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The Rural Voice, 2001-02, Page 18'uND e R sieGe • Agriculture is under a state of siege and is being assailed from all corners and all angles. It is being charged with noise pollution, dust pollution, increasing greenhouse gases, loss of rain forests, degradation of water quality, the cause of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico, the loss of biodiversity, the destructive release of GEOs, the inhumane housing of animals, and the cause of cancer. It is trying to cope with increasing mountainous debt, relentless new technology, loss of property rights, endangered species legislation, escalating input costs, shrinking returns and an unheard voice here in Canadian government. With all these battles to fight on so many fronts, it is becoming obvious that our $150 farm organization fees may be woefully inadequate. There is no union in Canada that goes to bat for its members with fees as cheap as these. If we don't like the results we're getting maybe we're just getting what we're paying for. It didn't used to be this way, Recently on TV I saw a 30 -minute film clip from England, produced after the Second World War, called There Will Always Be An England. This old black and white film showed many famous sites throughout the country, however the most surprising thing was the time the production spent on 14 THE RURAL VOICE agriculture. As the camera panned farms and fields and stockyards and fairs, showing farmers sowing and reaping and buying and selling and competing, the narrator talked about the importance of food production, how a country produced its wealth from its soil. He explained how the farmers were the backbone of the home economy. Today we all believe the DOW/NYSE and the NASDAQ are the backbone of the home economy. No question about it, we have the biggest bellies to bellyache with. The industrialized world has caught affluenza, which is the suffering from wanting more of what you don't need. However, in our affluent societies we still have two kinds of poverty: 1) not enough money to live on; 2) not enough money to keep up with affluenza. People bellyache about factory farms, yet there is no such thing. Farmers don't "make" anything, they grow things. They take a seed, an embryo and nurture it, to grow it into food. As we look at the coming year and years, I see a number of production problems. Firstly, technology is in the hands of the better managers, both here and South America, which is going to lead to more oversupply. Twenty per cent Farmers are under attack from all sides as the 2001 crop year begins. Here are some survival strategies. By Mervyn Erb of the farmers are producing 80 per cent of the food. Secondly, you will lose between $120-135 per acre, again, this year. We had low prices in 1999 but had exceptional yields to help cash flow it through. This year we may not be so lucky. Thirdly, what is happening here in Canada bears no resemblance to what is happening in the U.S. The markets are made in Chicago and the policies are made in Washington D.C. The $23.3 billion in ag program payments equals more than half the 2000 U.S. net farm income of $45.6 billion, which was up from $43.4 billion in 1999 and above the 1990-91 average. Consequently, these forces lifted Iowa farmland values 4.3 per cent in 2000. While their ag economy is supplying a huge boost to the whole national economy and to their rural communities, our ag economy is being sold out. At the recent Ridgetown Ag Conference, Dr. David Kohl, professor of Ag Finance at Virginia Tech, said he hears lots of complaining here in Canada about the unfair U.S. farm support programs. He said we do not understand how their system works. Food production is a national security item. Surpluses are needed and used to gain compliance from other countries and are necessary