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The Rural Voice, 1993-12, Page 41period. So we and our partners will maintain complete control of the process." This movement will turn farmers into franchise operators, Kneen maintains. This kind of operation has dominated the chicken industry in the U.S. for some time and is moving into pork there as well. Companies provide the restricted genetic stock in the form of chicks or piglets, provide the feed and other inputs, let the farmer raise them to their spec- ifications, then take them back to process and market them. There is one aspect of the production of the product that is not controllable: cheap labour. Therefore companies manage to find a way around the problem by leaving this to the "independent" farmer. "The independence of the farm unit is itself illusionary. The deed to the farm may carry the farmer's name, but it will be the bank or the Farm Credit Corporation that holds the mortgage. Farmers may buy their inputs in their own name, but they may well be bought on credit supplied either by the dealer or by the purchaser of the farm crop if they are not already the same (as is often the case in monoculture production like potatoes, tomatoes, corn and even beef.)" Critics of Kneen will argue that efficiency drives the changes in the industry but he argues that the system is only efficient in the bookkeeping of large corporations. For instance the companies have been successful in getting others to pick up additional costs. Because the Ontario Milk Marketing Board, and the farmers who are part of it, pick up the cost of transporting milk to the plant, they would like the plants as close to the cows as possible. The companies, however, would like the plants as close to the people as possible, so Ault Foods built its fluid milk plant in sight of the Don Valley Parkway in Toronto (the huge word "AULT" on Brewster Kneen Book Review the storage towers is worth a lot in advertising). Similarly, at the other end of the spectrum, milk companies have managed to fob off the cost of delivery of the milk to the consumer by persuading the customer to drive to the store to buy milk, instead of the more convenient, home delivery. Kneen questions whose interests are being represented at the GATT talks and other international trade rule -setting negotiations. Between 1984 and 1987, he points out, David Gilmore, a vice-president of Cargill Ltd. was on loan, under an "executive exchange" program, to Agriculture Canada to assist in drafting the Conservative government's ag- ricultural policy. Was he acting in the best interests of farmers, or of Cargill? In 1986 another Cargill employee, Phil de Kemp, was loaned to the Grain Marketing Bureau and later became an aide to Charlie Mayer, then minister of grains and oil seeds. Kneen worries that the industrialization of agriculture is / RISTMAS�� CCOUNTRY Flowers & Gifts \ 523-4820 Monday to Saturday 900 to 5:30 Sunday 100 to 5:00 till Xmas 2 levels of giftware, country crafts and Christmas accessories. Full Line WICKER FURNITURE (settees, rockers & lamps) Full Service Florist resulting in too much envir- onmentally inefficient long-distance shipping of goods, reducing the taste and nutritional value of food. He worries biological diversity is being hurt by specialization in too few varieties or breeds, narrowing the genetic base. He calls for reversing the current logic that holds we are heading in a straight line to "progress". He calls for producing food close to where it will be consumed, for pursuing biological diversity, for more self-reliance on trade build on equity and fairness rather than export based on taking advantage. It's a book sure to stir controversy. Many in the agriculture and food industry will reject Kneen's arguments entirely. Everyone, however, should read the book to spend a little time thinking about the industry they depend on, both for living and for making a living.0 From Land to Mouth — Understanding the Food System : Second Helping, by Brewster Kneen, NC Press Limited, $16.95. Black, Creek Woodcrafts COUNTRY FOLK ART V Finished & Unfinished Woodcrafts HAND PAINTED • Carousel Horses • Welcome Signs & more 216 Huron Rd., Sebringville 519-393-6230 Mon. -Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sundays by Chance toys that last xLatty gut -A, "from 18 seconds to 18 years" HOURS: Mon. - Thurs. & Sat. - 9:30 - 5:30 Friday 9:30 - 9:00 Sundays 1:00 - 4:00 until Xmas 166 The Courthouse Square GODERICH 519-524-5970 DECEMBER 1993 37