Farm Crisis 2025

2024 ж. 24 Мам.
13 562 Рет қаралды

1920s. 1980s. are we set to repeat the past?

Пікірлер
  • The only real crisis is that you need to be a millionaire to start. This is why government is starting to freak out about not enough young people wanting to farm. I'm right here, ready willing and able. Its not that we don't want to, we literally can't afford to start. People like bill gates and investment groups should not be allowed to buy farmland. The reason we have over production is because GMO seeds have essentially perfect yields only increased by fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides. What's actually needed is to reduce yields not maximize. This will push prices up.

    @ADobbin1@ADobbin115 күн бұрын
  • You understand that we inflict these factors on ourselves. We do no obey market signals, we bid up rent and land prices and we generally have little discipline on the business side. In the 80's we demanded legislators (lawyers with no business experience) take over our businesses. Govt just makes things worse. I enjoy farming, but it's a business and it has new challenges every year. Unfortunately the folks that go crazy with debt because they think they can, end up on the cover of farm magazines then crash. Yet folks want to be like them. Sustainability of ag isn't the problem. It's very sustainable except for our lack of business discipline. New systems need time for the bugs to be worked out (ie. notill or versions of it are very common now but seed and equipment needed to catch up). Forcing us to adopt someone's dream of sustainable farming will result in the opposite and worse problem of shortage. Consider that agriculture works because it's 2M different farmers adjusting our businesses and practices just about every year. We certainly learn from each other (experience matters) and consider input from other sources. Thinking that a relative few folks with no business or ag experience can come up with better solutions is foolish (ask Stalin)

    @harmetp@harmetp9 күн бұрын
  • This presentation is very well put together and correct. I was listening to some farmers talk about 400 bushel corn in the future. We'll have to ship it to another planet, to get rid of it.

    @coolstuff3016@coolstuff301612 күн бұрын
  • All very concerning but must we bail out every industry that produces too much? Pork prices are in the tank and yet massive new pig farms are built every year. Every hog owner wants more sows. Should we reward them for their gluttony?

    @gwc3721@gwc372120 күн бұрын
  • Thank you. Let's pass the word to get the public to understand farming.

    @jimlenz7416@jimlenz741624 күн бұрын
  • Just found your video I think we may still be on track for 2025.

    @Plan_it-Farm@Plan_it-Farm26 күн бұрын
  • As a farmer. People do not understand that we raise this food way below cost and it is the middle man who is totally ripping us all off.

    @Deere703@Deere70310 күн бұрын
  • Do you think a better method than pure direct payments could be tying direct payments to a do-not-cultivate order (requiring farmers to either only grow crops for their own-use, or lease land to people in towns for UK-style allotment gardening for a couple seasons, or just straight up put the land in cover crops or native vegetation)?

    @ellenorbjornsdottir1166@ellenorbjornsdottir116618 күн бұрын
    • Yes. We have a program called STAR that sets up a step by step method for farmers to become better land stewards. It should be mandated to get any government payment to be enrolled (it's free) in this program. I did a video on this as well. Thank you for your comments. I'm working on a follow up.

      @jimlenz7416@jimlenz741618 күн бұрын
  • You sir just summarized 3 generations of grinding farm work and experience into 10 minutes. Kudos and may it help more people understand. Do we as a country want large conglomerate foreign ownership of our farm lands or support family farming in meaningful ways?

    @scubasteve7946@scubasteve794625 күн бұрын
    • Are you perhaps suggesting that we, as a country, want large "domestically" owned conglomerates to have ownership of our farm lands who employ/use family farmers in all kinds of ways?!? Isn't this the case at present? Shouldn't we be questioning ALL types of conglomerate farmland ownership/management/involvement?

      @pedamucic@pedamucic18 күн бұрын
  • The elephant in farming is the ethanol mandate , farms are in big trouble if this were eliminated.

    @ronaldanderson6481@ronaldanderson648115 күн бұрын
  • Why it isn't important is this: hubris, and ignorance. They think it couldn't happen. Maybe they're captured. Maybe they just think you're some loon, which is not true.

    @ellenorbjornsdottir1166@ellenorbjornsdottir116618 күн бұрын
  • 100% agree! We need help producers transition to regenerative farming. For all of our sakes!

    @scottschaeffer8920@scottschaeffer892021 күн бұрын
  • The problem is that the Cabal has been taking the money out of the farmers pocket through costs of equipment and fertilizers. Farmers are enslaved through debt

    @user-et6ic7cc7e@user-et6ic7cc7e9 күн бұрын
  • Use organic humate yo save your farm!

    @bobwelch8317@bobwelch8317Ай бұрын
  • Take fulvic acid to restore needed minerals in your body?

    @bobwelch8317@bobwelch8317Ай бұрын
  • Rapid technology advances render a sizeable portion of existing farmers obsolete. The problems come from government programs attempting to support the excess farmers. The solution is to allow the market to work by allowing the excess farmers to fail, thereby reducing farmer debt load and overproduction. We need less govt interference, not more.

    @paulanderson3349@paulanderson334919 күн бұрын
    • @paulanderson3349 I used to be like you, thinking less gov. involvement is the right idea. But, from experience I can say the gov. plays a super critical role in farming. Every agricultural product on the market is a direct result of some type of government regulation, period. Without it we risk famine, poisonings, monopolies, etc. Wise government policies is the way to go, not absurd deregulation. Overproduction can be simplified by tightening restrictions on unsustainable farming practices and focusing on exporting what we don't consume as a nation.

      @christianmama2441@christianmama244118 күн бұрын
    • My friend My opinion is it's not near as cut and dry like you think As cheap as food is What ever system is in play It's working

      @user-me9ed9ro4z@user-me9ed9ro4z15 күн бұрын
    • @@christianmama2441 I was talking about subsidies that attempt to prop up in-efficient farms. I didn't say that there shouldn't be minimum food standards.

      @paulanderson3349@paulanderson334912 күн бұрын
    • @@paulanderson3349 I don't know about you, but the way they grow the major crops like soybean and corns should totally alarm you for two reasons: quality very poor, completely unsustainable for the land. It's not good for anyone, the profits are not even worth the trouble, hence the subsidies. I'm in favor of them getting rid of seed patents (no more GMO stuff) and encouraging organic and sustainable farming instead. US has way more farmland than it needs to feed it's entire population and could produce quite a bit for exporting. Efficiency and sustainability are often at odds with one another, you can't usually have both, one will always suffer.

      @christianmama2441@christianmama244112 күн бұрын
  • Wallstreet got bailout communism Agriculture will get we are sorry ca insolvency no bailout capitalism

    @michaelvanzyl8749@michaelvanzyl874920 күн бұрын
  • Land prices are huge. Everyone who wants to go into farming can't afford to, and everyone who can afford to go into it is getting out of it. Meanwhile, it seems as though the land itself is dying, as tends to happen in the latter stages of a declining civilization, as well as when there are abrupt, no-analogue shifts in climate.

    @ellenorbjornsdottir1166@ellenorbjornsdottir116618 күн бұрын
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