From Wendell Berry,
“Leaving the Future Behind. . .”: “If a place-a family farm, a
country town and its neighboring countryside, a city and its
tributary region-does not keep and care for and use enough of its
natural and human goods for its own maintenance and its people’s
thriving, the result is destruction, permanent damage-even, as I will
dare to say it-climate change.”
From Paul and
Phyllis Van Amburgh in the March 2018 issue of Graze: “The time
has come for us to bring consumer dollars through to our stewardship.
The transfer of wealth has gone on too long. Producers have been
harvesting the health of their cattle, mining soil organic matter
from the ground and working themselves too hard.”
And from Quebec dairy farmer Gerard Vermeulen in support of Canada's dairy program:
"This is not
nice what I'm going to say, but I think you people need to hear it,"
he says. "Go in Quebec, drive around the countryside, look at
the farms. The tin is painted; the tractors are put away. There are a
lot of nice farms in the States, I'm not saying they are all run
down, but there's a lot more farms that are run down in the States
than Canada."
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