May 11, 2007

A Corn Cartel Cometh

Farmer and mule plowBefore the 17th Century, the term farmer was seldom used for anyone working the land.

ancestry.com shows the history and origin to be the name of a tax collector - the word 'farm' derived from a 'firm' tax collector:
"The term denoted in the first instance a tax farmer, one who undertook the collection of taxes, revenues, paying a fixed (Latin firmus) sum for the proceeds. Old French ferm(i)er (Late Latin firmarius)"
As if to help reveal the point, Wiki states that a farmer follows a "way of life that has been the dominant occupation of human beings since the dawn of civilization." If this means the dominant had something to do with taxes, you can say that again.

In the 15th century, the fellows looking after the crops held an important position in the nobleman's property and would be known as a ‘yeoman’ - to attend to various tasks of the sovereign. Wiki shows that yeoman is an ancient word with its roots, no pun intended, in 'district' or 'country', hence the term, 'countryman' or 'man-of-the-district'.

During the cusp of the Industrial Revolution, the 1890 American Journal of Economics records the first 'factory' was built for what we now call a farmer. These factory farms recently harvested, no pun intended, over 75 percent of the cash from our nation's agriculture. Today, four companies produce 81 percent of cows, 73 percent of sheep, 60 percent of pigs, and 50 percent of chickens.

Finally, there's another interesting link to influence over money and power found in the more modern phrase 'to buy the farm'.
Jet pilots say that when a jet crashes on a farm the farmer usually sues the government for damages done to his farm by the crash, and the amount demanded is always more than enough to pay off the mortgage and then buy the farm outright. Since this type of crash is nearly always fatal to the pilot, the pilot pays for the farm.
It's clear that the 'farmer' has managed to remain especially well connected to government since they've been able to convince even the recently deceased to buy their property. It's clear that what we now call a farmer has been next to the money for a very long time. And next to power.

And today's 'farmer' is moving closer to money and power. They're growing, no pun intended, toward the lucrative and powerful energy business where they will supply not only our food, but fuel for our electricity, our heat and our transportation as well.

History shows us that the 'farmer' has been very shrewd. It's important for us to recognize how close they've been to the money all along. We need to pay attention before we find ourselves crippled under a Corn Cartel.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

A personal blog about ideas, written by a hardworking fellow who is big on love, tolerance, freedom and the human potential.



On The New Design
"Progress is man's ability to complicate simplicity." - Thor Heyerdahl

My favorite haiku

Ask not.
Take everything.
Even my poverty.


My Employment Ad
Life long iconoclast seeks engagement.

VP in Charge of Rebellion. Excellent opportunity to stimulate growth. Formal l'agent du change. Abyss facer with capable mystic graciousness. Poet industrialist. Altruistic capitalist. Molecular minuteman. Quantum quarterback. And much, much more. Able to leap reluctance in a single bound. Mentors, counterparts, swashbucklers, dancing girls included.

Transcendental Medication Corporation, makers of HexLax & Insani-Flush.

Links
Google News
blogger home
BrianHayes home
my construction blog
my computer blog
declaration of beauty

Contributors


My Economy Rant
When the rich steal from the rich, it's Good Business.

When the rich steal from the rich for the poor, it's Noblesse Oblige.

When the middle steal from the middle, it's Corruption.

When the rich and the middle steal from the poor, it's Fiscal Responsibility.

When the poor steal from the rich and the middle, it's Crime.

When the poor steal from the poor, it's Tough Luck.


Amazon 5 Stars
Brian Hayes produces the One Stop Thought Shop as a blog to capture smart and interesting ideas and technologies and social commentary. This blog doesn't tell you about what there is on the breakfast menu nor about mood or dinner dates. Instead the One Stop Thought Shop provides education and insight about breakthrough science, technology and our modern world. This is a good site for learning new things. Write your review.
Caveat
We must be careful not to overstate the case. Let us not forget that in this situation it must be noted: nothing could be further from the truth. Because, as they say, it is the exception that proves the rule. Of course, rules are made to be broken and so, in this case, we must make allowances. For the time being, all we can state with certainty is that, given this set of assumptions, all things will be equal. Context is everything. Thus, this is not the final word on the subject. And yet, because of the foregoing doubts, we must be doubly sure. So, in light of current developments and taking stock of all our cultural preconceptions, the conclusion is neither obvious nor buried.
by Robert Neuwirth.

Amerika
This doctrine is known as antinomianism, the doctrine that the Elect are free of all constraint by laws. To what extent does this principle still animate our politics?

At home, we have a famously low to nonfunctional welfare state, almost as if we thought there is fundamentally something wrong with helping those whom God hasn't favored.

Our entertainments (and sometimes, it seems, our police departments) are replete with the 'action hero' who breaks all the rules and acts an awful lot like a Bad Guy, but is the Good Guy nonetheless. More at Calvinism for Dummies

Reason's Revenge
mystic bourgeoisie:
"...history is not predestined. It is, however, littered with with petty control freaks peddling fascism tricked up to look like freedom..."

Henry David Thoreau: "Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life so. Aim above morality. Be not simply good. Be good for something."

Neitzche: "Morality is the best of all devices for leading mankind by the nose."

Isaac Asimov: "Never let your sense of morals get in the way of doing what's right."

Buckminster Fuller: "If humanity does not opt for integrity we are through completely. It is absolutely touch and go. Each one of us could make the difference.'

Albert Einstein: "As far as I’m concerned, I prefer silent vice to ostentatious virtue."

Anais Nin: "We don’t see things as they are; we see things as we are."





Subscribe
Google Reader or Homepage
Subscribe with Bloglines
Add to My AOL


Search

site or web

Services
[Valid Atom]
Page Rank
ping-o-matic
Statcounter
GeoURL
no software patents

Creative Commons License


Categories

Archives