bicycle has a kickstand to hold it up because it is too tired.

gilberts
gilberts
  Francis Marion
December 30, 2018 11:19 am

I believe it is better identified as Fascism. There is a quote attributed to Mussolini that says, “Fascism is better known as Corporatism, because it is the perfect melding of business and state.” There is no better example than our government, which is very deeply enmeshed with big business and calls the shots for all, but only enforces the regs on a few and works to keep new players and the Little People excluded from the game. I do not believe it will ever improve. Our only salvation is likely a total collapse of the system and a radical wiping clean of the slate. I just hope the airports are closed before they all escape to London or Bern or Tel Aviv or wherever those people go to relax.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
December 28, 2018 6:01 pm

This is happening to every industry possible.

starfcker
starfcker
  Donkey Balls
December 28, 2018 6:15 pm

And you guys have scorned me for years when I say the only answer is a benevolent and powerful and lethal federal government who busts up the monopolies. Otherwise we are just Russia. The government bad, Goldman Sachs wonderful (private!!!) model so many posters on this forum admire ain’t looking so fun, is it?

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  starfcker
December 28, 2018 6:45 pm

We live in a Marxist corporatocracy.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  starfcker
December 29, 2018 12:00 am

I don’t remember scorning you. But, I’m afraid to say that, if government is the only thing that can save us….WE ARE FUCKED for sure.

uturn
uturn
  starfcker
December 29, 2018 12:30 am

Starfcker is the biggest idiot on the planet. Just where does he suppose this benevolent government is going to come from? Over 200 years and the government just gets bigger and more powerful each year. The reason the corporations have so much power over the economy is because of the government. The Corps. write the laws that disenfranchise the small businesses. The only way out of this is to have smaller government with less powers.

Hopefully when the present system comes crashing down the people will give up their worship of the state and politicians. But I am not hopeful because like Starfcker most of the younger population are totally ignorant of economics and the true nature of the world.

BTW- Government and Goldman are both bad. Starfcker hasn’t figured out that Goldman and other Jewish interests control the government. A more powerful and lethal government will just crush the little people that much faster.

My advise is the ignore Starfckers posts and don’t waste time answering them. He , she, it is just a troll, a commie rat bastard or just too stupid to deserve the time to respond.

starfcker
starfcker
  uturn
December 29, 2018 3:23 pm

I’ve got a pretty good size dick you can suck, uturn.

CrashandByrne
CrashandByrne
  uturn
January 3, 2019 1:36 pm

What made this country great (besides all the obvious things that an INTELLECTUAL like yourself MUST already know!!) is that we are all ALLOWED to have an opinion, AND SHARE IT! The biggest hurdle we face, and I mean EVERYBODY, is the relentless censorship coming down on us! We have SO many obstacles in our lives right now and the ONLY way we will ever stand a chance of surviving is if we can communicate! Stop trying to stifle voices and opinions you dont like! Starfcker has as much right as ANYBODY else to say what he thinks. SOME of us may learn something from him…is that what you’re afraid of?

javelin
javelin
  starfcker
December 29, 2018 6:39 am

“Benevolent government”…isn’t that kind of like saying, “civil war”… “jumbo shrimp” or “minor crisis”

no one
no one
  javelin
December 29, 2018 7:23 am

military intelligence
is my favorite…

overthecliff
overthecliff
  no one
December 29, 2018 11:49 am

public school education—government worker

gilberts
gilberts
  starfcker
December 30, 2018 2:07 pm

The term, “benevolent government,” sounds like a bit of a contradiction.
Reference Mr. G. Carlin’s, “Jumbo Shrimp” and “Military Intelligence.”
I lean more towards something like a bowel cancer that doesn’t directly kill you right away, but might let you persist for months, maybe years before finally constricting your bowels and killing you and for which there is no cure.

Pequiste
Pequiste
December 28, 2018 6:15 pm

Another symptom of Hyper-Finance Capitalism.

Yeah, we all know, it’s cheaper to make crap in China and import cheese (and workers) from Mexico.

This model of economy kills every human-sized activity it envelopes: retail, banking, manufacture, education, and as the writer has so eloquently and agonizingly chronicled here, farming. Also living arrangements. How many small towns and large cities alike have been turned into burnt out shells because of this arrangement?

But the Evil Fuckers and their lackeys will tell you that it’s not personal, just business.

I mourn the loss of this gentleman’s farm, community, and way of life as the steamroller of technology paves over everything with the acrid, toxic asphalt of progress.

With the triumph of computers, robots, and A.G.I. can you guess what human-sized activity is probably next on the auction block?

no one
no one
  Pequiste
December 29, 2018 7:37 am

Amy Grant’s lyrics performed by County Crows

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=7&v=zNltjik1P18

They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
With a pink hotel, a boutique
And a swinging hot spot
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

They took all the trees
And put ’em in a tree museum
And they charged the people
Twenty-five bucks just to see ’em
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

Hey farmer farmer
Put away your DDT now
Give me spots on my apples
But leave me the birds and the bees
Please
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

Late last night
I heard the screen door slam
And a big yellow taxi
Carried off my old man
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

ARosa
ARosa
  no one
December 29, 2018 7:56 am

Joni Mitchell’s lyrics and song

no one
no one
  ARosa
December 29, 2018 8:45 am

Thanks… didn’t realize it was not Amy Grant’s original.

CCRider
CCRider
December 28, 2018 6:17 pm

When I was a boy in the 60’s my dad owned a construction business with his dad and brothers. The liquor store was owned by a neighbor. Another one owned the local laundry service. Another an appliance store, Etc, Etc. Proprietors and sovereign individuals. All now gone to the huge and emotionless ‘big box’ stores that are soulless. This article made me miss those days terribly. It was a time ‘gone with the wind”.

I wonder if that portends another ‘civil’ war.

Good luck with future endeavors, Jim.

Big Dick
Big Dick
December 28, 2018 6:48 pm

Hey dumbfuck contact the Hardscrapple Farmer and have him tell you how to live the good life!!

miforest
miforest
December 28, 2018 7:10 pm

lived in rural Michigan in the late 70’s and early 80’s as a high school and college student. I remember everything you said about the 80’s and then some. The mega farms you talk about as well as the mega meat processors are HUGE users of illegal immigrant labor . Look at the molly tibbins case in Iowa .
They also use access to near zero percent interest rate financing to buy up land and mechanization to gain advantage over the smaller farmers.
they are a huge force in the GOP. they are why the republicans will not allow E-verify or a border wall. It was clear to me when W bush was pushing amnesty for illegals during his 2nd term that the establishment didn’t give a crap about its base.
I’ve got no answers here . The billionaires have completely corrupted both parties . They own the media . Trump doesn’t really stand a chance against them , but I give I’m complete credit for trying.

We had 40 acres. we had a few hogs, chickens and a cow or two. we raised them for our own use , and sold a little corm that was excess to our needs . dad worked for GTE and mom stayed home. It was a great way to live.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  miforest
December 28, 2018 8:09 pm

i just put something up on the tesla thread that links to brietbart–i didn’t read it but one of the side articles was about mollie tibbets mom taking in an immigrant youth–
what effing virtue signaling–
as far as the mega farms or mega anything,i believe you’re correct about the big guys using credit to crowd out other small businesses–if they can build any type of biz into a behemoth w/o artificial stimulation,more power to them but i’m not sure that’s what’s happening–

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
December 28, 2018 7:45 pm

The new population of this country lacks the enzymes in their stomachs to digest milk products.
The parent’s dairy farm, sold to pay off squabbling children, sits empty, rotting.
Grow veggies, get rid of the chickens come winter and go south for the cold days.
Watch as the country goes wild, slowly, then quicker goes crazy.
Keep a back lot, out of the way a bit, to come back to, well prepared, but not so to the casual eye.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  Old Toad of Green Acres
December 29, 2018 11:40 am

The Wheel may turn back to smaller agrarian communities in the future as energy-hungry economies of scale fail, but before that comes about, there will have to be some serious societal upheavals.
When the banks, government, and corporates have nothing left to profit from there will be nothing left but the land – if they don’t manage to ruin it while killing many in the process.

During the early 20th Century almost one-third of Americans lived and worked on rural farms. Now most of the population is coastal urbanites. I can give you one guess how things eventually end before we go back to horses and the rural life.

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
December 28, 2018 8:01 pm

My family failed as farmers in scotland before failing in america in the 1880’s. Tough life for sure.

TampaRed
TampaRed
December 28, 2018 8:24 pm

good luck to you jim–
i’d like to ask you & any other farmers who are on this blog,who is helped or hurt the most by subsidies?
also,can farmers make a living w/o subsidies ,and w/o help from govt in times such as this when we are in world competition?

starfcker
starfcker
  TampaRed
December 28, 2018 10:58 pm

Tampa, I can give you a pretty good answer on that. It will have to be another time though, it’s kind of long. Remind me in the next few days

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  starfcker
December 29, 2018 12:43 am

I’m looking forward to that, starfcker.

no one
no one
  starfcker
December 29, 2018 7:45 am

I will look forward to it, as well. In the early 70s, I remember my own father railing against the subsidies to farmers, refusing to participate and watching as all the farms around ours seemed to thrive. Perhaps you can help me understand why all those farms are now owned by one or two corporate farmers and the families all gone.

Is why we chose hill country… nobody wants to farm in hill country. But, they will be coming to poison the land soon, I imagine. And to try to take our water rights. Then it will get ugly.

yahsure
yahsure
December 28, 2018 8:33 pm

Nebraska used to have so many farms and farmers. Now? All bought up by mega-farms.One owner with miles of land. I have talked to my kids about what Walmart has done.

James
James
December 28, 2018 8:46 pm

A sad tale,but you left on your own terms and found the cows hopefully a nice life.I hope to do it very small scale for meself and perhaps a few friends,though goats instea dof cows for milk and cheese/small vegetable plot,perhaps a few chickens.My biggest hinderance is first making sure the critters taken cared of and a new home set up so in case I die ect. they are not abandoned,same with any household pets..

TC
TC
December 28, 2018 9:54 pm

My Mom’s folks had a small dairy operation, but quit sometime in the 80’s. They never made enough money at it for my Granddad to quit his day job(s) but kept at it for decades. I’m not sure why they gave up on it – maybe it was the increasingly burdensome regulations, the last of their kids (i.e. slave labor) leaving the nest, or maybe my Grandma was just fucking worn out from milking cows by hand twice a day every day no matter who was sick, or how bad, or how hot or cold, or how deep the snow was. I still remember as a wide-eyed kid the sounds, sights and smells as the giant but gentle cows would saunter into the barn one at a time, on cue from my Grandmother’s call, to honor the mutual report they had with her. The anxious barnyard cats would all be lined up in a row hoping for some spillage from the bucket to the cooler, and would all simultaneously scatter once shot with a single tactical squirt of milk as my Grandma giggled. Of course once they had cleaned themselves, they were back in formation eagerly looking for more.

no one
no one
  TC
December 29, 2018 7:52 am

We had just one milk cow, appropriately named Jersey. She was a pet to us all.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
December 28, 2018 10:00 pm

Do you want to help farmers like this poor guy? Then don’t buy corporate shit in the big grocery stores!

All the meat in my freezer cames from 2 or 3 small farmers who raise grass-fed meat. I’ve been to their farms and verified I’m getting real food.

I have a freezer full of berries and fruit from small local farms that I purchased in the summer on the farms. Vegetables in the summer come from farmers markets where I can talk to the growers and get comfortable with the methods they use to grow the food. In winter I go to a local small grocery chain that primarily sells fresh food from real small farmers.

It takes time and effort to eat real food and support small farmers like this guy. So if you care, make an effort to find real food rather then bitching on the internet.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Trapped in Portlandia
December 28, 2018 10:49 pm

That will never happen..cheap is all that matters. I have preached for decades to buy American made goods. But nope, people buy cheap, no matter what.

Mexico wages are $3 an hour for advanced industrial jobs, versus $30 an hour in the US. That means Mexican goods are cheaper, which means they will be bought at the expense of US jobs. Which means that manufacturing as a source of US jobs, even if automation were not going to kill manufacturing as a source of US jobs anyway, will be lost to Mexico. Or China, Thailand,etc. Cheap is all that matters to the US consumer.

The US middle class is doomed. There is no saving it. It was a temporary blip that occurred as a result of the confluence of several factors that will not repeat again in the lifetimes of any that are living in the US today.

The strongest, smartest, etc., will thrive. The rest will serve them. Same as it ever was. Prepare your family to take advantage of the opportunities, else they will be the servants to those that are prepared.

Fatman
Fatman
  Llpoh
December 29, 2018 11:38 am

No different from Aussie consumers, who sprout oi, oi, oi but buy cheap, cheap cheap.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  Llpoh
December 29, 2018 11:56 am

I see at least one person doesn’t comprehend the economic truth behind that post.
Years ago Ford had union jobs paying $20/hr. for unskilled assembly line workers in or near Connersville, Indiana. Guess what, dem jerbs don’t exist anymore and the Ford truck I own was assembled in Canada. We have two Toyotas, as well.
Unions pricing themselves out of the cheaper international labor markets at the expense of corporate profit margins is the reason why.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Trapped in Portlandia
December 29, 2018 12:50 am

Trapped, I always buy organic, grass-fed meat and dairy, poultry, naturally raised pork. My other groceries are organic. I don’t have many farmers markets or local farmers around me that sell organic and/or grass-fed so I usually order online or try to find it at a local grocery store. It can be hard to support local farmers if they’re not selling what you want to buys, which, for me, is always organic.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
December 28, 2018 10:45 pm

I feel for this guy. I really do. But I’ve never understood what farmers meant by “getting a fair price”. There’s no product where the price is determined by how much the producer would like to be paid. It’s true that some products won’t be made if they don’t fetch enough to pay for the labor to produce them. MacDonalds won’t stay open paying people $15/hour if consumers will only spend $3 for a meal. That’s precisely farmers’ problem, though. The fact that many of them will do it to earn less than minimum wage (while paying their bills by driving truck or whatever) is a big part of why they – in the aggregate – don’t get a “fair price”. Their love of the farming lifestyle – to the point of working for almost nothing – is why they earn so little. Once enough people quit, those who stay in it should be able to earn a better living. Easy for me to say, I know. It sucks that they can’t make a decent income doing things the way they used to, but as said above, that’s true of a lot of businesses. My college roommate’s family owned a TV repair shop.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iska Waran
December 28, 2018 11:43 pm

People just have no concept of markets and how they work. They go into business knowing nothing about cycles and trading.

Chicago’s futures markets started out by trading breakfast: butter and eggs. Farmers should know how to position themselves for economic events and secure prices for their goods, and that means becoming competent traders. The same goes for other businesses that produce and/or consume commodities and their derivatives, and for people who get involved with financial instruments like mortgages.

We have a boom in centralization, central planning and dictatorship in progress. That boom will reverse. What will happen if thousand-mile supply lines get cut between farm, market, and cities, let alone supply lines crossing oceans? What about political risks that likely will end in war and destruction?

Who will have the skills to produce anything/ i just became a senior citizen and depending on Millennial American rubbish people scares me senseless!

Americans will likely be playing musical chairs on a ruined continent, fighting for scraps. Commodity prices will soon rise in a new cycle, partly because the number of producers have diminished and partly because of the looming supply line issues.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  Anonymous
December 29, 2018 12:20 am

What do you mean by the reversal of booming centralization and looming supply line issues?

e.d ott
e.d ott
  Donkey Balls
December 29, 2018 12:00 pm

LOL amazing

no one
no one
  Anonymous
December 30, 2018 9:13 am

It seems a lifetime ago that I attended a “How to…” class about storing food for really long term use. A pair of 60-something grandparents were canning chickens and rabbit like mad fiends to provide for themselves into their twilight years, as well as feed their kids and grandkids during TEOTWAWKI.

I have noticed the closing of at least local markets, family owned, since Dollar General put in a store in a little town of less than 100 people. If the big trucks don’t deliver the processed food to Dollar General, that hundred people will be hungry.

Frank
Frank
  Iska Waran
December 29, 2018 6:26 pm

Farmers buy seed, fertilizer, etc, at retail prices at the store. They then sell their produce at wholesale prices set by the people they sell to.
It was interesting to see how grain prices dropped just before harvest season, then went back up again after harvest was over. Things settled down a bit after enough farmers built enough storage facilities to store grain – if they could afford to hold it.

A
A
  Iska Waran
December 29, 2018 8:33 pm

Well said. The market determines the price. If you can’t scale up as a family farm to produce the volume necessary to survive you should leave and find a different career. Not any different than the buggy whip maker being put out of business by Henry Ford. Yes, I will shed a tear for the family farm. Is industrial agriculture better for us, likely not. Should we expect things to remain the same in perpetuity, absolutely not.

My grandfather was a dairy farmer in rural MN. He quit in the early 1980’s, retiring before he was bankrupted. My mother says they never were wealthy, it was a hard scratch life since forever. The farmers I know today say dairy farming is for suckers because its the most work for the least reward. Sounds about right. Lately all the farmers around me are moaning about tariffs and not being able to sell their soy to China. They can’t wait out a year or so for the Chinese to cave due to starvation because the rest of the world can’t out produce American agriculture. Why not? Because they are all up to their eyeballs in debt. $500k for a new tractor, $60k for a new pickup, mortgage on the land, etc. etc. Farming can be wildly profitable but the debt monkey gets a lot of them. Modern farmers should be going to college to learn finance and business. It’s capital intensive but those outlays need to be managed better than your average low credit car buyer.

starfcker
starfcker
  A
December 29, 2018 11:16 pm

People shouldn’t opine on things they know nothing about. You make a few good points, but the rest is bullshit.

A
A
  starfcker
December 30, 2018 1:39 pm

Are you a farmer? While I am not I have worked in agriculture and still have many family connected to the industry. Some of my best friends are farmers. They’ve all incorporated and run their farms like a business. Plan for worst case scenarios. Keep debt manageable. I opine the comments they’ve made. “I wish I learned more about business in college than crop nutrients.”

starfcker
starfcker
  A
December 30, 2018 11:27 pm

Yes I am. And a business major. I did say you made a few good points.

starfcker
starfcker
  Iska Waran
December 29, 2018 11:13 pm

None of that is true, Iska. Farming is different. None of what you were saying is relevant

Didius Julianus
Didius Julianus
December 28, 2018 10:50 pm

Unfortunately,the same old problem (corruption of everything) is the real issue here as he describes:

“When six dairy farms in Texas feed their thousands of cows a diet of organic grain and stored forage, with no discernible access to a blade of grass, they end up producing more milk than all 453 organic dairy farms in Wisconsin combined.”

Sorry, that is not organic in any moral and ethical sense of the word although it may now be so “legally” in the U.S.

Ginger
Ginger
  Didius Julianus
December 29, 2018 7:53 am

As the demand for “organic” rose, which is a word owned by the Federal Government by the way, the rules became more relaxed. In the old days to have something organic meant also no non-organic anything used in production, the trucks used to haul feed, the equipment, everything, even the boards in the barns.
Monsanto changed all of that.
The problem is that this nation expects cheap food.

no one
no one
  Didius Julianus
December 29, 2018 7:55 am

“Organic” is what the USeless government says it is. And, by the way, “legally” is also owned by the government, so be careful how you interpret it.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 12:58 am

Jim, I curious as to why you didn’t keep a few cows just so you could produce your own milk, butter and sour cream. It sure beats having to buy from a store.

By the way, I hate big-box stores. Problem is, they put the small, family-owned businesses out of business and then you’re stuck with nothing else. That’s why I have to do a lot of my shopping online. I try to support individuals and family businesses, even if they’re located somewhere else.

The crony capitalism in this country needs to stop. Knowing “important” people and having connections trumps hard work in this system, and that’s just plain wrong.

JimmyTorpedo
JimmyTorpedo
  Vixen Vic
December 30, 2018 7:26 pm

I do my shopping by telling my foremans’ son that I want 6 fresh eggs, a tub of cream and a ball of cheese the next morning when they come to milk my cows. The rest I go pick myself from the garden before supper.
The hardest part is convincing my friends to bring me 6 tubes of fluoride free toothpaste or a giant bag of shelled pumpkin seeds when they come to visit from Canada.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  JimmyTorpedo
December 30, 2018 9:29 pm

You’re a lucky man, JimmyTorpedo.

Hank
Hank
December 29, 2018 7:57 am

I am sure this won’t be a popular post here. We all like the nostalgic notion of the family farm. However, the reality is that doesn’t work to feed a country of over 300 million. The cost of production, storage , transport, volume all work against the small individual farm. While we all may get teary eyed over someone losing their farm if it weren’t for modern production methods as odorous as they may be, most of us would starve. Most on this site celebrate capitalism, well folks, this is capitalism, ruthless and efficient. Think I’ll have a cold inexpensive glass of cold milk from my energy efficient Fridge.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Hank
December 29, 2018 8:06 am

Hank, if it were capitalism, that would be fine, but we’re talking about crony capitalism, which is a different animal entirely. In others words, it’s soft Fascism, as Ron Paul calls it. It’s not a level playing field for those working hard to get somewhere compared to those connected and in the know (and on the take).

starfcker
starfcker
  Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 11:17 pm

Great post, Vic

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  starfcker
December 30, 2018 9:30 pm

Thank you, Star.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Hank
December 29, 2018 8:14 am

By the way, organic farming feeds more people than chemical farming. Strengthening and rejuvenating the soil is what keeps bugs and other problems away. Chemical fertilizers cause nothing but problems. There are more than four chemicals in your soil. Feed your soil, along with crop rotation, and you will experience a bounty of harvests.
I suggest you investigate this on YouTube. There are plenty of videos on this subject.

no one
no one
  Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 8:38 am

I suspect most of the illness in our country is caused by nutritional poisoning or deficiency. One only has to follow the acceptance, approval and widespread use of high fructose corn syrup to discover how a non-food becomes part of our diet, thanks to regulatory agencies being ignorant of the issues and products they regulate. Take a peek at what kinds of sawdust is allowed in Paremesan cheese and you might reconsider buying blocks of cheese from a local dairy. If you can find one, that is. We are fortunate to be close to an Amish market, but you know the government will be after them soon, as well.

For many of us who worked in and around government agencies for long periods of time, we grasp how terribly inefficient ALL government agencies function. While individuals may be there trying hard to make a difference (until they get reprimanded for making others look bad by union reps), the entire bureaucracy is wired to slow the process down for any reason whatsoever to make it work as its average worker works. The average worker is a sloth.

My personal opinion is that the word “Organic” stamped on food items simply means “Fees have been paid to FDA to use the word ‘organic’ on the label.”

REALLY? There are Great Value (Walmart TM) items that are officially “Organic?” Really?

IluvCO2
IluvCO2
  Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 8:57 am

Organic farming can and does definitely work. Read any of the books written by Joel Salatin. I particularly like “Everything I want to do is illegal”. It lays out nicely what organic farmers are up against from the government/corportate thugs. Loosen those restrictions and they can be very profitable and feed many mouths. I’ve actually visited his farm in Virginia, very impressive. Hardscrabble does this on a smaller scale.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  IluvCO2
December 29, 2018 12:11 pm

Thank you! One of several great posts here.
In one loose paragraph, you just explained the basic issues that put corporate agriculture at odds with small-scale profitable farming. There are people going to college prep classes who’d spend a semester trying to put that on paper sensibly.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  IluvCO2
December 29, 2018 12:39 pm

Joel Salatin is a brilliant man whose books are very much worth reading.

no one
no one
  IluvCO2
December 29, 2018 2:12 pm

Have read several of Salatin’s books.

We are blessed to have gotten this 40 acre plot with acreage cut only for hay with occasional cattle and/or horses to keep down undergrowth. With about half in woodland, hunting is good, but the soil is rich and grows wonderful grains for baling. No chemicals, probably ever, since it has been owned by the realtor for decades prior to selling to me.

It is well fertilized with rabbit and goat refuse now. Am planning to farm organic, but I will not be seeking government approval to use the word on any label.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  IluvCO2
December 30, 2018 9:36 pm

IluvCO2, I haven’t had a chance to read any of Joel Salatin’s books but I’ve seen plenty of videos with him. The man is amazing and smart and knows what he’s doing.
Another person who’s books I have read is Eliot Coleman. He does good gardening work as well.

Also, I’ve read that regular farmers get government subsidies, but organic and biodynamic farmers do not. Anybody know if this is true?

Not Sure
Not Sure
  Hank
December 29, 2018 10:05 am

Heart breaks for the writer of the story at the loss of his life’s work, but I also had the same thought; how else do you feed millions of people except by adopting the mega farms factory way of producing food?
Call it what you want, but for you to purchase chicken at your local Costco, there must be a factory of butchers raising chickens in less than humane ways to keep up with the demand.
“Organic” adds 20% or so more to the cost, but think that term means the chicken may be run through a field a few times in its life before it makes it to your table.
I don’t like it any more than you, but the reality of life is what it is. The idea of returning to mom and pop farms means returning to population levels where the neighborhood farms could adequately meet the supply needs of the population.
Not one of my rosier posts.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  Not Sure
December 29, 2018 12:37 pm

At some point the corporate farming model will take a hard hit and population levels will return to a level where rural life can support subsistence farming for profit … but like you said, there will have to be a large reduction in population and a big socio-cultural change for it to happen.
I’m pretty sure that’s coming because energy and food supply production won’t be keeping up with another several billion people in the future, especially if TPTB decide to fight a war over economic resources. More likely there will be several billion people less.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
  e.d. ott
January 15, 2019 7:35 pm

In my opinion, the political class needs to take a hard hit in order for family farming to return to a profitable level. No government, no regulations!

Stucky
Stucky
December 29, 2018 11:06 am

“I sold my herd of cows this summer. The herd had been in my family since 1904;”

Ho Lee Fuk!!! Those cows were 114 years old?? (I guess that’s were ‘aged’ cheese comes from?)

Sorry for asking … I’m just a city boy.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
December 29, 2018 2:13 pm

That means they bred & raised all of their replacement cows over the years from the beginning heard.

no one
no one
  Anonymous
December 29, 2018 6:42 pm

He’s being a wise ass from NJ… RiNS has been a bad influence.

nkit
nkit
  Anonymous
December 30, 2018 10:03 pm

that’s what I heard..

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
  nkit
January 15, 2019 7:36 pm

Or herd?

green acres
green acres
December 29, 2018 11:53 am

I think it will be pretty funny (big wheel of cosmic justice-wise) when the illegal Mexicans lose their $5/hr jobs to illegal central americans who will work for $3/hr.

TampaRed
TampaRed
December 29, 2018 12:23 pm
TampaRed
TampaRed
December 29, 2018 12:29 pm

meanwhile in china,cockroach farms for waste disposal,cosmetics,and food–
a hidden nugget in the article,crickets are being used in protein bars–how many of you eat them?

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2018/12/29/cockroach-farming-in-china.aspx?utm_source=dnl&utm_medium=email&utm_content=art2&utm_campaign=20181229Z1_UCM&et_cid=DM256219&et_rid=506077811

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  TampaRed
December 29, 2018 12:52 pm

Chinese people will eat almost anything and turn tiger penis or deer horn to “pharmaceuticals”. They even put poisonous melamine in doggie food for a cheap buck.
But in Chinese cultural superstition, crickets are supposed to be lucky.

It’s bad juju when people eat crickets, but it’s probably a state-run cooperative farm, that’s why. The State will have no ethical problems jumping the food chain as long as people eat.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  e.d. ott
December 29, 2018 2:35 pm

those bars w/crickets are being sold in america–

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  TampaRed
December 30, 2018 11:37 am

Crickets are edible. They’re eaten throughout in Asia. Even sold in restaurants there. People over here make videos and write articles about eating bugs, including crickets, usually for emergency purposes. It’s something we’re lucky we don’t have to rely on as do people in other countries.

no one
no one
  Vixen Vic
December 30, 2018 1:16 pm

was taught in survival school grasshoppers and crickets are protein, but you should roast them to get rid of parasites. Fortunately, I had a lighter with me, as well as cigarettes. Haha…

TampaRed
TampaRed
  no one
December 30, 2018 2:56 pm

“was taught in survival school …”
wouldn’t sending you to survival school be a waste of $?
i assume that means surviving after a plane crash?it’s been my understanding that people on the big planes did not have parachutes so what are the chances you would have survived anything but a normal or near normal landing?

no one
no one
  TampaRed
December 30, 2018 8:20 pm

Our chances were most assuredly zero in a crash situation. However, it was a prerequisite to entering the flight training program. It was just the basic survival course at Fairchild. No arctic or special water training. And, At least they just simulated dropping us in a parachute instead of wasting another week or so teaching us to tuck and roll. They knew those of us flying the heavies were not going to be rolling anywhere.

So, yes… a waste of money for sure. But that is what the military folks do very well. It is just monopoly money, is the saying.

As a radar tech, my station was near the back and my additional duties included controlling the rear entry and galley service doors. I always figured if I timed it JUST right, I could just step out the back door. LOL

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  no one
December 30, 2018 10:31 pm

No One, I bet you would like the videos of “Corporals Corner” on YouTube. He went to the Pathfinder School to become an instructor in bushcraft/survivalism, and he’s a former Marine. I carry No. 36 bank line instead of paracord in my BOB/camping gear because of this guy. He gives really good instructions on the things he does. Here’s an example of his videos.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  no one
December 30, 2018 10:00 pm

Also make sure you remove their barbed legs. You don’t want to eat that.

gilberts
gilberts
  Vixen Vic
December 30, 2018 10:50 pm

I’ve eaten crickets. They weren’t bad. Not my go-to, but edible. Roasted with ranch-flavor was just fine.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  gilberts
December 30, 2018 11:17 pm

I always wondered what crickets and locusts would taste like. Probably like chicken, right?

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  e.d. ott
December 30, 2018 9:59 pm

I think the Christian heritage of the majority of people in the U.S. and Europe over the years resulted in what was considered “right” to eat. Though the Jewish dietary laws didn’t apply to Christians, many people believed the laws kept them healthy. People living in countries like Asia and Africa didn’t have religious laws that kept them from eating any and everything that moved, especially anything containing protein. (Exceptions, Jews and later Muslims, and Hindus who consider the cow sacred.) And those foods included moths, crickets, ants, termites, dogs, cats and horses, which many still eat.
I remember reading an article online about an Asian man who was caught setting traps in parks catching stray cats, which his family ate. People were freaked out by that in the comments section. Can’t remember which state it was in because it’s been a while since I read the article. But people of different cultures and people of different religions do different things.

beau
beau
December 29, 2018 12:37 pm

a metaphor for the entire nation.

Suds
Suds
December 29, 2018 12:52 pm

Love the tips and knowledge here.
Choctaw’s comment about most buyers favoring cheap over quality and healthy organic…spot on.
By my reckoning, 80-90% of the problems people bitch about all source back economically, to the loss in value of money, and stealth inflation by the Fed.
Everybody wants more money.
Everything costs more.
99% ers are people trying to stretch a buck wherever possible. With the evil Corporations, they cut labor costs, and supplier costs.
It’s all a viscous cycle-spiral heading lower, directly a result of fractional reserve banking and the greed of the 1% who dominate, rule, corrupt, plunder, and control.
Filthy lucre.
Yes Sir, the middle class is slowly eroding, and wealth disparity gap widening.
Not sure what can effectively be done to reverse course.
Fixing the money might, but probably won’t gain traction.
Since 1913 in the U.S. …Slowly.
Maybe back even way further than that.
Wealth redistribution schemes won’t succeed in solving this.
They have their own laws of unintended consequences.
And if you believe they’re the solution, how much of what you have must be given up to those with less, demanding a share of what you have?
For some, it’s still possible to climb the financial ladder to wealth, but it’s much taller, steeper, and crowded with competition, with many willfully undercutting your expectations of compensation.
Living simple, within your means is still the best strategy, IMHO.
Unattainable goal for far too many, that can’t / won’t adjust to grim realities.
It’s those people that will commit evil, when they can’t feed themselves or their kin.
I’m seeing way more card holding beggars on street corners in my travels through semi-affluent cities & sub divisions.
Things are getting bad, and we’re a black swan or two from some serious widespread desperation.
It’s coming. Plan as best you know how.
Best of Luck, to you and yours, friends.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 29, 2018 2:20 pm

If an economic collapse occurs (or a large EMP strike/ geomagnetic storm), it will cause all those mega farms to cease to exist in short order…. Otherwise, “Get big or get out” will be the epitaph for our civilization, as we loose all of our small businesses and fall under the slavery of Kleptocracy.

john
john
December 29, 2018 3:03 pm

So sad

wdg
wdg
December 29, 2018 3:57 pm

This heartbreaking story brought tears to my eyes. I grew up on a small farm in New Brunswick where my father raised beef and dairy cows, sheep and chickens. I didn’t appreciate it at the time but I was fed organic foods; my father refused to buy processed or what he considered to be junk food. Back in those days after the WWII, it was possible to support a large family with the income generated from a small farm and just about everyone in this community farmed. My father sold milk, cream, butter, eggs, beef, lamb and chickens to a grocery store and some of the more wealthy homes in the nearby town. By the 1960s, it was no longer possible to raise a family by farming alone which forced my father to work off the farm during the day. The daily routine consisted of getting up at 6 am, feeding the animals followed by a substantial breakfast cooked by my Mother on a wood Enterprise kitchen stove, drive to work by 8 am, return home for dinner at 5 pm, milk and feed the cows and other animals after dinner plus complete any number of tasks related to farming, and be in bed by about 9:30 pm. The two weeks of summer holidays provided by his employer was set aside for the haying season. Sunday was a day of rest and a time to go to church. Most young people today have no idea of the demands of being a farmer and how hard farmers work.

Skindog
Skindog
December 29, 2018 6:43 pm

As in so many industries and small businesses these days it is nothing less THAN A RACE TO THE BOTTOM. The people and their families pay the ultimate price – some times with their lives. These days heart break and dispair abound. My heart aches for all those souls destroyed.

dunno y
dunno y
December 30, 2018 4:56 am

Diversity is our strength the global government says. But what does a 100yr old farming family diversify into in the mod era. Tourism? Hey European backpacker come and see the last dairy farm in America as the last cultural experience of the place before it all turns to a country like every other western country. Same same same. Corporate fascism yields one result and one result only. Collective punishment. My empathy sir and not forgotten.
What over paid and over corrupt politician in the history has milked a cow? Name one. Nancy the price of luxury in Hawaii could have been better spent on Ken’s property learning to milk a cow instead of milking the tax payer. They came for the jew but I didn’t care they where Jew and didn’t care for me. Then they came for the industrial worker and I cared some but didn’t understand. Now they come yet again for the family farmer and I’m ropeable because I understand rain on the scarecrow blood on the plow. Business they say yet life is not a business it is life. You all owe me for the air I let you breath said the globalist now pay up or die. Oh you make money on your cows then pay up for the air they breath as well. Progress is business, F that hard what an asinine cop out.

flash
flash
December 30, 2018 9:26 am

Bigger is better . We have to grow . Even if that means importing millions of third worlders and destroying the environment, culture and community along with it.

GRAVELMAN
GRAVELMAN
December 31, 2018 10:00 am

Scarecrow on a wooden cross blackbird in the barn
Four hundred empty acres that used to be my farm
I grew up like my daddy did my grandpa cleared this land
When I was five I walked the fence while grandpa held my hand
Rain on the scarecrow blood on the plow
This land fed a nation this land made me proud
And son I’m just sorry theres no legacy for you now
Rain on the scarecrow blood on the plow
Rain on the scarecrow blood on the plow….