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Small farms thrive in the Ozarks.

In just the last 5 years the local farmers market has quadrupled in size, private "meat packing" plants are springing up in the small towns where they'd closed years back and roadside stands replete with seafood from the gulf and crawdads from the delta line the paved roads..


Well that is great, but someone needs to tell these people that independent liberty to grown your own food is rising.










[video=vimeo;16513455]http://vimeo.com/16513455#at=0[/video]
 
Read the first story, best I can gather folks who try to market their food in urban areas are getting hit..

Fighting the feds in their courts really isn't the brightest thing to do but I've gotta respect 'em for trying.
 
"Free" markets. "Free" choice. If Americans were not so pathetic, this would actually be funny.

Look at DonnaY's videos. These are not some companies lobbying in a textbook fashion to get a tax break. This is perverted aggression by the industries and their pieces of filth government cronies. Some imbeciles bust into Rawsome, basically telling people they are not going to eat raw food.
 
Did you ever think that the life span might actually have increased even more and that surviving cancer isn't the ideal solution. Not getting it in the first place would be the preferred approach don't ya think?

Did I fail to mention heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, Alzheimer's, etc. Oh wait that falls under chronic disease. Beating these diseases isn't called living. It's called surviving. Living a healthy existence is what we should be striving for.

Cancer predates cereal.
 
"Free" markets. "Free" choice. If Americans were not so pathetic, this would actually be funny.

Look at DonnaY's videos. These are not some companies lobbying in a textbook fashion to get a tax break. This is perverted aggression by the industries and their pieces of filth government cronies. Some imbeciles bust into Rawsome, basically telling people they are not going to eat raw food.

Really. American people who choose not to believe everything YouTube tells them are pathetic imbeciles. That's your best argument?

And it's circular. The government gives them too much power, but yet if we had no government to restrain them, they'd be even more powerful.
 
Read the first story, best I can gather folks who try to market their food in urban areas are getting hit..

Fighting the feds in their courts really isn't the brightest thing to do but I've gotta respect 'em for trying.


Entry barriers have always existed in some form.
 
Really. American people who choose not to believe everything YouTube tells them are pathetic imbeciles. That's your best argument?

It's a raw video. There is no "believing" it or not believing it. It's mathematical.

By the way, the Americans are pathetic. The police are imbeciles.
 
Some people will be impressed with science, but you still can't trump nature. We have simply traded viral diseases for degenerative diseases. Live longer, but you can also live longer with the pain of cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer's, etc.

Science can't beat nature. It gets us all in the end.
 
Here's a good case about a nearly 400 year old family business gone because of government and Big Agra.

After 380-plus years, New Hampshire family sells farm

Three years after it was put up for sale, an 11-generation family farm in New Hampshire has been sold for a fraction of the price that was first listed.

Members of the Tuttle family owned the 135-acre farm in Dover since 1632, one of America's oldest continuously operated family farms. They put the fruit-and-vegetable farm up for sale in the summer of 2010 as they dealt with competition from supermarkets, pick-it-yourself farms and debt.

The original price was $3.35 million. Foster's Daily Democrat reports it sold last month for a little over $1 million to Matt Kozazcki, who owns a farm in Newbury, Mass.

"It's huge," Kozazcki told the paper. "It's a lot of heritage. We're trying to make it as much of a farm as possible. You can't forget the Tuttles. I can appreciate the work they did," Kozazcki told the paper.

Kozazcki calls the business Tendercrop Farm and plans to sell meat and produce starting in December.

Kozazcki said he plans to install a memorial plaque honoring the Tuttles near the farm store entrance.

The New York Times columnist Verlyn Klinkenborg wrote a piece in 2010 when the farm went out of business. She points out that the farm was founded when there were, maybe, 10,000 colonists in America.

"It is too simple to say, as the Tuttles have, that the recession killed a farm that had survived for nearly 400 years. What killed it was the economic structure of food production. Each year it has become harder for family farms to compete with industrial scale agriculture — heavily subsidized by the government — underselling them at every turn," Klinkenborg wrote. "In a system committed to the health of farms and their integration with local communities, the result would have been different. In 1632, and for many years after, the Tuttle farm was a necessity. In 2010, it is suddenly superfluous, or so we like to pretend."

The Associated Press contributed to this report

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/0...ost-popular+(Internal+-+Most+Popular+Content)
 
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