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Farm Business
Agricultural Matters
Excellent article about rewilding
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<blockquote data-quote="Humble Village Farmer" data-source="post: 7948203" data-attributes="member: 142541"><p>The article makes a number of exaggerations.</p><p></p><p>It implies by omission that everything in the agricultural garden is rosy and we have a thriving functioning agricultural and food economy. What balls is that? A third of farms are losing money before bps and some are even loss making after subsidies. </p><p></p><p>They claim that Elms will result in food insecurity when we are already only producing 50% by value of the food bought in this country. </p><p></p><p>There's a constant whine on food prices going up which can only be good for farmers (unless the corporate food system manage to keep all of the price increases). Food has never been cheaper.</p><p></p><p>It's not just the rspb and national trust who want to see increased biodiversity. A large section of the public do and some farmers too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Humble Village Farmer, post: 7948203, member: 142541"] The article makes a number of exaggerations. It implies by omission that everything in the agricultural garden is rosy and we have a thriving functioning agricultural and food economy. What balls is that? A third of farms are losing money before bps and some are even loss making after subsidies. They claim that Elms will result in food insecurity when we are already only producing 50% by value of the food bought in this country. There's a constant whine on food prices going up which can only be good for farmers (unless the corporate food system manage to keep all of the price increases). Food has never been cheaper. It's not just the rspb and national trust who want to see increased biodiversity. A large section of the public do and some farmers too. [/QUOTE]
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Excellent article about rewilding
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