Local news, national news, facebook, twitter, newspaper, tabloids, magazines, and email. These are just a few of the places that people these days can get their news and information that build their take on society. Now take a minute to think about that and what that means to you… Scary. All but two or three of those are dominated by profit seeking, corporate giants so their goal is not going to be to spread the unbiased truth, they’re going to be to give the best information that makes them money. I will admit that most news has done a better job recently of having some feel-good stories on there in order to try to put themselves in better light with the public, but it is still heavily skewed.
Ok, so why the rant about public media? When you are passionate about something and you see it portrayed in ways that do not give it the justice it deserves it hits really hard. Let me throw you some numbers: in 1870 approximately 75% of the American population was engaged in production agriculture for a living. In the early 20th Century that number was approximately 35%. Today that number is below 2%! In short what that means is that very few people are involved in the production of the food and food products for not only the population of the US, but also many parts of the world. Today the average American farmer can feed 126 people.
Now I’m sure that it would not be news to many of you that farmers today are using a lot of technologies that were not used in the past, among which is GMO (Genetically Modified Organism) seed for production. There have been a lot of questions arisen about using this for production of food and feed. There have also been attacks on the debate of whether to use tillable land for the production of fuel, and on practices of raising animals for consumption. Now for me, a person that has grown up around these things my whole life and that has an understanding of production practices, these accusations and questions are ill advised. If people would take time to think that the very people producing all of this food are people, with real families, that live in real communities. They are feeding their children the very same food that you are feeding yours. Don’t you think this would come to reason that they would take care to make sure the food supply is safe and healthy for consumption? I sure do.
Now, let me make sure I get my point across. I am not attacking the people that are questioning our practices; there is no point in me doing that because that is not going to get us past that. I am instead challenging two audiences. I am challenging the general population to listen to all sides of the story, to ask a farmer about his farm (and if you can’t find one, let me know, I have a few connections), to be understanding of the situation that the American farmer is in. Even further, I challenge anyone involved in agriculture to speak out. Tell your story to your neighbors, your friends, and your co-workers. Its not always their fault that they don’t understand or that they have questions. It is our job to educate them, and to have healthy conversations with them about the industry that we call home.
So you say, where do I start? It is very daunting, even to me who is trying to actively do this, to think about trying to spread the word to the over 98% of the population that is not brought up in production agriculture. The best answer I can give is start simple. Start with your friends, family, and community. Then beyond that, use your resources! Use the sources I talked about in the first sentence of this blog. Use facebook, tweets, blogs, emails, and even your local news. Its going to take more than a few key people speaking on behalf of the farming population, instead there must be a grassroots movement by everyone.
So, ask a farmer, and if you are within this field SPEAK OUT!