Farm Aid Fraud
By Trent Loos
During a speech in Michigan I pointed out that groups like Farm Aid
and Willie Nelson are doing more to get rid of farmers than to benefit
them. Farm Aid funds are siphoned into groups that are filing lawsuits
against family farms. Nearly a dozen lawsuits have been filed against
families in Iowa. In Minnesota, I personally know three families with
lawsuits against them for operating a livestock facility or hoping to
build one.
As I continue to do more research into Farm Aid, I am amazed at the
extent of the ties between Farm Aid and the movement that wants to completely
rid animal agriculture from the U.S.
Farm Aid has acquired millions of dollars because the term “family
farm” has tremendous sentimental value with the American public.
Consumers have been willing to financially contribute to this cause.
This is a HUGE problem because it appears the goal of Farm Aid is return
food production to the 1920s.
If you log onto their website (www.FarmAid.org), the home page tells
you where they stand. A big red sign urges you to purchase a shirt that
says “Stop Factory Farms.” “The Meatrix,” possibly
the single most damaging piece of recent work against agriculture, is
featured. There is a campaign called “Say NO to irradiated meat”.
They urge you to “tell USDA we don’t need genetically engineered
crops.”
Farm Aid’s website includes photos and statements from Farm Sanctuary,
a group that promotes a vegan and vegetarian lifestyle. Farm Sanctuary
put the only two pig farmers in Florida out of business by promoting
a law that bans individual animal housing units for sows. They are currently
supporting legislation in New Jersey and California to put more family
farms out of business.
Farm Aid funds support Concerned Citizens of Iowa (CCI) who brag on
their website “At the local level, CCI helped pass factory farm
moratoriums in four counties and passed ordinances in four other counties.”
Farm Aid funds go to Illinois for the Illinois Stewardship Alliance.
Their purpose is to: Establish and enforce regulations necessary to
protect the health and well-being of rural communities from the negative
results of livestock production facilities. Educate the public as to
the undesirable consequences of livestock production facilities on rural
economic, environmental and social systems.
The Campaign for Family Farms, a group that talks about family farmers
but doesn’t really know any, spearheaded litigation against the
Pork Checkoff. They teamed up with the Western Organization of Resource
Councils (WORC) , a group that leading the charge against the Beef Checkoff.
There are many more groups that benefit from Farm Aid funds and use
them against family farms: The Dakota Resource Council, Northern Plains
Resource Council, and the WORC filed a petition March 11 with the U.
S. Department of Agriculture for a full Environmental Impact Statement
to “address the economic, social, and environmental consequences
of introducing genetically-modified (GM) wheat.”
Let’s not forget The National Family Farm Coalition who “has
been one of the leading farmer advocacy voices that has raised concerns
about the potential effects this new technology (GMO’s) will have
on farmers.”
To top it off, Country Music Television (CMT) recently ran a Farm Aid
documentary. Listed in the credits was none other than “Voice
for Animals,” an animal rights group who’s main goal is
animal liberation.
The more research I do on this subject, the worse it gets. We in agriculture
have allowed the opposition to define a “factory farm” in
comparison to their idealistic “family farm.”
“Factory farms” do not exist. We spend countless hours
trying to educate the public about what really happens in food production.
Meanwhile, the opposition has stolen our best marketing tool by designing
their own image of a “family farm” and using it against
us. They are convincing the American public that we need to roll back
the clock on food production, let our pigs roll in the dirt and leave
our combines in the shed.
What they don’t seem to realize is that fewer farmers are feeding
millions more people today than we did in 1920 and it is predicted that
we will have even more mouths to feed in the very near future. How is
foregoing technology going to help us achieve an end to world hunger?
If farmers need to return to the “American Gothic” way
of life, then shouldn’t everyone else get to join us? Throw out
your computers, color televisions, DVDs and cell phones.
Willie, you should forget about selling CDs that rack in millions of
dollars for your Valentine Road Corporation. You need to be selling
LPs again like you did in the “good old days.” And for the
record Mr. Nelson, I have always liked your songs.
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