Originally posted by Gary - KJ6Q
"And for those who are now saying "we have PLENTY of food, nothing to worry about", just remember, it hasn't been too long ago we were saying the SAME THING about crude oil!
Well, then someone prove to me that we DON'T have enough crude oil! Never mind the difficulty of proving a negative. Fact is, we have enough for quite a while if greenies would let us get to it. Twenty years ago we were all told that "there are only 30 years of oil reserves left in the world!" Here we are twenty years later, and what are they telling us? Right, "there are only 30 years of oil reserves left". Whatever. As long as there is a demand for oil, there will be people finding it, and finding better ways to get to it. Assuming, of course, that there is oil to be found. I would imagine that the oceans are VERY large places, and it's pretty likely that beneath them is more oil than we could ever use-- but drilling through 6 miles of water isn't easy.
Don't get me wrong here. I don't believe in waste. I believe that when God put Adam in charge of managing the earth, He gave him a big responsibility. I believe that the Earth was created first, for the glory of God, second for our use of its resources. In that sense, I believe in conserving what God gave us, since we are charged with using it wisely. It's called stewardship.
That said, there is an awful lot of Chicken Little in the US. The Sky is Falling! The Sky is Falling! I Must go Tell the King! Only, today, it is more like: Pollution is Everywhere! The Icecaps are melting! We are running out of oil! Republicans want to steal your Social Security! The point is clear: why live in fear??
As for farming, Illflem, I know that the American farmer is coming upon tough times. I lament that mostly because the values that made this country so great are based in large part on the work ethic of the American Farmer. From its founding, the US has been a nation of farmers.
But progress marches on. If you will pardon a bad pun, we have outgrown our farming. It's simple progress. As our society becomes more advanced, we can buy things that we previously had to make ourselves. Most of us buy our food at the store-- we don't have to provide all our own food. We have that luxury because we have prospered. Similarly, it's common when we become wealthy to hire people to do things for us: cleaning, laundry, mowing the yard, etc. We don't knit our own blankets anymore or sew our own clothes-- we buy them. The modern American is SO prosperous, that we have more leisure time than any other major society has ever had in the history of the world. We have time to post to the TDR board, watch TV, wrench on our trucks. A lot of us who are very busy are working hard not because we HAVE to in order to have our basic needs for food and shelter met, but because we WANT to in order to have a higher quality of life with more luxuries.
As we become more prosperous, our basic needs of food and shelter become further and further away from our worries. We relegate this things to less prosperous people. This is part of how we "climb the ladder" of living the American dream. Right now, many Hispanic Americans are climbing that ladder. in many places I have lived, Hispanics are the dominant group doing work like construction and harvesting (picking lettuce, strawberries, etc). Who does a lot of the landscaping work where you live? Hispanics? Housekeepers? Hispanics? Ever notice this? Why do they dominate so many aspects of American labor? It's because they don't view some things as being beneath them. They will work hard all day for little money doing work many of us might consider menial. But they do it. Why do so many rural Hispanics have large families? Well, maybe we should ask why so many white rural Americans ALSO had large families 100 years ago. Simple, more kids= more labor= more productivity. Many White Americans are in a similar place as their Hispanic brethren are.
The day will come when white Americans will be a minority. Why? Because of our prosperity. We advance to a certain point, then we enjoy all our luxuries. How many white folks do you know have more kids than their parents did? It's not a function of being white, but of being prosperous. When we get rich, we don't have 30 kids, instead we spend money on ourselves. We take vacations, and buy boats and RVs. And we don't worry about food when we do.
In short, the American farmer will soon be a memory of things past, a symbolic foundation upon which the greatest nation ever was built. It pains me to say that, but I think it is true. We are transitioning from an economy of goods (producing THINGS) to an economy of services (things we do for others). I don't want to think about what happens when we REALLY need some food, but we have run all our farmers out of business. I guess that's where we trust the beauty of capitalism: wherever there is a need (a market) there will be someone who will provide that need for money.
Sorry-- I felt I needed to share some things that I believe a lot of people forget about.
HOHN