Posted on 07/26/2017 2:45:39 PM PDT by artichokegrower
Most of us dont spend our days plowing fields or wrangling cattle. Were part of the 99 percent of Americans who eat food, but dont produce it. Because of our intimate relationship with food, and because it's so crucial to our health and the environment, people should be very concerned about how its produced. But we dont always get it right. Next time youre at the grocery store, consider these 10 modern myths about the most ancient occupation.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Right you are. Three-fourths of farms don not sell enough product to support the producer, who is more of a hobbyist that relies on non-farm income.
https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/chart-gallery/gallery/chart-detail/?chartId=58288
Farmers are pro illegals.
They will ALWAYS work for cheap labor.
Tater chips, not corn chips. Them’s from Indiana.
11. Every person who is an American of African Descent raised pigs during the Obama Administration until the white man came and closed down all those pig farms in those apartments and then Obama gave them back their pigs.
False.
He gave them each $50,000 from the US Taxpayers.
“So, you’re claiming to be a pig farmer?”
“Yeah.”
“What did you feed your pigs?”
“You know....like regular pig food.”
“And that would be?”
“Uh, hay. Hay and kibbles.”
In a small state like Connecticut, which used to be largely agricultural...every so often, a developer will buy land, build a nice housing development, and the dairy farm that borders the development starts to *smell* to the new home owners; legal entanglements ensue, and the old farm goes broke; even if it has been there for generations.
NIMBY mind set.
I can only speak for the farms in my part of our state and not one is owned by large corporations.
We have some large farm owners but they are family owned.
“more of a hobbyist that relies on non-farm income.”
My buddy’s dad became a “gentleman farmer” on his 50 acre farm he got after he retired from teaching. All of his kids say his mom was actually the force behind that idea, just to get him off the couch and out of the house.
There is virtually no dairy farm in the US except for the Amish that uses Americans to milk cows.
There is virtually no dairy farm in the US except for the Amish that uses Americans to milk cows.
So what is?
I suspect that Mexicans using the fields for a bathroom is the chief threat to food safety.
Mexicans shitting in the fields
********** "Corportate-owned" can be a confusing term.
Many farms are family-owned, but the business structure may use a corporation that is closely-held by the members of the farm family. One common arrangement is to have a corporation (or corporations) that owns some of the land, while the actual farm operations are being conducted by an LLC that is owned/controlled by the same family members. The LLC leases the land from the corporation that owns the real estate, even though all the legal entities are owned/controlled by the same family members.
So one person could argue that it is a family farm and a second person could argue that it is corporate farm, and both would technically be true statements.
The Middle Ages called. They want you back.
Folks, he's right again!
3. Farming is traditional and low tech”””
I challenge you to find out the p;rice of a new tractor—combine—cornpicker—or any other piece of farming equipment.
Try the website Machinery Pete.
“There is virtually no dairy farm in the US except for the Amish that uses Americans to milk cows.”
Funny how the owners of those farms will always say they “can’t find any American’s to do the job”, but always leave out the part about “at the low wages I’m paying.”
>> All the Lays chips you eat were grown in northern Michigan <<
Is that because the chip plants don’t do well in the warmer climates down south?
Or maybe the soil chemistry of northern Michigan is uniquely helpful for chip farming, sorta like the soil around Vidalia GA is great for onions?
>> I thought they grew iron ore in Northern Michigan? <<
Maybe the soil that produces good iron orchards is in a different county from the soil that produces good chip orchards? After all, northern MI is a big place.
Also, I wonder if they need to use a lot of immigrant labor at harvest time to pull the ore and the chips down from the trees?
Or maybe the farmers now have harvesting machines to do the work?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.