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Busting Big Ag in Iowa

Posted on Fri, March 12, 2010 by Jerusha Klemperer
2 Comments | Categories: Biodiversity, Farms and Farming, Food Justice, News, Current Events, Policy, Take Action,

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by Siena Chrisman, WhyHunger

Last night in Ankeny, Iowa, just north of Des Moines, a standing-room-only crowd of over 250 people called on the Justice Department and USDA to “bust up big ag!” and put the needs of people before corporations.  Today is the official listening session where the government agencies will hear from all interested parties on the issue of corporate concentration in the food system—particularly, this round addresses “Issues of Concern to Farmers”—but the scheduled panels today are heavy on business and light on actual farmers. Several local groups organized Thursday’s town hall as a venue for farmers to voice their real concerns.

The evening began with a panel of independent farmers from Iowa, Wisconsin, and Missouri addressing concentration in seeds, dairy, and livestock; a representative from the United Food and Commercial Workers Union; and good food advocates talking about consumer issues (I had the great privilege to be one of those last speakers).

And then the floor was open to public comments. About 50 people spoke, almost all of them farmers. They told heartbreaking stories: The 29th anniversary of one man’s parents was a farm foreclosure. “The American Dream has turned into the American nightmare” for a southern Iowa dairy farmer, whose milk prices have been so low he can’t afford his feed costs. The 15-year-old son of a fifth generation dairy farmer wants to become the sixth generation, but if things don’t change in the next six months, they’re not going to have a farm.

Things are dire for farmers—as they are for so many of people who don’t have control over their food—but they’re ready to fight. They made powerful demands of the Department of Justice and Congress to enforce antitrust laws and break up the hugely concentrated ag industries. But government isn’t quite the last hope; people are. A family farmer from near Des Moines wanted to talk about power: “Industry cannot turn one wheel unless people make those machines work,” he said. “We have the power here, and we need to understand what that power means.”

We all need to start recognizing our power. The millions of us around the country talking about food are telling different stories, but with the same thread: people, not corporations, need to control what we eat. From New York to Iowa and far beyond, we need to keep talking and growing our power. Talk to each other, to strangers—and definitely talk to the government. DoJ is still accepting comments on corporate control of the food system. Tell ‘em what you think.  And visit www.bustthetrust.org for more.


Member Comments

From Angela on Sat, March 13, 2010

So glad to see this.  The power lies in lobbying, though and it will be hard to compete.  Grass roots and phone calls will help keep the pressure on.  Come into Illinois. Reach across the state line to Illinois.  I’m not a farmer, but I know many who face the same challenges.  One of my concerns is for my growing family and the quality of food in the food system, especially the school lunch programs.  Buy local.  Buy local.  Buy local.  That’s another way to send a message to giant food corporations.

From marie on Sun, April 25, 2010

So glad farmers are willing to fight for the people.  Now that this huge faction has come to the surface, people all over the country will support you and tradtional farming practices.  I just watched Robert Kenner’s Food Inc. movie.  I am shocked and sicked by political big wigs and the power they’ve achieved in the past 50 years.  Our global priority needs to be sustainability of life in farming production, not the efficiency of factory farming production that inadvertedly disregards life.

Farmers, please don’t let them bring you down.  We need you, the whole world needs you.  Awareness is key, continue to keep us informed.  It seems big business wants to treat us like chickens in a dark penhouse and throw corn at us.  We are not animals, we did not volunteer for this experiment.  We want out, out of the darkness.



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