From the category archives:

Farm Crisis

The Future of Food

by Ross Hunter on October 8, 2009

If you haven’t seen The Future of Food you can now watch the whole film at Hulu.com – it has a commercial every 15 minutes but otherwise it’s the best quality view online. The movie homesite is here.

The story tells of the Monsanto corporation in its incredibly ruthless drive to create a monopoly of seed and insecticide through genetic patents. Hear how framers in Canda were successfully sued for growing Monsanto’s genetically modified grain after the seed had blown into their fields. No word of trespass by the Monsanto seed, or how genetic modification is entering the food supply chain in this unregulated way.

At root in this story is the landmark decision to allow companies to take out patents on the elements of living things. This has gone beyond plantlife, as the movie shows us, and now extends into the human gene system. In Mexico, says the film, three attempts had already been made to patent tortillas – a funny joke until we consider how the courts are upholding lawsuits and allowing the jackboot of patent infringement to step on the neck of traditional life.

It will be an alarming story you watch unfold in this film, but you must watch it to know what farmers are up against. You must watch it to understand why the food chain is poisoned, and to see how the courts are helpless in the face of corporate influence over the law.

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Dave Matthews Explains the Farm Crisis in 3 Minutes

by Ross Hunter on October 5, 2009

A year ago during Farm Aid 2008 I posted a YouTube clip on my Hunter and Associates business site of Dave Matthews giving a brilliant explanation of what’s gone wrong with our food in America, and how to change it back.  I like what I said back then – and I LOVE what he said – so I’m going to copy my post pretty much verbatim here, as follows.

The argument for agribusiness is that larger operations can produce food more efficiently, but what if part of the goodness of our food comes from the goodness of the people who grow it? What if bringing the efficiencies of modern corporate methods has poisoned the land and made the crops not worth eating?

The singer Dave Matthews spoke at Farm Aid 2008, and gave a beautifully warm yet penetratingly logical description – in 3 minutes – of how the corporate approach to farming has been destroying the nutritive quality of our food as well as our ecological habitat. And he explained why this happens.

Take a listen:


Farm Aid 2008 – Dave Matthews Speaks Out

I love the way he delineates in 3 minutes the values that will have to prevail in the economics of sustainability. He talks about money, and how money works regardless of how we are – how, in fact, money cannot care, is philosophically opposed to caring about us.
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