farmageddon Anyone seen this?

   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #11  
40+ years ago I ran a raw (goat) milk dairy in Pennsylvania. Bottled and sold it to health food stores from Harrisburg to Philadelphia. Totally legal; inspected and tested every two weeks. I don't know about the laws today.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #12  
I have followed Joel Salitan for years now, he is a great man weather you want to follow what he is doing or not. What people should question is why is the goverment telling us we cant eat certain food, it should be an option and if you want to eat processed food or raw food its your choice to make. Why can people eat fast food for every meal of the day and government wont put regulations on that or people smoke 2 packs a day and drink a fifth of liquor every night and noone stops that, I'm not saying the government should stop those who smoke or drink I am saying they should let citzens make a choice for themselves rather than making it for them. I personally grew up drinking raw milk every morning, never once have gotten sick from milk but i've gotten sick from mcdonalds or wendys plenty of times and yes I still go back to those places and eat every now and then. When I went to college I obviously couldnt have fresh milk from the barn, I was 18 the first time I tasted processed milk and couldnt believe how flat it was. I just wish government would stay out of the nity grity of life and let us live, local, state, and federal included.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this?
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Your take on this will depend on how much you go for Alex Jones style conspiracy theories. The world has changed. Agriculture has changed. Small farmers farm in their spare time and work in town to make a living. That's just the way things are and always have been. There's a niche for people who sell value added products like jams and jellies, cheese, or fresh produce, but the customer base is limited and the opportunity for expansion is limited by the available labor within a family.

And if the documentary is true, expansion, is also limited by unfavorable legislation and unequal enforcement, I think we can all relate to that. Watch the part where an ununiformed fed with gun drawn is in someones house without identifying himself! Wonder how that would fly at Roy's house?

I don't believe what we see in a movie should be considered as factual. In my youth I watched many a Superman movie and I can't fly yet. Why? Am I doing something wrong? I watch movies all the time but consider them for what they are fantasys.


It is not a movie, it is a documentary, but with that said documentaries, just like movies and the evening news you are only seeing what fantasys someone wants you to see.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #14  
Bovine tuberculosis is transmitted through raw milk and attacks the bones. Often it settles in the spine. When I was a kid, you still saw frequent hunchbacks, though I think everyone who grew up before pasteurized milk has pretty well died off now.

There was a hoof and mouth outbreak a while back and people were unwilling to let their whole herd be slaughtered, but that's what it takes. Pigs, cows, horses, they all have to die, even if it was on the neighbor's farm and not yours. It's the price you pay for not having hoof and mouth in the USA.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #15  
I was reading today how rural America no longer has any political viable political force. My mind scanned my area and there is about 1/25th the number of actual farmers around but the few are mega farmers.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #16  
I have followed Joel Salitan for years now, he is a great man weather you want to follow what he is doing or not. What people should question is why is the goverment telling us we cant eat certain food, it should be an option and if you want to eat processed food or raw food its your choice to make. Why can people eat fast food for every meal of the day and government wont put regulations on that or people smoke 2 packs a day and drink a fifth of liquor every night and noone stops that, I'm not saying the government should stop those who smoke or drink I am saying they should let citzens make a choice for themselves rather than making it for them. I personally grew up drinking raw milk every morning, never once have gotten sick from milk but i've gotten sick from mcdonalds or wendys plenty of times and yes I still go back to those places and eat every now and then. When I went to college I obviously couldnt have fresh milk from the barn, I was 18 the first time I tasted processed milk and couldnt believe how flat it was. I just wish government would stay out of the nity grity of life and let us live, local, state, and federal included.

Surely you jest, sir. (or madam). You simply lack the intellectual capaciity to make these decisions. Let the "experts" in Washington decide what's best for you.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #17  
In the 60's and 70's, I know public school teachers in Ohio had to be screened for tuberculosis.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
In the 60's and 70's, I know public school teachers in Ohio had to be screened for tuberculosis.

Still do here in Ak as well as all the students. Even to substitute I had to have one.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #19  
In the 60's and 70's, I know public school teachers in Ohio had to be screened for tuberculosis.
During the years of 1967 to 1969, when I bagged groceries at a grocery store after school and on weekends, I was required to get a "Health Card". Everyone that worked in a grocery store, no matter what the job was, was required to get a "Health Card". And I had to pay for it. At the time, getting a yearly Health Card was $16.00.
 
   / farmageddon Anyone seen this? #20  
During the years of 1967 to 1969, when I bagged groceries at a grocery store after school and on weekends, I was required to get a "Health Card". Everyone that worked in a grocery store, no matter what the job was, was required to get a "Health Card". And I had to pay for it. At the time, getting a yearly Health Card was $16.00.

Ha, I started bagging in 1965. I think the pay was $1.60/hour. That would have been an expensive Health Card. I don't recall needing a health card in Ohio to work in a grocery store.
 

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