Filed under: Farm Issues, Green Issues, political issues | Tags: Al Gore, commonDreams.org, Farming, Jill Richardson
Published on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 by CommonDreams.org
Gore, You Can Have Your Meat and Eat It Too
An Open Letter to Al Gore
by Jill Richardson
At Netroots Nation, [July 19 in Austin, Texas] I asked you about the role of meat consumption in global warming. You responded very honestly that it was not something you had addressed much yet, partially perhaps because you eat meat. I say that for a “recovering politician,” you are obviously cured. That kind of honesty is refreshing. But I sensed that you thought that a “low carbon diet” means no meat or little meat — something you and most Americans are not prepared to accept. That is not true. A “low carbon diet” means sustainable meat.
Let me first share with you a few personal notes that I’ve long wanted to say to you, even if they are superfluous to this topic. I was a student at Washington University during your debate [in 2000]. I was in the audience that day. It was the most memorable day of my college experience and also the day my world turned upside down.
I left the debate knowing you had won, and the media said Bush won. What? I was there. I saw it with my own eyes. Yet the media denied it. It got worse. You won the election. The media denied it. The public denied it. And on it went for eight years now of denial and destruction to our constitution and our earth.
To me, you are more than just a former veep. You represent a combination of my president, my father (who you remind me of very much), and a leader who is more than either of those, someone on the level of Martin Luther King, Jr. or Gandhi. I burst into tears when you took the stage in Austin. I don’t know why but I couldn’t control it.
If you aren’t perfect despite your passion for the environment, neither am I. I drive a Corolla bearing a bumper sticker that says “Polar bears for global cooling.” I can’t afford a Prius and I can’t bike to work. I understand the irony that my instrument of global warming calls for its prevention. I can’t throw stones and I don’t wish to. I wish to work with you, if you are willing, towards a healthier planet.
The idea that animal products in particular (above all other foods) contribute to global warming is fairly established by studies such as one called “Diet, Energy, and Global Warming” published by University of Chicago researchers a few years ago. It is true. When considering only conventional, factory farmed meat, the less you eat of it the better. I became a vegetarian for that very reason. The silver lining is that the flaw isn’t in animal products themselves but in how we produce them.
A friend of mine, Judith McGeary, produces sustainable lamb, chicken, turkey, and eggs on her small Texas farm. The sheep graze on pasture, harvesting their own food. Judith tries to source feed for the chickens and turkeys locally when possible.
Most of all, the farm represents an enormous carbon sink. Instead of collecting manure in polluting, smelly lagoons like a factory farm, Judith lets nature take its course. Dung beetles on her land take care of all of the manure and they improve the soil at the same time. Then she sells the meat to local customers who use little oil to transport the meat home. She uses a lot of energy for refrigeration but she offsets it with solar panels on her roof. Her new home, currently under construction, will be a green building.
Judith is a scientist and an environmentalist. She earned a degree in Biology from Stanford, a JD from UT-Austin, and she also studies graduate level eco-agriculture at UT-Austin. Thousands like her around the country are equally passionate about sustainable agriculture. They might not all have degrees from Stanford but they aren’t starry eyed, idealistic hippies either.
The “eco” in “eco-agriculture” stands for “economical” as well as “ecologically-friendly.” Sustainable farming is a fantastic business model, producing a valuable product that more and more consumers are embracing.
I hope you will continue working on all of your current efforts — plug-in hybrids, solar panels, etc — but if we have five years to save the polar icecaps as you say, we need to do what we can do now. Sustainable agriculture is something we can do now. Sustainable agriculture means you can have your meat and eat it too.
Jill Richardson is the editor of the website La Vida Locavore and a new Policy Board Member of the Organic Consumers Association.
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To establish sustainable agriculture on a meaningful scale what is needed is a system that can be deployed quickly and on a broad scale. That is the concept behind SPIN-Farming. SPIN is a franchise-ready sustainable farming system that makes it possible to earn $50,000+ from a half acre. SPIN farmers utilize relay cropping to increase yield and achieve good economic returns by growing only the most profitable food crops tailored to local markets. SPIN’s growing techniques are not, in themselves, breakthrough. What is novel is the way a SPIN farm business is run. SPIN provides everything you’d expect from a good franchise: a business plan, marketing advice, and a detailed day-to-day workflow. In standardizing the system and creating a reproducible process it really isn’t any different from McDonalds. By offering a non-technical, easy-to-understand and inexpensive-to-implement farming system, it allows many more people to farm, wherever they live, as long as there are nearby markets to support them, and it removes the two big barriers to entry – sizeable acreage and significant start-up capital. By using front lawns and backyards and neighborhood lots as their land base, SPIN farmers are recasting farming as a small business in cities and towns and are helping to make local food production a viable business proposition once again. You can see some of them in action at http://www.spinfarming.com
Comment by Roxanne Christensen July 23, 2008 @ 1:41 pmRoxanne,
Thank you for posting your comment. It has a lot of good information.
I got interested in farm issues because of my time spent in KS. In Salina where I used to live they have a wonderful place called the Land Institute that does wonderful work.
I also saw first hand just how hard it was for the small KS farmer. More and more before I left KS in 98 I saw more corporations buying up the farms in Saline County.
You have a great day!!!
Chrisy
Comment by chrisy58 July 23, 2008 @ 1:50 pm