Wingnut, I too, was raised 'country', and have lived in large cities as well. Let me give a very simple example, perhaps not the best, but it will suffice for my purposes.
Farmer Brown raises Idaho potatoes, bushels and bushels of them. Sprays for the potato bug, and flea beetles, and so on.. finally harvesting them. Since he is a prudent fellow, he contracts for his crop well in advance, and does pretty much everything, within his power, of course, to increase his yield. After harvest, the trucks come round to pick up his crop, he receives on average, $.10/ lb ; thats a DIME per pound, of his potatoes.
Now, that broker he sold them to, sells some to this place, some to that place, all for a healthy profit of course (free market, as it were) and a huge portion to the fast food chain Mcdonalds.
Now, Mcdonalds skins the taters, deep fries them in vegetable oil (also an ag product) and then sells them for approximately $6.00/lb
Now thats a bit beyond the healthy profit and straight into obscene. Sure, there is a LOT of other costs, trucking, storage, many many things.. but dayum, somethin inside me says, now there has GOT to be a way that poor guy in Idaho could somehow get a lil more money for his taters.. but he cannot. He can sell to another broker, but hey, they ALL pay the same.. and if you don't like the pay, quit raisin taters.
Sure.. free market.. laws of supply and demand. I agree 100%.
Now, lets see.. if I remove the supply, by NOT growin a [censored] thing for anyone but myself and my family.. the demand oughta rise. After all, EVERYONE has to eat. And sure enough, if enough farmers stopped growing, the prices would SKYROCKET.. at the Chicago Board of Commodity Exchange. Do you actually think the poor SOB with the $350,000 combine, and $4,000,000 worth of land, who has a savings account of $1200 bucks, and barely keeps from bouncing checks is gonna see a DIME of that price increase?
Farming IS a business, and if my business model does not work, then I lose out, and go out of business. However, I know of NO other business, where the principals pay retail for all supplies, equipment and raw materials (seed) and then sell their product for less than wholesale.
Wholesale is what the broker charges the retailers of this product, to stock their grain bins, to fill their french fry machines...
As for "where is it written that I get to make all the choices, and society gets to pay for my miscalculations" ....
Do me a favor and ask the Fortune 500 company CEOs that. Ask the executive staff of Enron Oil Co. Ask the Chairman of the US Federal Reserve.
I choose to produce a product, and sell that product myself. Straight to consumers, fruits such as apples, pears, peaches, berries of many kinds, and so on. I choose, NOT to sell to some broker, but for someone with 10,000 apple trees, there very well may not BE such an option. Either sell to this guy, or this guy, both are going to pay the same. It's [censored] certain that apple farmer isn't going to open himself a roadside stand and sell 50,000 bushels of apples.
I do not know all the ins, and outs of the government price supports, and so on, but a very interesting question comes to my mind every time it is brought up... if we remove price supports, AND remove the artificial businesses that do nothing but act as a middleman for huge profits, not only would prices for those farmers go UP, but the prices at the check out stand of your local produce store would go DOWN.
I remember an in law of mine who raises apples in the Yakima valley of Washington state, telling me, if he could sell to grocery stores' central warehouses directly, he could DOUBLE his profits, and cut in HALF the cost of a Red Delicious apple at his local supermarket.
These artificial constructs DO serve a purpose, in that they make available nationally, the very best produce, and meat, that is available. There is a LOT of paychecks involved in the trucking, storage and other things.. which explains why there is such profit, since these brokers have to pay for a lot of this.
Oh and by the way.. if you don't think farmers are small business owners.. then perhaps I am actually wasting my typing. Farmers upgrade their education every year.. it's called experience. Remember that, next time, you buy some celery.
And yeah I would love to see the family farm 'return'. But let's NOT forget, the poor guy that runs that combine for Archer Daniels, HAS a family. He just couldn't compete, law of supply and demand, and free market, and all that...
So he got a job.