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Your victory garden and your local farmer can change the world

by: MinistryOfTruth

Fri Jun 05, 2009 at 16:05:27 PM PDT


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The concept is very simple. You are what you eat.

    Economically speaking, this also means that you are what you consume.

   Since consumer spending makes up over 70% of our national economy, logic dictates that the smarter, healthier and more sustainable our purchasing is as individuals, the more sustainable and strong our national economy will become.

   The simple ripples in the water can have drastic effects, in the long run.

    So, here's what we do.

   If Americans ate less meat, less fast food and manufactured food and instead ate more locally grown fruits and vegetables, as well as whatever food you can grow yourself, we could bring about the change we need without having to wait for anyone to take the lead.

   Simple changes to your daily diet, even if done in moderation, combined with enough people doing the same thing can literally change the world.

   If Americans bought half of their fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, poultry and dairy products from local providers, we could

1.      Directly effect the energy crisis. The less a food travels the better it is. Oil that profits America's enemies (terrorist supporting/financing nations, the Bush family, the Cheney family, etc) would not be in such high demand, which would lower the price and decrease the amount of damage being inflicted on our fragile ecosystem.

2.     Supporting your local economy means a stronger and more secure future for America. Factory farmed foods often lack the nutritional value that other foods have because of pesticides used on them, as well as the GMO's and other unnatural methods used to farm these foods in a way that is most profitable. Not only does this profit come at the cost of safety, the money these corporations make go towards the status quo that keeps America unhealthy, poor and in the dark about issues that directly affect our health.

3.     Preventable health issues can be avoided through proper diet. If you eat an apple instead of a McMuffin your body will thank you for it, and so will your local farmers, your doctor, the environment in which we live and anybody who may be attracted to you.

   These are just a few good reasons. There are plenty of reasons to eat less meat, prepackaged foods and GM foods. It is good for your body, for our local and national economies, it is energy efficient, socially conscientious and best of all, it is easy. If America can't sit on it's fat, lazy butt and stuff our faces to save the world, what will we be willing to do?

   I say this with love, of course.

   Seriously, though, it is so easy a caveman could do it. I know, because the cavemen founded the first agrarian economies.  

   Everything that you consume that is locally grown is one less gallon of oil our nation must buy from un-democratic, terrorist supporting regimes. Every time you eat at home instead of at a Corporate owned fast food location there is one less dollar that would have gone to supporting wasteful and unsafe factory farms, frankenfoods and the parasitic corporations that thrive with them. Every time you buy locally you keep another job in America, and every time you grow your own food you reap the reward of bringing a living thing into this world.

   I am not a vegetarian, but I try to do my part. I only hope that others may do the same.

   Next week we will diary, grow your own pot and help save the world.

   At the end of the day, much of the change our world needs is something we can do ourselves.

   So, get your forks, your re-usable shopping bags and your gardening clothes, and let's change the world.

   Isn't this how progress happens? One step at a time.

MinistryOfTruth :: Your victory garden and your local farmer can change the world
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Tips for being our own change (4.00 / 6)

and for doing for ourselves instead of waiting for others to do it for us.

asdf (4.00 / 6)
grow your own pot

There are many of us that would LOVE to do so!

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


Not me (4.00 / 5)
Pot isn't my thing, but if anyone else wants to do it, I figure that's their business.

Now growing my own pot-atoes, maybe . . .  

I have succumbed to the Twitter craze. @Omir55


[ Parent ]
exactly! (4.00 / 6)
many people making small changes get big results!

there is also the added benefit of exercise!
growing your own food will get you up & moving around, bending, stretching, lifting... therefore using up those last fatty bits left by those mcmuffins!  

come firefly-dreaming with me....


Also good mental effects (4.00 / 5)
I find gardening theraputic. I think a lot of other people do too. As a matter of fact, I think that is why I got into it. Then I started realizing how good the tomatoes taste and how shaky the economy is...

The potato plants are going gangbusters and if the volunteer pumpkins keep it up we are going to be selling pumpkins come October.  


[ Parent ]
bought? (4.00 / 6)
If Americans bought half of their fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, poultry and dairy products from local providers, we could

How about foraged?  ;)

Great post!

I wish I knew half what the flock of them know
Of where all the berries and other things grow,
Cranberries in bogs and raspberries on top
Of the boulder-strewn mountain, and when they will crop.
--"Blueberries" by Robert Frost


We're going one better (4.00 / 3)
Not only are we gardening this year (and off to a decent start, although a lot slower than we should have) we bought a bunch of our seeds from Ed Hume, a local company that specializes in seeds bred for the Pacific Northwest climate. We grow plants that grow well here, from seeds produced here, and the money stays in the area. I hope to buy an even bigger proportion of seeds from them next year.


I have succumbed to the Twitter craze. @Omir55

Local seeds... cool ... and smart! n/t (4.00 / 3)


[ Parent ]
gardening has helped me heal (4.00 / 1)
from my husbands suicide. It will be 2 years this July.On the day before he killed himself, we picked my daughter up at the airport. She had been away for 6 weeks. As we pulled into the drive way she said. "Dad the garden looks great" He said " I only see the weeds" They picked blueberries together that night, the last thing they did together...The next day he was dead...The garden is both a metaphor for his bi polar disorder and a way to heal for me..

I have just finished writing a documentary on my path since his suicide. The working title is called...He only saw the weeds ,my journey after my husbands suicide. Right now trying to get funding to film....



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