zompist wrote: ↑Fri Oct 08, 2021 7:39 am
Industrial agriculture means that 90% of the population is no longer starving peasants. Farmers are certainly not poor in this country--
median household income for residential farms is $100,593, and $139,016 for commercial farms.
MacAnDàil is I think thinking of France where the situation of farmers is I think, different under pretty much all respects.
Median household income is about $50000, before taxes and various payments (notably, health insurance). Long story, that ends up far below minimum wage. And that number hides very different and unequal situation. As it happens, I know a few farmers. The usual strategy is that the farmer's wife has a safe civil job and often ends up providing the bulk of the income.
Farmers are at a higher risk of cancer and suicide. Surprisingly, all in all, their life expectance is a bit higher.
This looks like a highly unstable situation and you'd expect everything to be consolidated in megafarms; but the French are wary of industrial agriculture so there's quite a market for small farms. So in the long run I have no idea how this'll evolve.
Industrial agriculture, as it's practiced right now, has a number of problems: fossil fuel use, the carbon footprint of it all is absurdly high, and the current use of fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides amounts, basically, to nuking the existing ecosystem. (Reports on biodiversity are scary.) None of this is sustainable.
I don't think getting back to pre-Green revolution agriculture is the answer either. We need something new. I'm convinced we'll manager, but there will be lifestyle adjustments and it'll be painful in the long run. (At some point, food prices
will rise.)
(Again, I don't know how all this will translate in terms of economic growth. Ecosystems, which are what we're trying to preserve, don't translate to anything in terms of GDP so all in all the question is meaningless.)
Raphael wrote: ↑Fri Oct 08, 2021 10:12 am
And from a
cultural perspective, people who are usually on the left but dislike cities look pretty contradictory to me. I mean, I strongly disagree with
right-wingers who dislike cities, but at least they have a certain internal consistency on that matter. People who are usually on the left but dislike cities, on the other hand, are basically saying that everyone should live in small, tight-knit communities, but
somehow, in
some way that they never bother to explain, people should
not have the culturally very conservative mindsets that people in small, tight-knit communities have usually had in most places throughout most of known history.
No disagreement here! But I'd like to add that from a historical perspective, it's odd that environmentalism ended up on the left. If anything, it should be a conservative concern.
(Not too long ago I read a biography of Tolkien. It's interesting to see that he was a most conservative man in all respects. But his ideas on the environment, while eccentric at best during his time, feel very modern.)