Monday, November 24, 2008

My record is broken

Same stuff, I know, I know. But I find it important to constantly acknowledge the GOOD that came out of industrialized farming and the loads of other niceties we possess because of the industrial and agricultural "revolutions" of the past 150 years. Pretty easy to cast stones and propose blind solutions that pay no respect to what has come before us and that so many innovations came from the best intentions. I think it helps us meet in the middle to do so.
Thanks, Rancho Cappuccino:
"This is no chicken-little scenario. Agribusiness is not destroying the human habitat (although it probably could, given time). We need to give due credit to the architects of the first “green revolution.” The benefits of agricultural productivity are real. We have fed a lot more people than would have been possible without technology. But a lot of people believe that the world would be a better place if we re-focused agricultural priorities on local food, environmental preservation and healthy farmers.
Agriculture’s green revolution underlines in a powerful way this basic biological fact: We live at the expense of other creatures. Every living thing does. We can, through symbiotic relationships or good husbandry, cooperate with other creatures to increase biological productivity overall, but at the end of the day if we disappeared, other living things would take advantage of the resources we no longer consumed.
And because I am alive — because you are alive — a lot of other creatures never get the chance to live. "

1 comment:

Adam Szczepanski said...

aren't most famines politically driven?

peace through commerce is cool.