Quote from article below:
It has been 50 years since President John F. Kennedy spoke
of ending world hunger, yet on the eve of World Food Day, Oct.
16, the situation remains dire. The question “How will we feed
the world?” implies that we have no choice but to intensify
industrial agriculture, with more high-tech seeds, chemicals
and collateral damage. Yet there are other, better options.
http://nyti.ms/17Er20a
This isn’t about “organic” versus “modern.” It’s about
supporting the system in which small producers make decisions
based on their knowledge and experience of their farms in the
landscape, as opposed to buying standardized technological
fixes in a bag.
Some people call this knowledge-based rather than
energy-based agriculture, but obviously it takes plenty of
energy; as it happens, much of that energy is human, which can
be a good thing.
Frances Moore Lappé, author of “Diet for a Small Planet,”
calls it “relational,” and says, “Agroecology is not just
healthy sustainable food production but the seed of a
different way of relating to one another, and to the earth.”
The reason this won’t work, is the same reason @F-L-O-W, that
it’s too difficult to enroll the masses…?
I’ll answer that question in our
ValuDYNAMICS™ sessions to show you why values do NOT
spiral, but "leaf" out before going higher, based on a lot of
keys which I will outline.
Twice a year Mike sponsors a fund raiser to purchase rice
to feed the poor people he is scaffolding in the Philippines.
It’s not fun to continually ask people for money to help
others and Mike has been working on ways to reduce the
expense. Having majored in agriculture in college, Mike knows
how to raise crops efficiently and since his college days he
has learned even better ways to feed the world.
Below are some of his notes to his Inner Circle.
ALL of our rice was spared last weekend, but a LOT wasn’t
around us.
We want to use the rice thresher to conserve our own
pre-purchased rice and pick up 1 sack for every 12 sacks we
run through the thresher.
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- Dumping rice into a thresher
in the Philippines
Since everyone pays in this manner due to lack of cash
flow, we are going to pick up very valuable rice in this
manner this year as rice is already through the roof (50 pesos
per kilo, normal 30).
I’m offering our
ValuDYNAMICS™ (VD) program [Note: the
Early Bird tuition is $197 and the regular tuition is $297]
live or recorded (the live program is October 21-24) for
anyone giving $100 donation and if you do it by 10-18-13 you
can have the Living at FLOW series I just completed as a
bonus, this will bring you up to speed quickly on my latest
thinking, add $100 and I’ll give you the Design @F-L-O-W
series as well.
Just send your donation to
paypal@leadwise.com and I’ll let Gary
know to include you for these calls and recordings.
You will be interested in what I do with VD, as I’ve been
talking a lot with Don Beck [he introduced Spiral Dynamics – a
theory of human development] lately and we maybe turning SDi
on it’s side!!
In any case, there is a new values basin intensifying and
I’m going to elaborate on that as well as talk about
fractionalization and dis-integration and how it applies in
this new basin.
Help us help some needy people for the upcoming holidays
with this rice thresher.
-
- Pilipino children who will
benefit thru your donation.
Just go to www.paypal.com
and send to
paypal@leadwise.com today or tomorrow so we
can order it now. Thanks a lot!!
Mike
I forgot to show you what a rice thresher and thresher
process in the Philippines looks like.
-
- Rice in the field ready to
be harvested.
-
- Thresher being pulled to
it’s work location by caribou.
Including the rice thresher mover in the last picture,
believe it or not, they cost $500 for one of those compared to
a tractor at $5000 which requires diesel.
The mover you see, which I will purchase with the rice
thresher, uses grass only!
-
- The rice bagging machine in
operation.
-
- Filling the rice bags.
-
- The finished product ready
for market and/or the food tables.
I want to get this order in as it takes 2-3 weeks for
delivery and our first rice harvesting is starting first week
in November.
We project we can pick up around 10 sacks a day because
there are no rice threshers among our farmers and they must
wait until one comes free. This way, we can probably pick up
100 sacks of rice during the harvest season (about 200 raw
rice sacks at 50% yield). Those 100 sacks will be worth around
3-5k USD, which will pay for our thresher in rice!
Please review the bonuses you get for helping with a donation
of $100 or $200.
This is the best way I know to leverage our money. Please
help by sending your donation to
paypal@leadwise.com right
away so we can get one ordered. It takes 10 of you to get the
order deposit. I have 2 so far. Please help me help them!
Mike
Many people ask me about why I’m fooling around with small
potatoes when I could be helping more people with my
capability?
Well, it’s not true… and yes, it’s small potatoes, but it
is based on systems that keep people producing small amounts
in ways they can, such as with a rice thresher to help small
farmers with their crops:
Here’s a quote from this article at
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/15/opinion/how-to-feed-the-world.html
As Raj Patel, a fellow at the Institute for Food and
Development Policy, puts it, “The playing field has been
tilted against peasants for centuries, and they’ve still
managed to feed more people than industrial agriculture. With
the right kinds of agro-ecological training and the freedom to
shape the food system on fair terms, it’s a safe bet that
they’ll be able to feed themselves, and others as well.”
I graduated with an agriculture degree from one of the best
AG schools on the planet, and I have had to unlearn a
significant amount of what I learned about industrial
agriculture.
I do believe that we have to rethink EVERYTHING about
agriculture and how we are going to feed the world in the
future.
There are so many things I can help these farmers learn,
but it takes time and effort to teach them to inoculate their
seeds so they build better soil, or that they can hedge their
crops to finance production… even on their small plots
eeking out a small amount of food to sell and eat… using
caribou instead of tractors….
This is an extremely hard life. The average age of Pilipino
farmers is now past 50 and climbing steadily… as few want
this life. Yet, this very life holds the secret to feeding the
world, we just need to meshwork what we know and what we have
learned in industrial agriculture with smaller ventures and
capability.
If you can help me help them, we need a rice thresher this
year, please go to
www.paypal.com and send $100 to
paypal@leadwise.com so I can get one built for
them by harvest time.
Mike
*****************************************
Please make your $100 donation and receive
tuition free entrance to
ValuDYNAMICS™ [door tuition of
$297] OR
— make your $200 donation and receive access to both
ValuDYNAMICS™ and
Design Dynamics [a combined tuition of $597]
OR
— contribute what you can and gain access to our
Living at
FLOW audios [valued at $197]
Thanks for your support,
Team @F-L-O-W
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