Sunday, September 21, 2008

Farm Aid Helps F***ed Farmers

Just wondering where the BILLION DOLLAR BAILOUT is for the American family farmer.

"Farm Aid draws 20,000 at 1st Bay State concert; Annual benefit performance aims to raise $1m" by Rachana Rathi, Globe Staff | September 21, 2008

MANSFIELD - Walken and her friends were among more than 20,000 people at the sold-out event, held to support family farmers. People came from as far as Texas and Wisconsin to hear headliners such as Farm Aid founders Willie Nelson, Neil Young, and John Mellencamp, as well as to network and support the movement.

What was the carbon footprint on that, anyway?

From hot dogs to popcorn to whole wheat pretzels, the concession stands were filled with organic, locally grown, and family-farm fresh food. Trash cans were clumped in threes - landfill, recycle, and compost. And rather than selling merchandise, most of the stands were about education, awareness, and advocacy of family-run farms.

Expected to raise more than $1 million, the annual benefit concert for Farm Aid was held in the organization's home state for the first time in its 23-year history. Farm Aid, based in Somerville, helps family farmers thrive through grants and resource programs, raises awareness about the burgeoning Good Food movement, and promotes fair farm policies and grass-roots organizing campaigns nationwide.

"I was told as a child that the farmer, or agriculture, is the backbone of America," Nelson said at the news conference. "If the bottom rung, the farmer, if it falls down, everything else falls down."

Governor Deval Patrick also stopped by, touting the Commonwealth's commitment to open space and family farmers, who make up 80 percent of the 6,100 farmers in the state.

That's why it made the paper, right?

Mellencamp said the concert continues for many reasons, including the discrepancy in profit margins between family and factory farmers and the fact that suicide has replaced equipment-related deaths as the leading cause of family farm deaths.

That's not a good sign.

In a crowd ranging in age from toddlers to the elderly, the youth appeared to embrace the headliners and the cause. University of Massachusetts at Amherst freshmen Madeleine Maggio and Noah Simes, volunteers at the event, said it was a movement in which they could make a difference.

"It really feels like this is our generation's cause," said Maggio, 18, of Great Barrington. "If we can get a local food movement going in the United States, it can lead to solving big things - the energy crisis, global trade problems, our foreign diplomacy issues."

The day had a celebratory overtone with lawn chairs, cookouts, and games of Frisbee and beer pong filling the parking lot, and musical acts such as Dave Matthews, Kenny Chesney, the Pretenders, moe., Arlo Guthrie, Steve Earle, Jakob Dylan, and Grace Potter on stage. But the undercurrent was one of concern, particularly in light of the faltering economy.

Numerous family farmers said times were harder than ever, with the costs of fuel, fertilizer, and nitrogen rising as much as fourfold this year.

Gee, where is HIS BAILOUT, huh, Americans?

--more--"

Got a heck of a lot more print than that
other rally in Boston yesterday.

What was that one about again?