
Economy
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Industrialized
farms are threatening the well being of rural communities
throughout the U.S., and citizens are increasingly working
to block their construction in order to prevent pollution
and protect the quality of life.
Various studies have shown the benefits of traditional farm
economies and the negative consequences of factory farming.
Among the first to study this problem as it emerged in the
1940s was social scientist Walter Goldschmidt, who found that
"Communities with absentee-owned industrial farms are
less developed economically and socially than similar communities
composed mainly of family farms." Goldschmidt's findings
have since been replicated by others.
Family farms have been the core of agrarian culture for thousands
of years, providing the opportunity to connect with the land
and to live in tune with the seasons and the weather. Traditional
farmers don't produce more than the carrying capacity of the
land. They understand the condition of the soil and its ability
to sustain various crops from season to season. They commonly
produce and save their own seeds, a practice that has helped
small farms maintain the integrity of crops, and allow hardier,
diverse strains of plants to prosper. Contrasting this, industrial
farms use a few strains of high yielding crops, an approach
that threatens genetic diversity and often leads to chemical
dependency.
Small farms help to create close-knit communities and thriving
local economies. Various rural institutions, ranging from
banks to equipment and feed suppliers, are created to support
farming, and family farmers support the local community by
hiring and buying inputs locally rather than contracting to
an outside supplier. Family farm dollars paid to equipment
dealers, grocery stores, and gas stations re-circulate throughout
the local economy, strengthening it.
Large scale factory farms tend to bypass the local economy,
buying their inputs and marketing their products largely outside
of the community. Industrialized farming also negates the
traditional sense of community - a place where people share
values, interests and work. Rather than creating healthy,
sustainable employment, these operations tend to create dangerous,
low-paying jobs. The rise of factory farms, along with the
decline of family farms, often signals the degradation of
rural communities.
Short term efficiency and profitability, rather than long
term sustainability drives the factory farming model. It externalizes
costs, such as pollution clean up and health care services,
onto others in the community. Neighbors of industrial operations
have experienced health problems ranging from chronic asthma
to neurological damage, and they have watched property values
plummet.
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