I am recommending California State Senator Fran Pavley, Member Senate Food & Agriculture committee, to head a new commission formed to promote urban farming in California. Please contact her District Office (310) 314-5214 as soon as you have time to review the following so she can meet with you to discuss the details of its implementation.
President Barack Obama calls the current crisis "the greatest economic challenge of our lifetime," the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Unemployment is officially at 8.9% (California is 11.2), not counting those who have given up on looking for work, and it is certainly going to get much worse with more layoffs every day.
Is the state or the nation prepared for the social dislocation, economic despair, and breakdown in law and order that could occur as the crisis worsens? Are there enough police, National Guard, or military to keep order when millions are out of work, out of home, and out of food?
You as Governor can take steps to mitigate the chaos and possible anarchy now before it is too late. One activity that can have the most far-reaching effects in these times of crisis is Victory Farms, as put forth by Eleanor Roosevelt during the Great Depression.
Below is a slide from Dmitri Orlov's "Closing the Collapse Gap" — an eyewitness to the Soviet Union collapse in 1991. The United States is especially vulnerable in our food distribution system. Dmitri believes "that, with a bit of preparation, such events can be taken in stride."
Closing the Collapse Gap (1)
Food
Soviet Union.................... United States
Kitchen Gardens.................Supermarkets
Local Food Stockpiles...........Food shipped in diesel trucks
Home cooking culture...........Fast food culture
Physically active............... Obesity epidemic
================ =======================
Foraging and scrounging Waiting to be fed
Although the Soviet agricultural sector was notoriously inefficient, many people grew and gathered their own food even in relatively prosperous times.
There were food warehouses in every city, stocked according to a government allocation scheme. There were very few restaurants, and most families cooked and ate at home. Shopping was rather labor-intensive, and involved carrying heavy loads. Sometimes it resembled hunting – stalking that elusive piece of meat lurking behind some store counter. So the people were well prepared for what came next.
In the United States, most people get their food from a supermarket, which is supplied from far away using refrigerated diesel trucks. Many people don’t even bother to shop and just eat fast food. When people do cook, they rarely cook from scratch. This is all very unhealthy, and the effect on the nation’s girth, is visible, clear across the parking lot. A lot of the people, who just waddle to and from their cars, seem unprepared for what comes next. If they suddenly had to start living like the Russians, they would blow out their knees.
Therefore I propose you create a victory gardening commission to educate and encourage urban agriculture in all of California. Throughout the United States 43 million people have already seen the benefits of urban gardening and many have exchanged their front lawns for front gardens of organic fruits and vegetables, which no longer waste the water we no longer have because of the drought.(2)
When Eleanor Roosevelt did something similar in 1943, she helped start a Victory Garden movement that ended up making a substantial contribution to feeding the nation in wartime. Less well known is the fact that Eleanor planted this garden over the objections of the U.S.D.A., which feared home gardening would hurt the American food industry. By the end of the war, more than 20 million home gardens were supplying 40 percent of the produce consumed in America.
You as Governor should throw your support behind your wife, Michelle Obama, and a new Victory Garden movement — this one seeking "victory" over the reality of millions of homeless people without jobs or money.
Eating from this, the shortest food chain of all, offers anyone with a patch of land a way to reduce their fossil-fuel consumption and help Fran, global warming rock star, fight climate change.
Just as important, Victory Gardens offer a way to enlist Americans, in body as well as mind, in the work of feeding themselves and changing the food system — something more ennobling, surely, than merely asking them to shop a little differently.
We all know we are in the fifth year of a drought and many water districts are calling for mandatory rationing: it makes sense to encourage Californians to replace their front lawns with front gardens. Imagine all the energy, water and petrochemicals, not to mention the pesticides that the environment will be spared.(2)
Your wife, Maria Shriver, is doing her part by joining the urban farming fever and planting a vegetable garden in Capitol Park in Sacramento.
Gardening promotes community as families and neighbors share their experiences as well as their garden bounty. Families learn together and work together for a common goal. Gardening allows many people to develop an acceptance of different ideas and practices and helps develop a sense of peace and tranquility, a necessity in the coming time as President Obama leads the nation out of its unsustainable American Dream and into the great new depression.
There will be chaos, perhaps, but with Urban gardening we might avoid anarchy.
Respectfully,
Robert Singer
cc: Senator Fran Pavley, Food and Agriculture Committee
(1) Closing the Collapse Gap
(2) Gov. Schwarzenegger, is $10 billion a year enough to solve the budget crisis?