Wingnut
Veteran Member
KPP ... "I" think that a farmer is definitely a small business owner. I just don't happen to think that they're treated as such. Non-farm business owners sink or swim - mostly on their own - with little sympathy from anyone ... not at all the way farmers are treated.
I hope I'm not appearing anti-farmer ... my point is that farming WAS a lifestyle ... but NOW it's a business ... but not treated completely like a business. When's the last benefit you saw for Joe mom-and-pop-shop who's losing the family store?
Yeah ... you have a point about what you're paid ... so does the rest of the crowd involved in the "you want fries with that?" crowd. The trucker also has expenses, so does the broker, the MickeyD owner has to pay MickeyD plus pay that youngster (or oldster) and still sell the fries for a loss (Biggee Size or Super Size or whatever). He's not selling your spuds ... he's selling your spuds that have been delivered, peeled, deepfried, seasoned, packaged and handed over with a plastic smile. Obscene profit? Maybe by MickeyD ... but how about the individual franchisee?
You want to make the $6.00 a pound that they're charging for your spuds? OK ... build a store, hire people, advertise to the degree that people equate orange with MickeyD instead of Kubota ... and maybe you'll make money ... or maybe not.
On your comments about the Fortune 500 companies. I happen to agree about the obscene salaries those guys make (more so, sicne I wotrk for one) ... but you think they're different? I remember wondering why we'd sell something under the cost of production myself ... terrible business model ... but somewhere, somehow, it is written that market share is worth something. I don't happen to believe it ... but then I don't happen to understand how you can sell a business and have a certain amount of proceeds based on "good-will". Of course, if a company keeps selling for under the cost of production - for whatever reason - they'll soon go the way of the Internet startups and the DoDo Bird ... extinction ... and Willie Nelson won't consider a benefit for them. Run a farm into the ground and your family suffers ... run Enron into the ground and, apparently a lot of families suffer.
You don't like middlemen? Well, neither do I, but they certainly abound ... and seem to serve a need. They aggragate when supply is fragmented, and also perform the reverse. You don't buy your fertilizer directly from Monsanto or whomever ... you buy it from a wholesaler or, more likely a retailer. You want to eliminate the middleman ... well, either you get big enough to completely supply Safeway ... or form a co-op so you're big enough to supply Safeway ...
Almost finally .... I get experience too .... but that doesn't help me stay ahead of my competition ... all those young guys getting out of college with all the new techniques and lots of book-larnin' ... so I gotta spend time and non-reimbursed money to keep myself better educated than my peers. Besides ... experience is just another way of saying "I served my time" .... "good experience" now (but who gets to define "good?). And I get to work 365 days/year minus whatever vacation I don't want to lose. Spend weeks away from my family whenever someone wants to meet in Holland or Brazil or Thailand ... all the while building up my little patch of ground so I can enjoy the farming lifestyle when I retire.
Finally (thought I'd never get here?) ... again ... I'm not anti-farmer by ANY stretch of the imagination ... I'm just in favor of balanced viewpoints. There are at least 4 sides to every story.
(ps ... nor anti-KPP !!)
I hope I'm not appearing anti-farmer ... my point is that farming WAS a lifestyle ... but NOW it's a business ... but not treated completely like a business. When's the last benefit you saw for Joe mom-and-pop-shop who's losing the family store?
Yeah ... you have a point about what you're paid ... so does the rest of the crowd involved in the "you want fries with that?" crowd. The trucker also has expenses, so does the broker, the MickeyD owner has to pay MickeyD plus pay that youngster (or oldster) and still sell the fries for a loss (Biggee Size or Super Size or whatever). He's not selling your spuds ... he's selling your spuds that have been delivered, peeled, deepfried, seasoned, packaged and handed over with a plastic smile. Obscene profit? Maybe by MickeyD ... but how about the individual franchisee?
You want to make the $6.00 a pound that they're charging for your spuds? OK ... build a store, hire people, advertise to the degree that people equate orange with MickeyD instead of Kubota ... and maybe you'll make money ... or maybe not.
On your comments about the Fortune 500 companies. I happen to agree about the obscene salaries those guys make (more so, sicne I wotrk for one) ... but you think they're different? I remember wondering why we'd sell something under the cost of production myself ... terrible business model ... but somewhere, somehow, it is written that market share is worth something. I don't happen to believe it ... but then I don't happen to understand how you can sell a business and have a certain amount of proceeds based on "good-will". Of course, if a company keeps selling for under the cost of production - for whatever reason - they'll soon go the way of the Internet startups and the DoDo Bird ... extinction ... and Willie Nelson won't consider a benefit for them. Run a farm into the ground and your family suffers ... run Enron into the ground and, apparently a lot of families suffer.
You don't like middlemen? Well, neither do I, but they certainly abound ... and seem to serve a need. They aggragate when supply is fragmented, and also perform the reverse. You don't buy your fertilizer directly from Monsanto or whomever ... you buy it from a wholesaler or, more likely a retailer. You want to eliminate the middleman ... well, either you get big enough to completely supply Safeway ... or form a co-op so you're big enough to supply Safeway ...
Almost finally .... I get experience too .... but that doesn't help me stay ahead of my competition ... all those young guys getting out of college with all the new techniques and lots of book-larnin' ... so I gotta spend time and non-reimbursed money to keep myself better educated than my peers. Besides ... experience is just another way of saying "I served my time" .... "good experience" now (but who gets to define "good?). And I get to work 365 days/year minus whatever vacation I don't want to lose. Spend weeks away from my family whenever someone wants to meet in Holland or Brazil or Thailand ... all the while building up my little patch of ground so I can enjoy the farming lifestyle when I retire.
Finally (thought I'd never get here?) ... again ... I'm not anti-farmer by ANY stretch of the imagination ... I'm just in favor of balanced viewpoints. There are at least 4 sides to every story.
(ps ... nor anti-KPP !!)