My Fear of Complacency
By Trent Loos
If you go to the pasture everyday and all cows are there, does that
mean you never need to go around the fence? Even if all cows are accounted
for, you better make sure somebody isn’t looking for an opportunity
to escape. It is becoming more common for us, as farmers, to look at
the trends. The Atkins diet rage means more meat consumption. Combine
that with a shortage of dairy cows and increased milk consumption rumors
suggest twenty-dollar milk may be on the horizon. Things look good.
With some of the best economic times in animal agriculture and crop
production, we may become a little complacent and let holes develop
in our fences. I spend a tremendous amount of time focusing on the Animal
Rights movement. These groups are promoting the myth that animal and
crop farming poses a threat to a healthy environment. There are attacks
leveled against individuals regarding personal property rights. But
none of these things are as dangerous to the dairy industry as the divide
and conquer strategies being implemented against us.
Many find it interesting that I attend animal rights and environmental
conventions and I hear as much about the controversial issues in agriculture
as I do when I attend an event like the AMPI convention. Why is it that
anti-ag activists care about the check-off or country of origin labeling?
They recognize the impact of pitting farmer against farmer.
At the AMPI convention, a SYSCO representative stated that they have
17% of the market and their goal is 50% of the market. I did not get
the feeling that one single person in the audience thought that was
a bad thing. Since SYSCO is one of the best distributors of milk products,
their goal was perceived as a wonderful opportunity. If a group of dairymen
admitted to owning 17% of the cows in production with a goal of owning
50%, they would have been run out on a rail.
The challenges that we face in American food production are not in
the demand for high quality, safe products but rather in our ability
to continue converting our God-given natural recourses into products
for human consumption. At the AMPI meeting, I shared the story of George
Willer a Quincy, IL dairyman whose farm has been in the family for over
100 years. George had two sons return to join the operation. They were
hit with a nuisance lawsuit by several neighbors who had moved into
the area. The Willers’ spent three years and $250,000 defending
their right to operate their property in the safe and productive manner
they had utilized for years. They won the battle in court, but they
lost the war. They were forced into bankruptcy and the bank sold their
cattle. The Willer’s will tell you that the monetary cost was
nothing in comparison to the mental anguish of defending a way of life
that their family had cultivated for over one hundred years.
The average American consumer has been led to believe that modern food
production is done without humans. They believe that industrial agriculture
has stripped young people of any opportunity to make a life on the farm.
The activists forgot to tell that to your Youth Leaders of the Year
- Kevin and Kari Knapp. They didn’t fall into the trap of letting
themselves believe what they read most frequently rather worked hard
and found a way to be involved in this great industry.
We can’t let the good times we are experiencing now cause us
to become complacent. Farm families across this nation are experiencing
the same type of harassment as the Willers’. Special interest
groups are convincing legislators to enact unnecessary restrictions
such as banning non-ambulatory cattle from the food chain and 100% testing
for BSE. Activists make in-roads because we typically only have time
to check the cows and don’t bother to check the fences until the
cows are out. I don’t need to tell any of you how hard it can
be to get free-roaming cows back in. If you think that is tough, image
how hard it will be to bring food production back to U.S. soil after
we let it escape to another country.
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