Daily Kos

Tag: Organic

Industrial agriculture versus Organic.

Thu May 08, 2008 at 11:20:41 AM PDT

Farming is the heart of every country.  Corporate agriculture - INDUSTRIAL agriculture - is destroying it worldwide.  

Notice that after the vaunted "Green Revolution" and the much ballyhooed "biotech" solutions to food problems:

  the earth is swimming in 6-10 more pesticides than before GMOs,
  fishing stocks are failing because of run-off into oceans,
  prices on commodities are sky-rocketing,
  people are not seeing the great promised yields that were allegedly proposed to solve hunger,

but in fact:

(most) Kossacks Don't Know Farming!?

Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 06:27:27 PM PDT

A few days back I posted a diary asking what would be the best use of a 40 acre farm in west central Minnesota. The answers, quite frankly surprised me- Kossacks divulged a plephora of romantic suggestions, most of which would lead our little farm right into bankruptcy. But I shouldn't really have been surprised- currently less than 2% and falling of our population live on farms. And most folks don't even live near farms- even here in Minnesota, two thirds of our population lives in metro areas. Ag news has been pushed to early morning hours on rural AM stations, and much of that "news" is thinly veiled PR from big agribusiness. Is it any wonder that Kossacks, never mind the general public, are so easily swayed by rumors of shortages and anti-ethanol propaganda?

Earth-Day Event for Chicagoland Kossacks! First Diary

Sat Apr 12, 2008 at 03:54:35 PM PDT

Calling all Kossacks in the Chicago area to come show some support for and learn about some amazing green businesses.

Green Scene on Northside Prep's grounds along the Chicago River next Saturday, April 19 from 12-5pm.

The CASE Project is holding its second annual GREEN SCENE.  Come out and support this great organization as well as some amazing businesses that are seeking to raise awareness of green products and practices in the Chicago community (and beyond).

Growing Vegetables on City Rooftops

Thu Apr 10, 2008 at 02:39:46 PM PDT

Crazy?

Maybe, but we're doing it.

At the end of this post is a guide full of relevant links showing how you can do this yourself.  We've also told our story using pictures at this Flickr page.  Next to those pictures are similar instructions on how to do this .

Our experience has shown that this process has other benefits, namely that it builds connections in a fragmented social/political landscape.  If you're trying to organize people, it's got a lot of potential.  A big selling point is that it is something that can be done by individuals.  You don't need to appeal for funding, attend planning meetings, or hire a budget busting number of "professionals".

If nothing else, you'll get some great tomatoes out of it.

The Ride for Farmers

Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 11:11:04 AM PDT

Think "Milk."  
Think Monsanto pushing rBGH in cows, with no labeling of the milk.  
Think farmers being sued for saying their milk is rBGH-free.
Think farmers in Pennsylvania facing prison for selling normal raw milk.

Think a 7 fold increased risk of breast cancer from the unlabeled rBGH milk.  http://www.sustdev.org/...

Think when it all began.
Think Clinton administration when Monsanto ran the FDA.
Think Monsanto altering the numbers in the studies.
Think FDA scientists fired telling congress about the fiddle of numbers.
Think Monsanto approving its own product - first GMO ever approved by FDA.
Think Monsanto hiring Burson-Marsteller to clean up the split milk. http://www.corporatewatch.org/...
Think pus in the milk and sick and dead cows and no labeling.

A New Victory Garden

Mon Mar 31, 2008 at 04:12:06 PM PDT

Throughout our extended weekend and stay with a gracious Obama volunteer in Pittsburgh, I must admit I wondered if someone had matched us, a white, Mennonite-by-choice, vegan couple with a 70 year-young, black, Reconciliation-by-choice, health-conscious grandmother.  We had so much in common, but our differences made for deep and purposeful conversations.  It was as if we had filled out a matchmaker form in great detail and were placed intentionally with Dolly.

Poll

Are you willing to volunteer, mentor, or plant a Victory Garden?

17%7 votes
5%2 votes
12%5 votes
15%6 votes
5%2 votes
17%7 votes
5%2 votes
5%2 votes
0%0 votes
15%6 votes

| 39 votes | Vote | Results

And now you know the rest of the tail: Easter Chocolate & Stuff...

Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 11:22:27 PM PDT

.... .... .... .... ....

I'm posting this as the fluffy bunny tale end of the diary I posted several hours ago but didn't have room for to include all I wanted so cut short. Please consider this a complementary companion diary to my earlier one:

Uncage the Chocolate Easter Bunny: Modern Child Slavery
by CSI Bentonville
Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 02:27:04 PM EDT

Bonus is that it's a non-can-did-ate diary to occupy those with insomnia overnight. :)

Uncage the Chocolate Easter Bunny: Modern Child Slavery

Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 11:27:04 AM PDT

Not available

It takes
10 full
cacao
pods
to make
6 bars
of chocolate.

Monsanto and Clinton:  animals, pain and diseases

Fri Mar 21, 2008 at 01:36:08 AM PDT

Disclaimer:  In all these diaries, I speak as a mother.  I am horrified by what I am learning about Monsanto and about what it is doing to farmers and to food.  Harking back to women's role over millennia, I have a familial and a societal (society being the larger family) obligation to warn.  In that role, I am free to err in the direction of too much caution but I may NEVER err in the other direction - acceptance of things as safe if there is ANY signal at all that suggests there even MIGHT be a problem. Common sense trumps the nitpicking parsing of science in this obligation.  Illogical things, greedy things, cruel things, massively controlling things,  send up flares.  And for those, mothers warn.  

Monsanto is pushing the USDA to institute NAIS, the National Animal Identification System, which is a global tracking system for every farm animal in the country. http://goexcelglobal.he.net/...  

How should anyone who loves animals feel about this?

Looking closely at what Monsanto is doing to animals already may help add some clarity.

Food News Roundup, Saint Patrick's Day Edition

Mon Mar 17, 2008 at 01:44:02 PM PDT

Happy Saint Patrick! I don't know about you but I'll be having a couple of pints of the black stuff later.

                                  PhotobucketPhotobucket

The "internets" is full of surprises, links and great news, good and bad.

Today I will post a series of links that I usually peruse, looking for the latest news on food produce, sustainability, farming methods and esoterica.

If you have any to add to this list, please do so, the more info we can get our hands on, the better.

A Chat with the Father of U.S. Organic Standards

Sun Mar 09, 2008 at 10:21:02 AM PDT

If you could identify a father of America's organic standards, Harry MacCormack would be it. He's been farming organically since before the term existed. Of course, during his childhood in upstate New York, there was no need for the term. No one used chemicals yet, so there was no alternative to what we now refer to as "organic farming." Back then, they just called it "farming."

Like many consumers of organics, I am interested in how organic my organic food actually is. Can it contain chemical residues? Is it truly good for the environment? Or are the American organic standards merely a sellout to Big Business like so much else in our country is? Few people are better equipped to answer my questions than Harry.

What's For dinner? The Free Range Chicken Edition

Sat Mar 08, 2008 at 03:31:23 PM PDT

This WFD? is a follow-up on Wednesday's diary about battery chickens versus free range. I have been buying free range chickens all along not just because I care about what ends up on our plates but how they are raised and what they are fed with is just as important. The low cost of a battery chicken is tempting, particularly in the light of this ever slowing economy. But if you knew the true cost of these birds you'd be amazed at how rapidly you'd switch to free range. Even though purchasing free range is somewhat prohibitive (as much as three times the price of an ordinary supermarket bird) it is well worth the buy when you consider that you are not only eating a superior fowl but you are also doing your bit for the planet.
The trick lies in recouping its cost by lengthening its uses, (assuming the fair-sized bird is bought for a family of four): first roast it for your Sunday lunch, then pick the flesh clean off the bones for chicken & sticky rice fajitas or a Shepherd's pie, then make a stock with the carcass, adding a few vegetables.    

Veggies of Mass Destruction - URGENT ACTION issue

Sat Mar 01, 2008 at 08:27:48 PM PDT

orangeclouds has graciously allowed me to diary a VMD (aka Vegetables of Mass Destruction) issue. And, it's an "URGENT TAKE ACTION" variety. Why the urgency you may ask, well...

Though Monday, March 3, the USDA is taking comments on a proposal to change the usage of the term "naturally raised" on beef/livestock product labels in stores. (PDF of Proposal)

Consumer polls indicate the average person imagines meat labeled "Naturally Raised" comes from animals that spent their drug-free lives freely roaming the fields of a family farmer, eating wild flora and being humanely slaughtered. A 2007 Consumer Reports survey shows 83% of consumers assume such labeling means "it came from an animal raised in a natural environment." The USDA, however, has released a standard for "Naturally Raised" meats that is so weak it would apply to a cloned animal raised in the confines of a factory farm.

Would this new label mean the cattle were grassfed? No.
Have had access to outdoors? No.
Were humanely treated? No.

(what to do below the fold...)

Breaking: 143 million pounds of beef recalled by USDA

Sun Feb 17, 2008 at 01:56:38 PM PDT

Sick cattle destined for consumption in the school lunch program and fast food restaurants were forklifted in the slaughterhouse.

Federal officials suspended operations at Westland/Hallmark after an undercover video surfaced showing crippled and sick animals being shoved with forklifts.

It is illegal to use these "downer cows" in the food supply because they are more likely to cause disease in humans than healthy cattle. However, the USDA hasn't reported any associated disease outbreaks with the recalled beef.

We ARE What We Sweet: Love does NOT have to hurt

Wed Feb 13, 2008 at 04:32:46 AM PDT

The Irony of Valentine's Day is that so much of what we give as gifts are awash in pain and suffering. It does not have to be that way.

THE TOPICS:
In this diary I'll talk about possible gifts for your Valentines as well as alternatives, providing much alternative and further reading at your discretion. Among the topics included are:

♥ Flowers
♥ Non-Sweets
♥ Chocolate
♥ Coffee
♥ Doing Without
♥ Dinner & a Show
♥ Jewelry
♥ Wine
♥ How to find "Love" and support kossoks too

Part of how I ended up at dKos was finding out how Republican the grocery store Safeway was. I already despised Wal-Mart (and more with each new thing I discovered about them) but was still to discover just how neck-deep in Neo-Con they are.

Essentially, I didn't want another damn dollar of mine going to support Bushco keeping them in power. As Dr. Phil would say:

Name the Farm Contest

Sun Jan 20, 2008 at 09:34:09 PM PDT

So far y'all have named my dog and my web site, now I'm asking you to name my farm.  The farm will be growing organic veggies and trees to start with, it will be completely solar within a year and a half.  There won't be livestock but lots of pets and a couple of horses and a stocked pond.

I have tried a few times but can't seem to come up with anything.  I'll need a name within a week as I'll be ordering supplies and feed.  I left this for the late night crew because I think you are a little more creative than the daytime crew.  So once again put your leather and aluminum thinking caps on and let loose with thy names.

Free Video Below The Fold!

Pa. to Ban "Hormone Free" Milk Labeling?

Fri Jan 04, 2008 at 03:13:08 PM PDT

Success in any market is driven by finding a niche that consumers like.  A lot of people are suspicious of products such as milk from hormone-injected cows.  Yet, a new Pennsylvania product labeling rule will ban the use of "no hormones added" labeling on milk products as of Feb. 1.  Apparently, consumers aren't smart enough to have the information needed to make the decision themselves on whether they'd rather buy this type of product.

Put aside your milk and cookies for a moment as we consider a true progressive issue -- food safety -- below the flip...

What's in the Weekly Papers:  Non-Violence and Local Meat

Fri Dec 07, 2007 at 03:33:15 PM PDT

The Boston area has a plethora of free papers in colored plastic boxes next to T and bus stops.  Two of them are the Boston Phoenix, the last of the "alternative" papers from the Sixties, and the Dig, an upstart about a decade old which keeps on picking fights with its older brother.  I pick up both because they're free, have comics, and include good (but not complete) events lists.

In the Phoenix this week, the cover story is on Gene Sharp, the Albert Einstein Institution, and their somewhat problematic promotion of non-violent tactics around the world.  They call him the "Dictator Slayer" and his institution a "Coup Factory."

In the Dig, I found an ad from Lionette's Market with a bold title:

Sustainable
Farming is the
Only Option

These are the cards in this week's news-stream tarot.

Poll

Non-violence as a weapon?

68%11 votes
12%2 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
18%3 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes

| 16 votes | Vote | Results


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