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Hi Folks,
The letters and emails keep rolling in regarding recent reports
about the Farm Bureau leadership. This OP-ED piece is written
by farm bureau farmer Chris Peterson. He asked that
you help get this published. Please contact your local editor
and ask them to please run this important editorial.
Thanks,
Scotty Johnson
Rural Community Outreach Coordinator
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chris Petersen
1-515-357-4090
I have become
involved in the food policy debate in this country from the local
through state to the national level with unending energy to bring
awareness of and to family farmers, consumers, and taxpayers.
My activity got the attention and interest of Mike
Wallace and “60 Minutes” as you all now
know! I do this with the thought that someday soon
we will get a change in ag. policy and create
opportunities which my grandparents came from Denmark and
Ireland to pursue which are now being stolen by corporate
America. Agribusiness is eliminating us by the thousands
while our Farm Bureau and political leaders watch and do
nothing. As a family farmer and Farm Bureau member of many
years, I am disappointed and feel betrayed by Farm Bureau
leadership. In the 1980’s, Dean Kleckner, past
president of American Farm Bureau Federation told us, we
family farmers should adopt new technology, put our
families to work in town, raise mor crops and livestock to save
our family farms. We all have, and we are still
losing thousands of family farmers every year due to a
failed farm policy.
I am going to share with the reason for Farm Bureau’s tax
exempt status.
“An organization representing the rural community and
dedicated to improving net farm income and the quality of
life.”
Guess what? They have failed miserably. Our rural
drain of people, small town main streets, schools, hospitals, and
equity continues to be lost at a record pace. Farm Bureau brags
that they are the #14 lobbying group in Washington
D.C. This does not take into account all of their state
lobbying efforts in the legislative process.
For decades, Farm Bureau has had within their hands the power
to make things right for rural America. Right now in this
crisis they especially have the power to change farm policy.
Why are they not doing it? Farm Bureau needs to be held
accountable for its misrepresentation of independent production
agriculture past and present!
While most people assume that Farm Bureau only represents
farmers, their membership of 5 million is in fact insurance holders,
agribusiness interests, financial entities, and some farmers.
What is the actual percentage of their total membership who are
family farmers? With at most 1.9 million farmers left on the land, we
know why many of these are not Farm Bureau members.
The farmer membership is dressed down and misled from the
leadership and their agribusiness friends. For instance, in
Iowa, the Farm Bureau leadership held “listening”
sessions around the state last summer. The major issue at every
session was the failed farm policy called “Freedom to
Farm.” By the time the leadership put together policy, the
basic farm policy was no longer an issue, except for a few minor
changes. We at the grassroots are told, “we should all speak
with one voice.” If you only agree on a couple of
issues, we should work with leadership on these and forget about the
rest. This is not democracy or freedom of speech.
The taxpayers are sending billions out here to help
farmers. The majority is going to large-scale operators and not
family farmers. Consumers are paying twice for this food
policy. Before, we had an agriculture policy that provided
farmers with a decent living and consumers affordable food while our
rural communities prospered! With Freedom to Farm, we now
are going broke and the taxpayer has had no choice but to provide
this “bailout” of $22 billion last year. In reality all
these multi-nationals are getting their raw products (grain,
livestock, etc.) bought at under the cost of
production (or worse yet---becoming the “farmer” ) at the
expense of family farmers, rural communities, and the taxpayer
. It is really a corporate subsidy for agribusiness in addition
to record profits for agribusiness. Consumers are paying the
same or more while the gap between the farm and retail price
continues to expand.
A lot of us family farmers have decided enough is enough –
Farm Bureau, National Pork Producers Council, and most other
commodity groups don’t represent us anymore because of their ties
to corporate America. This is one reason why we had
the Rally for Rural America which I was involved in. The
National Farmers Union, Family Farm Coalition, and smaller family
farm organizations are working hard for family farms. I
encourage the press to carry our message to all farmers
to take a long hard look at your farm organizations and
commodity groups. Do they have yours, the consumer,
and the nation’s best interest at heart? Or do
they only care about their own special
“self-interests”!
I personally have and encourage everyone to tune up the
pickup, buy some low cost airline tickets for some trips to Des
Moines and Washington D.C., and kick over some rocks to see what’s
there and what runs out! Like farming it’s good
to be working for our own destiny for a change –
Besides, every politician, organization, etc. have been more than
eager to hear from actual family farmers instead of disconnected
leadership – and the list of friendships and allies never quits
growing!
Remember, ag. policy is food policy. It concerns all
Americans. Who do you want producing and controlling your food?
Family farmers or the multinationals?
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