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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Omnivore's Dialectic


      There are few professions accorded as little credit in the world of academia and business as motherhood. Oh certainly, people recognize and appreciate that you have “sacrificed your career” for your children, that you have “given selflessly” of yourself to create that most enchanted and enduring period of childhood for your own offspring. More often, motherhood and child-rearing are an onus to be explained away and overcome, like a stint in jail or a period of unemployability due to a highly contagious social disease. Rarely, though, does anyone consider your time spent in child-rearing and ask, “What have you learned?” 
 
      And the lessons are many. I myself learned that while I am of relatively little use in disciplining my children, I am a rather capable dog-trainer. I learned to make a German sourdough with wild yeast. I learned to plaster walls. I studied up on sustainable agriculture and organic gardening, tested my soil, made compost, and raised a garden. I learned about fruit tree diseases. I learned to grow enough to share with the bugs, the raccoons, the deer, and the ducks. I learned about frustration and triumph. And I learned the art of manuevering through rapidly changing and partially-informed opinions, with a minimum of tears and screaming—either my own or that of others.

     Because tearing of hair and condemnation seem to be the tone set for the argument between “conventional” farming and “sustainable” farming. The choices that we as omnivores face—collectively--seem to be bringing out the infant on both sides, and frankly, I'd like to set both sides in time out. I have no doubts about the truthfulness of the statements made; both sides are correct on many counts. I absolutely believe that both sides are heavily invested—both monetarily and emotionally—in the argument; that's clear from the vitriole. 

      I come from a family of arguers. My mother hated it; she would get sort of red and shrill whenever the four of us kids began one of our legendary arguments. Before long she would have composed a long list of outdoor chores for us, the most dreadful ones she could supply: shoveling out the barn, fixing fence, restacking the hay. She didn't realize that, to us, an argument was amusing. Hell, we lived in the country; what else did we have to do except argue with each other and have rotten tomato fights and jump off the barn roof? Actually, she didn't know about that last one. But it always began when one of us made an inocuous statement of opinion; another would disagree, rather more strongly, and in a few minutes, a raging debate had begun on, say, the relative probability of being killed by my sister's rotten clutchwork whilst driving us to school. As a mother, I can attest to the wearisomeness of listening to this, but the adrenal rush of the fray is not to be denied.

     A better question, though, might be: What's the cost of the argument? For every Tony Bourdain there is a Steven Best, for every Michael Pollan a Blake Hurst. For every one of my sister's protests that she is a “just dandy stick-shift driver,” there is my own unflagging protest that no, in fact, she is not. And the truth, as it often is, rests somewhere in the middle, quietly going on with daily life, as it often does, with some days being a little bit more progressive than others. Michael Pollan proposes some rather radical ideas—let's be completely honest. A corps of local meat inspectors? A strategic grain reserve? I can get behind it, although I feel that the regulation of such endeavors might stop them before they even get started. Restructuring American public school lunches?? Now you're really messing with tradition, friend. I can almost hear an entire nation, voices lifted together as one, “If I had to eat that god-dang tuna casserole, then my kids do too!” It isn't that school lunches couldn't be better—because we all know they can't get a lot worse—but it goes so far beyond lunches to changes in curriculum and, even worse, a reallocation of budget. Again, governmental regulation may ruin this otherwise good idea; school lunches are a money-maker for public schools catering to children in poverty. This needs to stop, but only if done in a way that actually benefits the child, and not the school alone.

     Blake Hurst, however, doesn't have all the answers either. He claims that technologically driven, fossil-fueled agriculture has kept food prices low, something that Americans will not be willing to give up. However, Darrin Qualman, in his chapter in Writing Off the Rural West, talks about the overall impacts of hog “megabarn” farming practices in Canada. The book contains this chart:


The gray lines at the bottom show the price of pigs per pound—or what the farmer is paid when he sells the live pigs. The black dots at the top represent the price of pork chops on average across Canada. The chart covers 1976 to 2000. Here we see just how illogical Hurst's argument is: consumers are NOT paying less for food because of technological improvements or vertical integration of farms; in fact, they're paying more. And neither are farmers earning more—in some years, they're earning even less. As Alan Guebert points out, Hurst is farming because there is (at least some) money in it.

     Hurst continues on by calling Mathew Scully's denunciation of animal cruelty a “move toward vegetarianism” (2). Quite simply, it isn't. It is, in the end, a rejection of the idea that we can distance ourselves from the inherent violence against animals that eating meat entails. Scully advocates for animals to live natural lives, to be unstressed and healthy, and for mindfulness. He writes, “Whenever we are called to decide the fate of an animal, the realism comes in at least facing up to the price of things whenever man with all his powers enters the pictures. It requires discernment and care and humility before Creation. It means understanding that habits are not always needs, traditions are not eternal laws, and the fur salon, kitchen table, or Churchill Room are not the center of the moral universe” (45).

     This “facing up” is something that more and more of us are having to do. Barbara Kingsolver writes of having to face up in her chapter “You Can't Run Away on Harvest Day.” Hurst rationalizes: animals want protection from predators, they like their barns, they're too stupid to live; in fact, this argument was addressed directly by Scully in Dominion. Kingsolver, however, makes no such claims. Domesticated livestock are, she realizes, as many of us realize, humanly constructed. We have bred them to be as they are—and because of this, we must, for our sake and theirs, harvest them when it is practical and best to do so. Population dynamics—our own and that of the farmyard populace—must be obeyed. However, Kingsolver and others like her – Lierre Keith, Wendell Berry, Wes Jackson—realize that domesticated animals are a part of the farm life cycle, a human-scale life-supporting ecosystem in which we care for the animals and plants, the animals graze and fertilize the plants, the plants feed us and the animals, and round and round we go, on contemporary sunlight. The differences between these people and Hurst is one of tone: Hurst hectors the reader with his rights to farm in any way he wishes, with a minimum of toil to feed a hungry world; the others concern themselves with a smaller scale, feeding themselves, their families, their communities, knowing that with stewardship and mindfulness, feeding the world will come in time.

     The thing is, none of these people are wrong. Blake Hurst is correct that some baby pigs will die as a result of a ban on gestational crating. Mathew Scully is right that gestational crates are cruel for the adult pigs. Steven Best is right when he says that pigs are happier outside crates, free to run and graze. Tony Bourdain is right when he says that pork is delicious. Barbara Kingsolver is right when she says that butchering day is difficult emotional and physical work. Lierre Keith is right when she writes that, whether we are vegans or eat meat, our diets are comprised of a thousand little killings, that things must die for us to eat.

     But they are also wrong—all of them. Because there is not one system of agriculture, not a one-size-fits-all diet. Wes Jackson said in a speech that so many of our problems, from agriculture to obesity to fossil fuels, stem from the fact that we are borne of poor people set down on a continent of seemingly endless bounty. We think that we can farm more, farm bigger, farm better, forever and ever, ah-men, when perhaps, Kingsolver, et al suggest, the paradigmatic shift from growth economy to developed eonomy is preferable in the long run. We don't know, because we in America have not tried it. Can we learn to grow our own food again? Can we know the provenance of our food (and still eat it)? Are we willing to accept seasonality and regionality and yes, maybe even scarcity, in our food? Will scarcity increase value, and will value in food mean a return to a simpler time and simpler pleasures: a family dinner? Establishment of local food culture? Mindfulness? I think it can.

     But first, we have to learn to talk, exchange ideas on the nature of farming and the myriad ways in which farming can transition from industrial to sustainable. Blake Hurst has a good point: villainizing farmers will not change the status quo. Similarly, however, demonizing hippie “agri-intellectuals” won't change things either. Believe it or not, you folks are not that far apart: you want to raise food—good, healthful, nutritious, delicious, and affordable food; you care about the land; you care about families, your own and others'; you care about the animals; you care about the ethics of what you are doing. But the way in which you each try to shout the other down—in the interests of being right? In the interests of selling a book?--well, it's just maddening. The confusion created for the public by such varied opinions—because that's all they are—is detrimental to the idea of effecting real agricultural change. So you lot, there . . . you just hold your horses. I think I have some chores to keep you busy.






Works Consulted

Berry, Wendell. “Conservationist and Agrarian.”

“Best, Steven.” Wikipedia entry.

Bourdain, Anthony. Kitchen Confidential. New York: Harper, 2001.

Guebert, Alan. “Guebert: Farmers Aren't In It to Feed the World.” Springfield News Sun. August 2009.

Hurst, Blake. “The Omnivore's Delusion: Against the Agri-Intellectuals.” The American(July 2009).

Jackson, Wes. Consulting the Genius of The Place. Counterpoint, 2011.

Kingsolver, Barbara. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. New York: Harper, 2007.

Pollan, Michael. “Farmer in Chief.”

Qualman, Darrin. “Corporate Hog Farming: the View from the Family Farm.” Writing Off the Rural West: Globalization, Governments, and the Transformation of Rural Communities. Roger Epp & Dave Whitson, eds. Edmonton: U of Alberta P, 2001, 21-38.

Scully, Mathew. Dominion: the Power of Man, The Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy. New York: St. Martin's, 2002.