Will Allen: voting with our farms and forks against climate catastrophe
source: http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_24530.cfm
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- JanforGore
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If we allow the infamous "one percent" to continue with business as usual, we will soon be arriving at civilization's last stop, climate hell. If we allow the U.S. and global fossil fuel/military industrial/corporate agribusiness economy to keep turning up the planet's delicately balanced thermostat, raising average global temperatures by two degrees Celsius or more, we will soon pass the point of no return, detonating runaway global warming. Among the catastrophic consequences of runaway global warming will be the release of a significant portion of the 1.7 trillion tons of deadly methane now sequestered in the shallow Arctic seabeds and permafrost (equivalent to twice the amount of total greenhouse gas pollution currently in the atmosphere). As the International Energy Agency warned on November 9, the world is accelerating toward irreversible climate change. We will lose the chance to avert catastrophic warming if we don't take bold action in the next five years to sharply reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; drastically increase energy efficiency in the food, transportation, utilities, and housing sectors; and safely sequester billions of tons of greenhouse gases in our soils, plants, and forests through organic soil management and permaculture practices. In other words we have approximately 1800 days left to avert catastrophe.
One of our major tasks as farmers or food consumers is to educate the public to the heretofore-undisclosed fact that the world's energy and chemical- intensive industrial food system is the major cause of global warming. That is the central message of this rather detailed essay. We go into depth and explain the details of this deadly state of affairs, because our fate and the fate of the human species depends upon rapidly changing what we farm and what we eat. The good news is that we can stop and reverse this suicidal food and farming system by taking decisive action, not only in the political policy realm and through our growing street protests and occupations; but also by voting with our farms, gardens, and forks for an organic, sustainable, and re-localized food and farming system. This new agro-ecological system will drastically reduce GHG emissions, and at the same time naturally sequester billions of tons of climate-destabilizing greenhouse gases, in our soils, plants, and trees. But the hour is late. We must jumpstart this great transition immediately.
Millions of Americans are still in denial about global warming or else waiting vainly for Washington to pass laws and regulations to alleviate the problem. Many of those aware of the crisis are calling for cap and trade, or a carbon tax, or a ban on coal and tar sands, or stronger emissions standards, and energy efficiency. A large part of the agenda for reversing global warming involves reducing fossil fuels use by 90% over the next 40 years. But with non-stop advertising from the polluters and a do-nothing, indentured congress, that gets millions from the fossil fuel industry, the likelihood of federal legislation, at least in the near future, to solve the problem appears remote. Only persistent campaigning and the encircling of the White House by 15,000 demonstrators finally got the President's attention about the dangers of the Keystone tar sands pipeline.
Of course we must stop the coal industry, natural gas fracking, the nuclear industry, and the tar sands juggernaught. We must unite a critical mass of the 99% to cut Wall Street and the corporate elite down to size and implement a 21st century New Deal that not only brings about full employment and economic justice, but also environmental and climate sustainability. But there's something else we can do, immediately, and it's as close as our back yard, our farm field, or the knife and fork in our hands.
The failed climate conferences in Kyoto, Copenhagen, Cancun, and Durban have concentrated most of their energy and effort on fossil fuel emissions, but very little on emissions from industrial agriculture, and the demonstrated ability of organic food and farming to cool the planet and sequester climate-destabilizing greenhouse gases. Recent research and reports, however, conclude that factory farming in the U.S. is responsible for more GHG emissions than the entire transportation and industrial sector combined; including cars, trucks, buses, airplanes, trains, boats, and factories.
The main climate and health issues with the U.S. industrial farming system are:
a) Enormous quantities of greenhouse gasses emitted from fertilizers, animals, animal feed production, animal processing, and the shipping, cooling, and freezing of all food products;
b) Huge subsidies to the wealthiest, chemical and energy-intensive farmers for growing unhealthy food;
c) Too much emphasis on meat production and other harmful, fatty foods.
Despite these serious problems, the U.S. government and big agriculture aggressively promote our factory farming system to developing countries as a solution to their hunger problems.
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DudleyDooleft
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Interesting and overwhelming at times.
Thanks for the post Jan.
- 5 months ago
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DudleyDooleft
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JanforGore
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DudleyDooleft:
You're welcome. This will wind up being the one solution that will be passed up because it isn't lucrative enough for the corporate owners of this government. It is beyond tragic to see the solution so clearly because it is right, and yet be so elusive.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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DudleyDooleft
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JanforGore:
How true, Jan! Corporate power has become absolute power especially over environmental issues. They have corrupted our government, our government has corrupted our democracy. It has gotten to the point that Wall Street runs the corporations, that run agro-business, that runs the farm, that runs the farmer, that runs the tractor, that plows the field and sprays the chemicals, each one is beholden to the one before and not one of them are beholden to "Mother Earth", not anymore. The demise of the family farm is nearly complete, and so is responsible agricultural stewardship.
- 5 months ago
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DudleyDooleft
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JanforGore
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Important talk by Dr. Vandana Shiva on food, globalizaton and GMOS. We need more people in the world like Dr. Shiva.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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And it isn't only CO2. Synthetic Nitrogen fertilizers in use must be stopped. They have degraded and stripped soil and polluted our waterways also causing hypoxia which effects marinelife.They also emit CO2 in their production.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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CitizenHill
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Now conjecture is righteous?
- 5 months ago
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CitizenHill
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coolplanet
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CitizenHill:
And we've got to get ourselves back to the garden of Eden.....
- 5 months ago
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coolplanet
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Gravity_Man
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coolplanet:
AND MISS THE FIREBALL??? A fireball isn't really a fireball without 1.7 trillion tons of METHANE.
Party Pooper.
- 5 months ago
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Gravity_Man
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artemis6
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That is a fine greenhouse and that red leaf lettuce looks SOO good . I agree with everything you said , PLUS , i want to add UNLESS your local store is carrying LOCAL produce and meat (some of our are) the "food" I am using that term loosely , tastes .... like crap . To put it bluntly . Value yourself and your children enough to give them food that will help them grow clever , strong , and free of harmful hormones , rogue DNA , neurotoxins and antibiotics . This is an investment in the future you will never regret .
- 5 months ago
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artemis6
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JanforGore
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artemis6:
Absolutely. It isn't just an investment in lower emissions, but higher quality food, better health and it sticks it to the fossil fuel 1%. A definite win win to me. Time to kick Monsanto, Dow and their friends out of our food system. I will be pitching a CSA to my mayor again by spring. We have so many lots of vacant land that could be used for local agriculture and it would even bring us some jobs which we desperately need.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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artemis6
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JanforGore:
It IS a win/win/win ! Except if you are evil .
- 5 months ago
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artemis6
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JanforGore
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Sustainable agriculture CAN save our climate. And it isn't impossible!
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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artemis6
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JanforGore:
I have yet to hear of a better idea for the future .
- 5 months ago
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artemis6
