Americans are losing the ability to feed themselves. Nothing
signifies this loss of the golden age in America more than
our growing reliance on foreign countries for our food. Yet
American's happily buy their produce from Mexico and their
fish from China without giving it a thought. These are the
same Americans who bemoan the loss of our manufacturing base
saying that we should have done something about it before
it was too late. Why can't they see the similarity to us losing
our agricultural base? Buying food from the Chinese is no
different than buying a Toyota from the Japanese. Both actions
portray an American turning his back on his country.
When you buy food from a foreign country, you enrich the
same corporations that have dumped their long time, faithful
employees here in America. These are the food conglomerates
that have shut down factories in the U.S. and created ghost
towns where there were once thriving communities. They are
the same corporations that show their contempt for Americans
by using toxic chemicals and pesticides in their food production
that are not allowed in the U.S. Maybe you say, "I only
buy organic so I don't have to worry." What does 'organic'
mean in Mexico or China? Who enforces those standards?
If this scenario isn't enough, add in government policy to
ignore the fuel inefficiency of vehicles in the U.S. and instead
to turn its attention and rhetoric to the encouragement of
using our food for fuel. You would almost think there was
a plot against the American people.
You don't have to be a dedicated fanatic to see what is going
on. Just pick up some newspapers and you will find stories
that paint a glaring picture of our fall from grace. Like
the one in the New York Times about the death of the catfish
industry in the U.S.
Last year, Dillard & Company raised 11 million fish.
Next year they will raise none, and 55 more Americans will
be unemployed while the rest of us will be getting our catfish
from Asia.
With the rising costs of corn and soybeans, feed is now more
than half the total cost of raising catfish. The president
of Dillard says that for every dollar the company spends raising
catfish it gets back only 75 cents when the fish go to market.
Along with other producers Dillard's takes its fish to Consolidated
Catfish Producers where they are cut into fillets. With fewer
fish coming in, Consolidated is laying off half its workers.
Dillard also blames governmental policy resulting in ethanol
mandates.
Producer's Feed Company, across the highway from Dillard's
has already shut down. The ripple effect continues at Peter
Bo's Restaurant, locally known for its catfish dinners but
now out of business.
Catfish has always been a delicacy that symbolized the South.
The founder of Dillard's came to the Mississippi delta 50
years ago and put in a catfish pond. The idea caught on and
soon the industry was booming, employing more than 10,000
people at its peak. But producers from Vietnam and China flooded
the American market, resulting in the loss of pricing power.
Then there's the Associated Press article about a Mexican
named Martinez who used to pay smugglers to sneak him into
the U.S. to manage farm crews. Now he is back at home working
for U.S. owned VegPacker de Mexico, one of many companies
that have turned their backs on their American customers and
moved their fields to Mexico to take advantage of hands willing
to work for half of the prevailing rate in the U.S.
American companies now farm more than 45,000 acres of Mexican
land with about 11,000 employees according to a survey quoted
in the AP article. U.S. direct investment in Mexican agriculture,
including American companies moving operations to Mexico and
establishing Mexican partnerships, has grown seven fold to
$60 million since the year 2000.
U.S. agribusinesses are now in the position of overrunning
the local growers in Mexico and putting them out of business,
much as they have been doing in the U.S. for decades.
A story in Tulsa World tells us that cattle in feedlots is
at its lowest level since last August due to record high feed
and fuel costs coupled with massive flooding in the Midwest
that took out 5 million acres of farmland earlier in the summer.
It looks bleak for the fall when cattle ranchers can no longer
rely on the grass in their pastures to cushion high feed prices.
High prices for feed affects every part of the food chain
from crop to consumer with higher prices all along the way.
Placements of cattle into feedlots to gain weight for slaughter
are down over the long term with May's placements totaling
only 40,000 head, the second lowest monthly figure in more
than a decade. Cattle inventories are at some of their lowest
levels since the early 1960's as the result of the squeeze
between higher feed costs and the ceiling of what feedlot
operators will pay.
Again, the government policy to encourage the use of ethanol
for fuel is sited as a determining factor. Cattle ranchers
see their future as resting in the hands of what consumers
are willing to pay, and it doesn't look good.
Meanwhile, the Wall Street crowd has turned its attention
to farming in order to harvest a crop of fat profits. Crop
price manipulation has long been a mainstay of speculators
but now we've got hedge funds and venture capital amassing
billions of dollars from global investors wanting to own farmland,
and all the commodities involved in food production, transport
and storage. They call it 'owning structure'.
Americans who have left any footprints in foreign countries
are being contacted to act as go-betweens as foreign investors
need intermediaries to contact real estate brokers of farmland
not just in the U.S. but worldwide. Their goal is price control.
With big size and deep pockets, these investment groups can
almost corner the markets in corn or any targeted commodity,
and store it long enough to force prices into huge advances.
In the process, any small time operator can be brought to
his knees. And since these funds own the mechanisms of transport
and fuel, they are also in a position to move the commodity
to whatever market is paying the most for it.
What can you do about all this? You can start by increasing
your awareness of where your food comes from. This is fairly
easy to do since most produce and packaged meat carries identification
of the country of origin. Then you can tell your grocer that
you are unwilling to spend your hard earned money on advancing
the standard of living in another country while it's declining
in your own country. You can go to weekend Farmers Market
events and support your local growers. Buying only what is
grown in the U.S. can be a cumbersome task but one that leaves
you feeling good. You can start a victory garden in your own
backyard and encourage your family members and neighbors to
take part in it.
On a political level, you can support candidates that are
at least willing to acknowledge and debate the issue of food
crisis. Unfortunately there appear to be no such candidates
in this year's election at the national level. Both the republicans
and the democrats are on the bandwagon in support of the globalist's
agenda and it doesn't seem to matter to them if Americans
lose the ability to produce their own food supply.