The
Commondreams progressive website features articles on farming and the
food industry. One article advocates the Green New Deal where it
calls for support to family farms,
universal access to healthy foods, and sustainable farming and
land-use practices "that fixes our food system."
Another article,
also focuses upon the GND addressing similar issues, "shifting
of practices away from large scale monocultures towards small and
medium-sized diversified farms. We must wean away from the mass
amounts of toxic chemical pesticides and fertilisers being used, and
instead integrate regenerative practices” arguing “disinvestment
from factory farms is necessary, not only from a climate standpoint,
but from a larger human and environmental health perspective as
well.”
The
goal of an ecological steady-state harmonious relationship between society and nature cannot
be reconciled with capitalism’s insatiable structural compulsion to
grow. The goal of economic justice cannot be reconciled with the
ever-growing polarisation of income and wealth under capitalism. The
goal of peace cannot be reconciled with capitalism’s competitive
struggle for markets and resources. The
goals of the environmentalists confront capitalism’s structural
barriers to their realisation.
The
first point to make is that with socialism farming methods will be
adopted according to health benefits, not wealth benefits and
satisfying genuine hunger not hunger for profits. The proposal that
the world community in socialism could immediately stop deaths from
hunger and rapidly increase the supply of food is based on the
freedom that all people would enjoy to co-operate with each other to
produce food directly for needs without the constraints of the market
system. With food, it is possible to increase production rapidly
because a lot can be done with hand labour. It is not necessary to
first expand means of production. Whilst industry and manufacture may
take time to bring in more machinery and equipment, local initiatives
could mean more people using their local land resources for more
intensive production. But, to begin with, a socialist world could
immediately stop people dying of hunger with a more equal
distribution of scarce supplies. At the same time local initiatives
would greatly improve the supply of food within a very short time
Common
ownership would give all communities immediate access to land. In the
short term, people in the areas of greatest need could concentrate
their local efforts using the best means available. At the same time
the regions most able to do so could assist with increased supplies.
There can be no doubt that throughout the world, within a season, the
plight of the seriously undernourished would be greatly improved.
In
the longer term, communities in socialism would be able to look
beyond the immediate priorities of desperate need and begin to sort
out the appalling state of world agriculture that is a consequence of
the exploitation and destructive methods of capitalist agribusiness.
It not only exploits farm workers of all lands, it exploits the soil
and anything in nature it can get its hands on. There is of course
widespread concern, not just about starving people but also about the
damage and loss of natural food assets across the world. This is the
continuing despoliation of land and ocean resources, the excessive
and inappropriate use of weed killers and chemical fertilisers
together with the cruel treatment of animals. Also within agriculture
we shall be reassessing the relative values of different methods of
producing our food.
We shall be free to look at the results of
studies knowing that there is no hidden agenda or biased information.
When we have the correct, unambiguous facts in front of us decisions
can be made unemotionally about land use. Chemical fertiliser or
natural manure and traditional methods? Monocrops or mixed farms?
Grain for food or fuel? Grain for humans or animals?
With shrinking aquifers and glaciers there is huge wastage of water with some countries' current irrigation methods, poor infrastructure, old or outdated technology in some industries, money-based equations for water use when mining for minerals and a billion dollar business selling bottled water at up to a thousand times the cost of water from the tap with how many thousands of gallons wasted in the process? In the likely future scenario demographics will probably change a great deal but we shall be in a position to totally re-think the use of the global water supply and consider every stage from aquifers, dams, irrigation methods, industrial use and domestic consumption. Water and the infrastructure required will be considered in minute detail as to how best to use, re-use, conserve and generally value it as a basic necessity of all life.
It will make sense in general to reduce food miles – to relocalise agriculture for everyone's benefit. By doing so huge savings will be made in fuel and energy use. But local food production is limited by variations of soil and climate, which means that local projects would contribute to balanced production throughout the regions of the world. On this larger scale the grain-producing regions of America, Canada, Australia and Asia would continue to be important. Wheat, maize and rice are basic to world agriculture and new areas could be developed for the production of these cereals together with the whole range of nutritious fruits and vegetables. With the ending of rival capitalist states and the market system the world community in socialism would have the great advantage of being able to make the best use of the land resources of the planet in whatever location may be considered best. A priority in such decisions would be care of the environment.
With shrinking aquifers and glaciers there is huge wastage of water with some countries' current irrigation methods, poor infrastructure, old or outdated technology in some industries, money-based equations for water use when mining for minerals and a billion dollar business selling bottled water at up to a thousand times the cost of water from the tap with how many thousands of gallons wasted in the process? In the likely future scenario demographics will probably change a great deal but we shall be in a position to totally re-think the use of the global water supply and consider every stage from aquifers, dams, irrigation methods, industrial use and domestic consumption. Water and the infrastructure required will be considered in minute detail as to how best to use, re-use, conserve and generally value it as a basic necessity of all life.
It will make sense in general to reduce food miles – to relocalise agriculture for everyone's benefit. By doing so huge savings will be made in fuel and energy use. But local food production is limited by variations of soil and climate, which means that local projects would contribute to balanced production throughout the regions of the world. On this larger scale the grain-producing regions of America, Canada, Australia and Asia would continue to be important. Wheat, maize and rice are basic to world agriculture and new areas could be developed for the production of these cereals together with the whole range of nutritious fruits and vegetables. With the ending of rival capitalist states and the market system the world community in socialism would have the great advantage of being able to make the best use of the land resources of the planet in whatever location may be considered best. A priority in such decisions would be care of the environment.
The possibility that conservation methods might require
more people would not matter. There would be no economic pressure to
carry on using destructive production methods that use the least
amounts of labour. Certainly in the transition period whilst we are
investing our human energies into appropriate infrastructure we can
cut emissions drastically and restore food security and control to
local communities, always remembering decisions will be made locally.
On the global scale we will move right away from decisions imposed
and implemented by world financial authorities and transnational
corporations in favour of working for the common good. Respect will
automatically be conferred to local knowledge and traditional methods
understanding that the objective will be to satisfy food, fuel
and other needs.
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