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Food And Farm Changes Afoot, Your Chance To Weigh In E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog
There are big changes in food and farming happening at the highest levels of California government and this is your chance to weigh in with your opinions.

First a bit of background about the players - the two most powerful State government entities focused on food and farms. The California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) provides valuable services to Californian producers, merchants and citizens while protecting and promoting California’s agriculture.  The State Board of Food and Agriculture is made up of fifteen members appointed by the Governor from California’s agricultural sector who advise the governor and CDFA’s Secretary on agricultural issues and consumer needs.
 
ROC President: Food Movement Unites Unlikely Allies E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

 Michael Pollan’s latest article, “The Food Movement, Rising” in the New York Review of Books , is well worth careful reading. He offers both  an overview of the movement’s evolution and musings on its possibilities. He suggests that the food movement could become a political force of profound influence.

As he clarifies, the context is perfect. The growing sophistication of reform organizations regarding the nuance and necessities of making change indicates more unity within the movement. The impulse to reconstitute a sense of community and viable regional economies is evident in the young adults who are often forced to be nomadic. They are underemployed and deeply concerned about their futures. 

 
State of the Food Movement: A dispatch from the Kellogg Conference E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

Last week, I spent four days on the Gila River Community Reservation in Chandler, Arizona, where I attended the WK Kellogg Foundation’s Food and Community Conference. This conference is the nation’s largest annual gathering of NGO, business, academic and government leaders working to create an affordable, nutritious, accessible, and ecologically sound supply of food for all Americans. I am left with several thoughts and a theme as a result of the presentations, conversations, sights and sounds there.

ImageFirst, the interests and people that now constitutes the “movement” for good food is truly diverse. Over six hundred folks ranging from late teens to late seventies, white, brown, black, Asian, African, European, Indigenous, urban, rural and suburban showed up. Some of them focus on nutrition and health, others on urban or rural food production, some on farmworker rights or distributing good food to schools and low-income communities of color. Others are improving policy or doing research to support all the areas represented. Any way you slice it, the evidence exists that the movement is getting very large, representing millions of Americans.

Second, the issue of race relations and the impacts of race on health and good food access now sits atop an inevitable hierarchy of priorities. From the drama spawned by being in Arizona, which just passed a racially charged immigration policy, to discussions about farmworker rights and health disparities for inner city African Americans, the underlying need for this nation to embrace racial healing was obvious to all. The movement for good food is now also a platform for dismantling structural racism.

Third, the need for deeper research on the biological realities underlying health is clear and exciting. The research findings related to secondary plant metabolites (plant properties beyond the carbohydrates typically discussed for their impact on nutrition) provide a pathway for humans to understand the synergistic or relational nature of ecosystems, plants and human health. We need more variety in our diets from a diverse set of plants that emerge from deeply healthy ecosystems. Diets rich in plant diversity will ensure that our cells receive the full spectrum of nutrition that evolution has made available to us.

Fourth, there is so much more to be learned from dialog among the various interests now committed to good food. I always attend this conference because I thirst for the interaction. The “mash up” of perspectives unleashes synthesis and synthesis is what we need in this country to work through the polarization that reveals a national fear shared by both right and left of changes we cannot fully control. Food producers and food and farming activists must learn to hear one another better by loosening their certainty about what is the right or wrong path. We all have much to learn.

If the story of human civilization provides a continuous theme, it is that change is upon us here, now and always. Yet, in the realm of politics, humans struggle to limit and/or control change in order to gain or to protect perceived good fortune or perhaps merely acceptable pain. But given the monumental economic, health, climate, and security challenges today, we must overcome our national fears and engage our in-born ability to adapt.

Evolution teaches us that species amass within their genetic make up a spectrum of abilities to respond in diverse environments. The more adaptable an individual, the more likely they are to survive. We are living a moment of massive social and biological transformation and those who adapt will more likely thrive and survive. I do see it happening through the folks I met from Detroit, Boston, Madison, Los Angeles, Oakland, Fresno, Kansas City, San Francisco and Des Moines to name only a few. Sustainable food production is emerging to underpin sustainable communities where healthy food is widely available to everyone.

The WK Kellogg Food and Community conference reminds me that adapting can be fulfilling as well as challenging. This nation and all nations only exist because countless generations have risen to challenges they faced. Some were larger and some were smaller, but all were met. Creating a healthy food and agriculture for this nation will not be easy or happen quickly, but the effort will be worth it for us and for future generations. Thank you WK Kellogg Foundation for another rejuvenating conference.
 
Time for a New Alliance on Healthy Food and Agriculture E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

The Agriculture Committee of the US Senate has taken a first big step forward toward President Obama’s call for improved child nutrition by requesting an additional $450 million per year to fund better school lunch. Those seeking a healthy food and agriculture across the nation applaud the Committee’s approval of the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, though more will be needed to improve the healthfulness of the food served in our lunchrooms. At the same time, it took one big step backwards by suggesting that over $4 billion dollars needed to fund that Act should be taken out of two existing Farm Bill programs.

The Committee wants to rob Peter to pay Paul and few people seeking healthy food and agriculture have cried foul. This is a mistake. It is the reason why two weeks ago Roots of Change launched an online petition to the House leadership that could stop such a move. We are encouraged by the announcement last week by Colin Peterson, Chairman of the House Ag Committee, that he will protect those Farm Bill programs with backing from many House members. But the fight is not over.

Creating better health in this nation requires a holistic approach. We need to work at the farm and ranch level as well as on the distribution and food manufacturing systems. Piece meal approaches will not cut the mustard.

The Senate Committee proposes to cut the Environmental Quality Improvement Program (EQIP). This provides farmers and ranchers with matching funds to do work on their lands to protect environmental quality. Funded projects help to maintain clean water, free of pollutants. Some critics of industrial meat operations complain that factory hog farms use EQIP funds. This is true. But small and mid-sized family farmers who want to be good stewards also use these same funds. As with any fair government program, it is open to all who apply and fit the criteria. If we want to stop mega hog farming, let’s not destroy a program that has environmental benefits. It would be better to change the language in the next Farm Bill.

The Senate also seeks to cut outreach money to public and private agencies that are working in low-income communities to ensure that people know they can receive supplemental nutrition assistance in the form of an electronic balance transfer (EBT) card to help them purchase food, the modern version of food stamps. As a result of the Great Recession, hunger in America is worse. Almost half the people eligible to receive an EBT card don’t know it. In California, the food and farming sector losses nearly $4 billion per year because eligible people don’t have cards. This huge revenue loss could be fixed with better outreach.

So the Senate proposal will make farms less environmentally sound and contribute to hunger in America. Clearly the Senate Agriculture Committee did not consider a holistic approach to the people’s health.

My real concern is that those who seek a healthy food and agriculture have once again split over the funding of good policy. Many of those who want the money to improve school food are afraid to speak up about the cuts because funds will not be found. Let’s not let fear lead to bad decisions.

There has never been a more opportune time to stand firm and seek real solutions to complex problems. The evidence is overwhelming that change is needed and the conditions are right for making that change. Along with the President and First Lady, the US departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services have good leadership that understands the links between farms, food and human health. The good food movement across the nation is growing larger and more influential every day. There are even signs, despite angry rhetoric regarding change, that many conventional agricultural leaders are beginning to see opportunities to improve the plight of farmers and ranchers by aligning on key issues with the good food movement.

Now is the moment to cut a Gordian knot that has long existed and impeded the move to a healthier nation. For over a decade there has been an alliance between those who seek to increase the supply of food to the hungry and the agro-industrial complex (mega food manufactures and factory farms). They have joined hands to shape the Farm Bill and other food legislation. As long as more food was made available to feeding programs, the food access advocates would accept the agro-industrial complex’s efforts to limit needed change. The links between healthy farms and healthier food, and healthy food and healthier people were downplayed. We know this because the food banks increasingly received highly processed food laden with fat, sugar and salt. This dynamic contributed to much higher rates of obesity, diabetes and heart disease for low-income people who receive this food.

To their great credit, many food bank leaders are now focusing on real nutrition rather than calories by increasing delivery of fresh, whole food. This is better for the recipients of food assistance and for the farmers. It also indicates a potential shift in a power alliance that has shaped farm and food policy.

It is my hope that moving forward toward passage of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act we will get full funding, but the money will come from sources other than the Farm Bill. I propose that we take 1% of the $531 billion base 2010 Department of Defense budget. The rationale is that obese kids today will not make healthy members of the armed forces tomorrow. The US Department of Defense is a stakeholder in the nutrition programs of this nation.

To get it done, the Congress needs to see unity among those seeking a healthy food and agriculture. The food access, nutrition, healthcare, organic, environmental and sustainable agriculture advocates and their public supporters need to come together and demand a holistic strategy underpinning the nation’s food and agriculture policy. All the ducks are in a row. So let’s act. Helping Roots of Change with its campaign is one way.

 
What if Food Inc Takes Home An Oscar? E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

An open letter in response to the editorial on CattleNetwork.com: What If Food Inc. Takes Home An Oscar?
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I think it is very interesting to note that the piece begins by saying the film attacks farmers, which it does not. The film clearly attacks the food processing industry that it describes as controlling farmers.

I think one weakness of the current industrial food paradigm is its relationship to farmers. Many conventional/production agriculture farmers across the nation in commodity crops, specialty crops, and livestock, recognize that they are now reduced to cogs in a machine, who assume a disproportionate amount of the system risk and receive a unfair amount of the profit given that risk.

This growing awareness among farmers of all types permeates the context and is like gasoline fumes in an enclosed space. A small spark could transform the entire dynamic and severely disrupt the industrial complex.

The fact is that the long-term interests of most farmers is not currently served by processors and big industrial brands. The mainstream brands often exploit a farmer's resource base, balance sheet, and iconic identity as the backbone of American culture. I think that this is why Food Inc. is so scary to some.

I often wonder how long the peace between farmers and industrial processors can be sustained. It would seem logical that more and more farmers would seek alternative models to grow and sell in the face of the culture's demand for a better food system and the decreasing profit margins offered by the industrial supply chains.

But logic is not always a primary driver in economic decision making as we know. I think debt causes paralyzing fear. Many farmers in the industrial supply chain carry huge debt and fear that a change in their current approach is not survivable. I have heard this directly from members of family farms growing commodity crops in the mid west and from growers of specialty crops in California.


Michael Dimock

President
Roots of Change
 
A 21st Century Social Contract Between Agriculture & the Public E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

ROC President, Michael Dimock, joined former USDA Secretary Dan Glickman and Texas State University food system researcher and author, Dr. Jimmy McWillams, on a panel for the Farm Foundation's Agriculture Roundtable on January 8th in San Antonio, Texas. The Roundtable is a national membership organization representing much of the nation's production agriculture leaders. Following their presentation, Glickman, McWilliams and Dimock engaged in a 90-minute dialog with these leaders. It was a penetrating and constructive, offering further evidence that a major shift is underway. Important elements of production agriculture are seriously engaging the challenge of creating a sustainable food system.

 

Presentation to the Farm Foundation Roundtable
January 8, 2010
San Antonio, Texas

Ladies and gentleman, I want to thank you for this exciting opportunity to share the podium this morning with former USDA Secretary Dan Glickman and Dr. McWilliams. I value this opportunity to consider, with you all, this vitally important issue of the emerging social contract between agriculture and the public. I feel the survival of our farms and ranches depends on a renewed contract.

michael-2.jpgBefore I describe what I think the emerging contract is, let me set some context by talking a bit about Roots of Change. Practically speaking, Roots of Change is a philanthropic fund investing in people and projects. We have built a network of nearly 32,000 people who are unified by their pursuit of a sustainable food system in California by the year 2030. There are hundreds leaders from farms and ranches, food businesses, nonprofits, small towns, government agencies, and tens of thousands of consumers within the ROC network.

ROC has committed to network formation and support because our theory of change holds that the best way to make the food system sustainable is to connect and support the people within the system that have the knowledge, positions, relationships, and commitments required to successfully manage a rapid transformation. ROC implements three primary activities to support this network of stakeholders.

We convene stakeholders face-to-face and we also offer fellowships, grants and contracts in order to help them: a) embrace system thinking and science, and/or to resolve conflicts (particularly among farmers and environmentalists and farmers and labor advocates) and hopefully through sustained dialogs to arrive at new ways of thinking about a problem that will improve the food system; b) we also convene stakeholders, particularly NGOs, so they can coordinate plans and accelerate or expand projects; and c) we include in the realm of convening our communication with ROC's online community. We link and communicate using our Facebook pages, twitter, our website and email blasts. The posting of educational information spawns on-line dialog and builds agricultural literacy.

The second big thing we do is to write grants or find funding for allied organizations to implement projects that aim to improve the food system.

Last, but not least, we advocate for increased investment in food system work by foundations, government, and citizens. Given the impact of food and farming on the environment and society, philanthropic support is very low.

So now let me turn to the emerging social contract. First, clearly a new social contract is emerging. We believe it will increasingly be defined by the desire for health, economic recovery, and long-term sustainability of the economy and nation.

My sense is that the food and agriculture industry is in a period similar to the financial industry in the late 1990s and early 2000s. There are serious signs of trouble based on external and internal challenges, particularly around food safety, labor supply, water quality and quantity, energy pricing, diabetes, and other nutrition related disease.

Consequently, respected and highly visible authors, filmmakers, journalists, policymakers, and cultural heroes (like chefs, musicians, and actors) are increasingly critical of the food and agricultural system. Retailers like Wal-Mart and food service providers like Sysco are demanding change.

It is interesting to note that Christine Quinn, the Speaker of the New York City Council, who wants to move out of Mr. Bloomberg's shadow, in the hope of becoming that City's next Mayor (or so reports the New York Times), has stated that her defining political focus will be coordination of the city's food policies. Roots of Change is working closely with Mayors Newsom in San Francisco and Villaraigosa in Los Angeles on their food policies. The big city mayors of Chicago, Boston, Detroit and Seattle are also focused on food and agriculture. To me this indicates that the "good food movement" is real and will get larger over time and that urban centers will increasingly seek power over America's agriculture and food policy.

This new public focus is a sea change. Before now and for the last 100 years, the people of this nation have increasingly lost their focus on agriculture. The perception of US farmers and ranchers as the foundation of community, which was evident until maybe even the late 1950s, has been lost. Now agriculture is perceived as a source of cheap food, fiber and beverage. This transformation in perception does not accurately reflect agriculture's fundamental role as the basis of civilization. This diminution of agriculture - in fact - threatens the future of civilization itself.

The growing crises related to energy, health, and climate change provides the opportunity for agriculture to reemerge as a fundamental characteristic in the nation's identity, a central player once again.

I believe that this opportunity will be most constructively realized if agriculture proactively aligns with the public interest in green jobs, health and sustainability. Agriculture seen as a primary solution to many problems faced today creates the basis for a new social contract.

The New Social Contract


First, what do I mean by sustainability. At ROC we broadly define it as follows: a sustainable system provides food perpetually and ensures that the underlying ecosystems and resources remain abundant and viable. It maintains the health of the soil, people, animals, and plants. The economics underlying the system allow owners, workers, and investors to live and benefit from the system at a level that maintains their wellbeing, life-long participation, and commitment to the system's continuous improvement.

But what would this mean, practically speaking, for those working in agriculture? What would they be asked to do over time? I would like to offer 10 defining characteristics of a new social contract:

1.      Agriculture would move from an industrial model of production to a biological model, meaning it would seek to mimic nature, not a Ford assembly line, when producing food and fiber. An assembly line does not like diversity, but nature does because diversity, whether in nature, economics, or politics, is strategy for long-term health. Investors seek diverse portfolios. Regions seek diverse economies. So why do we not seek diverse farms and ranches that are resilient in the face of ecological and economic changes?

2.      The diversity principle requires that we eliminate all broad spectrum, long-lived, toxins in our efforts to control pests and weeds or increase fertility. These compounds kill indiscriminately and thereby disrupt natural biological cycles or spawn unintended disease in non-targeted species. Think of the impact of Atrazine on amphibians. So yes, we need more green chemistries that mimic naturally occurring compounds that nature has already learned to breakdown and metabolize quickly. But even better, we need to use nature to manage nature. More beneficial insects to control pests, more cover crops to control weeds, supply nitrogen, and provide habitat to beneficial species.

3.      We need to eliminate use of fossil fuels as a means to create fertility and power machinery. A major rationale for expanding local food systems is climate change. If farmers are not impacting climate, there is less reason to focus on local. Even if climate change was not a reality, a fossil fuel-based system is not sustainable, fossil fuels will eventually run out, becoming ever more expensive as they are depleted.

4.      We must end the maltreatment of farm and food system workers, even if it is the result of a few. We need to create an industry ethic that ostracizes bad actors. Further, lets transform food and farming jobs into careers that lead to advancement, pride of participation, long-term commitment through enhanced opportunity and quality of life. The divide between labor and operators is not good for anyone. As the technology sector has shown, when there is more alignment between management and labor, there is more innovation, job satisfaction, and productivity.

5.      Likewise, we must end the inhumane treatment of animals evident in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) because the public concern will only grow. The fight cannot be won on economic grounds. The more people know, the less they like CAFOs. Entire nonprofits have been born to stop them. Alternative livestock systems are showing us that when we understand each breed's life cycle and allow it to live stress free, we enhance flavor and product quality and consumers are willing to pay more.

6.      The nation was founded on a fear of tyranny and concentrated power. Thus, perceived ownership of the food supply by a few, using intellectual property rights or economies of scale, although legal and economical when viewed in a relatively brief time frame, will never be politically, ethically, or socially useful because concentrated power undermines public trust.

7.      Food safety is a constant and growing challenge. What are the increasingly frequent recalls telling us? Perhaps that e coli, salmonella, and other food borne bugs like huge processing or manufacturing facilities. I would bet that no prophylactic approach will be thorough enough to fully control germs and viruses, at least not for long. These things quickly mutate. Pathogens will always exist in a biological system. I believe a sound systemic solution will be more diversification and decentralization of production to limit the scale and scope of a persistent problem.

8.      We clearly need to end the loss of soil and over tapping of aquifers. To continue it will guarantee the end of agriculture and increase the anger of the public. We need to build soil and bank water. No till systems, intensive composting and cover cropping are the pathways. We need accurate water balances that are adhered to in all parts of the nation.

9.      We must accept or recognize the impact of genes on human consumption patterns. Most people will seek out sugar and fat because their genes are programmed to find it. So to align our industry with the public's best interest, we need to take the lead in weaning the nation from its unhealthy addiction to these substances. We need less processed and more fresh and whole foods. Otherwise, we risk that physicians and health insurance companies will become agriculture's worst enemies.

10.  Local and regional food systems are good. Big agriculture would benefit from embracing small farmers and ranchers, peri-urban and urban food producers who are the frontline of these regional systems. They can be seen as the diplomatic corps for all agriculture. Farmers and ranchers with direct relations to consumers in the urban centers, which are the base of political and financial power, are the best way to build agricultural literacy.

These are my ten basic building blocks for the new social contract. Every thing I have suggested is achievable because people are doing them all now in small and increasingly large ways. But these building blocks need to be assembled within a cogent and consistent framework. I have some thoughts on that as well.


The Framework for Building the Social Contract


To start with, it would be much better for the industry if agricultural products were no longer seen or described as "commodities." Here are two of the five entries from Merriam-Webster that define the word commodity: "a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (like brand name) other than price; one that is subject to ready exchange or exploitation within a market."

Remaining competitive in a commodity system is a thankless task that has forced huge segments of the industry into insolvency. Food is the basis of life; it deserves to be valuable. It is undervalued because our current system defines it as so. Our thinking is flawed. Cheap food requires that we externalize costs because we cannot pay to mitigate or avoid impacts on the ecosystem, workers and communities, which gets us into a conundrum. If we do not end the negative impacts, we are increasingly regulated, taxed and/or both to cover the costs of those impacts. So commoditization of food is a losing game for growers, (but consider the fact that it is good for manufactures of processed food).

Obviously, this move to sustainability is a long-term affair. It will take time because achieving sustainability is not an end point. It is actually a process of continuous improvement.  A human life span is insufficient to address the problem. Sustainability is really about millennia, not centuries. To be frank, Roots of Change has set 2030 as the time frame for changing thinking and setting a new direction, not necessarily becoming sustainable.  However, by then we should be able to see a shift from short-term profit maximization to maximization of long-term productivity and health if ROC is successful. We believe sustained productivity and health are the basis for profits earned over the longest term.

Linked to this concept of long-term thinking, it would be very useful to end the contradiction within the industry that, on the one hand, calls for unfettered property rights and unregulated capitalism, and on the otherhand, for a safety net (price supports or subsidy payments) for the industry. What is the quid pro quo for establishing a safety net? And I believe there does need to be a safety net. Biological systems are inherently in flux. So, what should the public get back for providing a safety net? That is the social contract.

So obviously I am not calling for the end of payments to farmers. I am calling for different payments and perhaps even more payments. Commodity programs and other subsidies provide the rules of the agriculture game.

I think it would useful, productive and appreciated by the public if we tied payments to health enhancement and resource stewardship. Let's pay more money for riparian buffers, species enhancement, and on farm energy production. Let's tie payments to diversity of scale, larger sums to smaller farms. Payments are the incentives. The current incentives render cheap calories. Let’s devise payments that render healthy farm business and healthy ecosystems and healthier people.We engineered the current system, so we can engineer a new one with new policy. Congress sees this and has built within the Farm Bill a corner stone, if not a foundation, for major change through the Conservation Security Program.

To reengineer the system we need allies. Luckily, agriculture has more allies in waiting than we could imagine. Powerful environmental, health, social justice, and community advocates want to align with agriculture to create a healthier world. If we join with them, they will help give agriculture the Congressional and State house votes needed to create  policy for the long-term health of farms and ranches and the environment. We need more people to vote and speak for agriculture's interests. A new social contract will give us those votes we need.

For instance, we need substantially more research and the public has little concept of that need now. So one message we must get out is that a healthy sustainable agriculture will require a research agenda as bold as that being called for in energy. The trend of reducing the research funds for agriculture must be reversed, but that will be impossible without broad public support.

This raises a controversial issue. I really don't think we should bet the farm on genetic modification. Resistance to GMO food is firm among certain consumers. And there is evidence that the hoped for results may prove much more illusive than once thought. Furthermore, the issues of concentration and tyranny over the food supply loom very large when GMOs enter the picture.

I would argue that it is much less problematic to think about learning to mimic natural systems in scaled up ways. How could we scale or massively
replicate Joel Salatin's Poly-Face Farm model of multi-species livestock production? What could be done on the plains with cattle and hogs in large open ranges managed by collaborating producers using intensive range management?  How can we accelerate the work of Wes Jackson and create a perennial poly-culture of grains in the Great Plains? None of these systems bring in the problems associated with gene ownership and genetic pollution of organic and non-GMO conventional farms.

This brings me to my final point and I need to be very careful to be clear. I am a realist who looks at the past and says we can, we will, and we must change in unbelievably immense ways. Science and technology must be part of that change. Agriculture has a history of rapid change using technology. But I am very concerned about what appears to be an underlying hubris that permeates our perception of our ability to build and maintain industrial scale food production for a sustained period, particularly one based on fossil fuel.

In fact, it appears to me that our nation has been suffering a massive case of hubris in our economic, military and energy policy, as well as food. I was stunned at what happened to the CIA in Afghanistan last week. It was very tragic, but the more I read the details the more I felt it was another indicator of our loss of contact with reality about the world. Why do we see ourselves as immune to the blow back from systems we seek to "manage"?

We have myths that warn us about hubris. The ancient Greeks gave us Icarus who flew too close to the Sun and fell into the sea. The Old Testament teachings and those of Jesus contain warnings about believing we are not subject to larger dynamics. I posit that these would be both biological and social dynamics. I think of Noah's flood and I cannot help thinking about the melting of the polar caps. I am not talking about magical thinking here. I am saying that our culture has imbedded in collective memory long held stories that contain warnings for the human species as it evolves. We must be careful to not overstep and unleash nature's immune response.

Natural biological communities, which are the result of billions of years of evolution, are the key. They share energy, feed each other, and maintain a balance. Species are interdependent. We too are one of those species. To the extent we understand in depth the survival mechanisms of diverse communities of species and apply them to our agricultural and social systems, I think we will find that we will be well guided.

In short, nature is no longer our enemy. It once was, we had to fight to survive. I think we have evolved past the fight. It is time to relate to nature with a more collaborative approach.  We can learn to surf the dynamics of nature in order to efficiently produce food, fiber and fuel in ways that restore and maintain health, not degrade it.

I am absolutely certain that we can and will do it. We have no choice really. So let's show the public that farmers and ranchers are civilization's life stewards, the most important people in the world, who will perpetually and deftly tend the food supply, by tending large swaths of nature and well employing large numbers of people, for current and future generations. That social contract will be enduring. Thank you.

 
Giving Thanks, an American Tradition E-mail
Michael R. Dimock’s Blog

"Gratitude is the sign of noble souls." -Aesop
“Silent gratitude isn’t much use to anyone.” -G.B. Stern

What do the Pilgrims, George Washington, Sarah J. Hale, and Abraham Lincoln all have in common? Hint: they liked heritage breed turkeys. Yes, they all contributed to the formation of the national Thanksgiving Day holiday. We all know the pilgrim story. Some may not know that President Washington offered the first proclamation on November 26, 1789, declaring a national day of thanksgiving. It was not until November 1863, after the July battles of Gettysburg and Vicksburg, which sealed the fate of the south, that Lincoln renewed the tradition and declared the last Thursday of that month a day of thanks. Sarah J. Hale, a magazine editor, is credited with planting the idea in the weary leader’s head.

Each year from that time, with the exception of one year during the Great Depression, every president issued a similar proclamation on the same day. In 1941 the Congress formerly established the holiday we know today. So we have a long history of giving thanks, and I am grateful for that. It is an important social and civic act too little appreciated in our time.

Maybe it is because so many of us feel things have gotten off track. Right or left, urban or rural, rich or poor, most all of us seemed perpetually perturbed by the state of the world, the nation, or our communities. As a consequence, we are adept at, blaming, attacking, and/or ignoring, particularly when directed at leaders. It is easy for us to forget our role in the many messes and to blame “them,” the damn leaders.

Particularly as activists, we are constantly asking for change. There is always more to be done, and often, what is getting done is not good enough. We too rarely stop to acknowledge the good that is taking place.

Roots of Change (ROC) has decided that this Thanksgiving season is the perfect time to pause and show our gratitude to the United States Department of Agriculture for taking an unprecedented step towards making a sustainable regional food system a real priority through the “Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food” initiative. We have just launched a letter writing campaign to offer thanks . I am not shocked, but a bit disappointed that we have gotten negative comments about sending a positive message to Secretary Vilsack and Deputy Secretary Merrigan.

ROC understands that there are still many issues that are not getting addressed by the USDA, that contradictions in policy and message exist, and that there are ways that “Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food” could be improved. What can one realistically expect in this day of polarized politics in which corporate interest too often controls debate.

The bottom line, though, is that we want to acknowledge that the USDA is making a real, risky and unprecedented effort to support regional food systems. Regional food systems are the best road to agricultural and food literacy I can image right now. They will help sustainable farmers and ranchers, the healthcare system and local economies. Yet, we must realize that many industrial-scale-cheap-food manufacturers who benefit from subsidies and over production of undifferentiated commodities are seeking to undermine this recent initiative.

Who could argue that the situation is not much improved? Think about what it was like 18 months ago. USDA leadership did not discuss local, organic, sustainable, and a focus on healthy food; they avoided these topics. If our movement is not thankful for the leadership having ears to hear our message, then we must begin to question our real motivation. Are we merely contrarian? Are we so into combat that we cannot acknowledge and celebrate victory? Are we unable to see the risks that new leadership is taking and to show support for what is lonely and exhausting work?

I think not. I believe the good food movement is primarily made of people who appreciate hard work, who empathize with those who take risks, who appreciate acts that build cohesion and community. I know this because the good food movement clearly appreciates the farmers, ranchers and processors who produce healthy food. And clearly the leadership of USDA is doing the same three things through their important initiative.

ROC is betting that lots of folks, in the best tradition of America’s greatest leaders, will hit the link we offer and send a message of thanks to the USDA. Once in a while just saying thank you is a good thing.
 
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