- Michelle Obama, Bill Clinton & Jim Leach on Speaking Freely w/ Dennis Raimondi Tue at 1pm
- Jukebox Boogaloo Tuesday Nite Annex 11pm
- Lyrical Venus: Female Singer-Songwriters Tues 9AM - Musical Moms & An Interview with Jessie Baylin
- Ultra Lounge Celebrates the 50th Anniversary of Stereo Hi-Fi Wed 2PM
- Politickin with Ari Berman Mon at 1pm
- THE INTERCRANIAL WHIZBANG HOUR: The 2nd Annual Post-Mothers Day Salute
- Norman Finkelstein's Recent Grinnell Address on Planet Erstwild Mon 1am
- Obvious World - Sunday Night - 11/10c
- Mothers Day Special 9am Tune in to hear Ruth and Daughter Elsa
- Thank You Fairfield for Making Our KRUU-FM Classical Gala Such a Success
Homeland Security
Well, if you have listened to the Tuesday broadcast and Thursday re-broadcast you have gotten an earful concerning our neighbors to the north and the Palms. I would really be interested in your viewpoint as well, even if is not the same as my own. My son Caleb tells me I'm too emotional about the whole thing. I should take all the emotion out and look at the situation logically. Well, easier said than done!
I'll admit being part Irish I am very tied to the land and emotion is part of that! When you're in love with someone you can't help but be emotional about them and that is how I feel about land! To think that someone can come along and not only tell you that you cannot continue to make a living on the land your great great grandfather farmed in the way you choose but that they are going to take it away from you all together...excuse me but I get emotional!
This is not the same as going in and taking houses or businesses in a town for urban renewal. Families can buy another house or build a business on another site but it is nie-on-to impossible for Mr. Palm to be able to go out and buy another 150 acres to farm. I've heard alot of talk about big corporate farms coming in and driving the small family farms out of business but at least corporate farms are still...farming! They still produce grain and meat, but if you turn it into a public anything how is that better? Might as well be a parking lot for the good it will do the neighborhood, city, country, and the world.
Iowa is a rural state, we are proud of that! We produce food not only for our own residents but also for the nation and the world. Lately I have heard some pretty condescending things said about farmers...I don't think people realize what it takes to run a modern farm today. Have you ever thought about all the things a farmer has to know in order to farm? Weather, conservation, animal husbandry, veterinary skills, genitics, biology, horticulture, tax laws, insurance regulations, banking, nutrition, mechanics...and I have only scratched the surface!
Okay now I feel like shouting, "I'M MAD AS HELL AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANYMORE!" So...maybe I am a bit too emotional. Sorry Caleb.
If we all thought alike what a boring world this would be. It is obvious that some people in our area have thought about and have spent some time with hogs and are well aquainted with their likes and dislikes. But I wonder if they know the one thing hogs like most [because they have no sweat glands] is to wallow in the muck and mire to cool their hot little bodies. Happy hogs most generally are lying in the hog wallow under a shade tree not scampering around in the sunshine. They get sunburnt just like the rest of us so it's better to stay muddy and in the shade. So if you are going to raise them in a confined area you have to moderate their environment by cooling them in the summer (and that includes cool mists of water cascading down from sprinkling units) and heating in the winter so that they don't lose their ears and tails to frost bite like field raised hogs use to do. Most confined pigs get hosed off every day and are in a much cleaner environment than field raised hogs. And as far as using their straw as compost most people agree that sheep and horse manure are a much better choice on homeowners gardens and lawns but hog manure is probably best used for field crops. (And just as an aside the farmers I've known use wood shavings as bedding rather than straw, it's cleaner.) Manure is natural though but I will agree very smelly. It is interesting to me that folks without children always have the best advise for those of us in the midst of raising our own...and maybe that might be a good metaphor here. Folks who don't make a living by farming the land and raising the world's meat/food supply really like to think they know better than the folks who have been producing year after year the best food in the world to feed the world. But I would like to hear more of what people have to say about this subject. I think it clear that we are talking about two separate issues however. One, farming practices, those who love them and those that don't. And Two, what are we going to do tomorrow? What we do everyday Pinky...try to take over the world!
And the thugs in Washington are trying to justify torture at Abu Graib too. Yes, I do have a right as a resident of this area to be part of the decision making process on land use. In fact, I believe I have more say as a local resident than the huge monopolistic corporations that really own these poor pigs and don't live here. The air, water and earth are not privately owned by corporations or farmers and should be used in harmony with nature. All of the farmers I know are opposed to CAFO's. They aren't family farms as some will have you believe.
I wouldn't regard what comes out of these factory farms as good food but than again if you've never had good food you wouldn't know it. More like eating misery. You are what you eat. CAFO's are banned in at least 1 country in Europe (Netherlands ?) and indications are that's spreading. They are way ahead of us but it will happen here.
Pigs are highly intelligent animals with a strong instinct to graze, forage and root for food, to play, to explore, to socialize with herd-mates or littermates, and in the case of sows, to build a nest at farrowing time. They need to be able to fulfill these instinctive behaviors and are unable to do so in CAFO's. Close confinement that prevents an animal from walking and turning should be prohibited. They should have dry, clean bedding. They are unable to breathe freely and safely in CAFO's due to amonia and hydrogen sulfide levels inside the prisons are far too high.
Liquid manure is pollutive and a bad idea. Straw is used by organic small farmily farms with huge success, the pigs prefer it as bedding material, it absorbs the manure and breaks down nicely into compost. Shavings and sawdust do not. There is no odor when straw is used. I've visited such farms and yes, pigs DO love basking in the sun as well as rolling in the mud. They happen to have intelligence and if allowed move freely between sun and shade. Mud is natural and it's healthy for them to be in it. Mud, sun, and fresh air are all excluded in CAFO world. Being locked up in a crowded aritificial environment in filthy conditions is not natural, healthy or just.
I enjoy debate with those informed on a subject with a handle on their emotions. This isn't the case here. Google search CAFO's and get the clear picture. There's good and bad farming and I support the later. I was told I had no right to speak on the issue as I'm ignorant in regards to farms and animal agriculture. For the record, I spent 10 years living and working on a farm, several years working at a soil and water conservation district and 2 years fighting a CAFO, alone. I won. Guess the citizens board of the Minnesota Pollution Control did think I had some knowledge in the matter.
Name calling and/or personal attacks are obnoxious and shut down discourse. Inviting others to respond and then attacking them for doing so is false and contradictory.
Hi Diana,
I was at the hearing, and I should state for the record that the hearing was conducted very civilly, and about 30 people (mostly farmers) made their opinions clear about Vedic City's intent to either condemn the Palms' land, or to apply eminent domain proceedings.
I don't believe the issue is as cut-and-dry as MVC taking over the Palms' land and destroying a family farm. There appear to be extenuating circumstances which need to be considered.
I have invited both Mr. Wynne (mayor of Vedic City) and Mr. Palms to have a discussion on the issue at KRUU. Both said they would consider it, and thus far neither has contacted the station.
There is obviously a great deal of emotion tied to the issue. This was abundantly clear at the hearing. But it would be very worthwhile to really get to the bottom of the issue, and what's really at stake for both Vedic City and Mr. Palms.
Perhaps we can try to get these parties in to actually have a civil discussion so we can get to the heart of this matter, especially since the outcome (whatever that is) will affect every resident in the area.
Enjoy :-)
|
Goal: $2000/month
|
|
|
2000!
|
|
|
1800
|
|
|
1600
|
|
|
1400
|
|
|
1200
|
|
|
1000
|
|
|
800
|
|
|
600
|
|
|
400
|
|
|
200
|
|
|
|
|
If you own a business, consider becoming an on-air KRUU Underwriter
Also, support KRUU with your tax-deductible donation.
It's easy to donate right now via PayPal (feel free to change the amounts below)
Click here for other ways to support KRUU


