We think you're near Los Angeles

Currently in Los Angeles

Location: Los Angeles Current temperature: 45°F: Current condition: Clear See Extended Forecast

A Thanksgiving lesson for environmental alarmists

 

The American Farm Bureau Federation just released its annual survey estimating the cost of the traditional Thanksgiving dinner. It reminds us that, while our nation struggles to recover from its worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, there are still blessings to be counted.
 
The average cost of this year's feast for 10 is $44.61, according to the Farm Bureau survey. That includes a 16-pound turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, rolls with butter, peas, cranberries, a relish tray of carrots and celery, pumpkin pie with whipped cream, and coffee with milk.
 
The price is up $2.35 from last year, which may not seem a blessing. That is, unless we adjust for inflation, in which case the cost of this year’s Thanksgiving dinner is actually is 8 percent less than it was 20 years ago.
 
That decline amounts to a near miracle  considering that, just three decades ago, the American public was warned that the so-called population "explosion" would almost certainly lead to food scarcity, starvation and higher commodity prices.
 
That was the dire prediction of Paul Ehrlich, a latter-day Malthusian, who authored the 1968 jeremiad titled, "The Population Bomb." Ehrlich warned that the Earth eventually would be overrun by human beings, and that worldwide famine would follow, accompanied by global chaos and social unrest.
 
Ehrlich's zero-sum thinking, which continues to inform the more radical fringes of the environmental community to this very day, proved wrong.
 
He assumed, incorrectly, that farm output would remain relatively constant over time. He failed, shortsightedly, to foresee agricultural advances -- scientific, mechanical and technological -- that have enabled American farmers to multiply their output.
 
Indeed, in 1850 a farmer needed about 75 to 90 hours of labor to produce 100 bushels of corn with a walking plow, harrow and hand planting. Today, a farmer needs only two hours to produce 100 bushels of corn using a tractor, five-bottom plow, 25-foot tandem disk, planter, 25-foot herbicide applicator, 15-foot self-propelled combine and trucks.
 
America's farmers are so efficient, so productive, that they not only fill the nation's supermarkets and grocery stores, but they also provide their leftover bounty to the rest of the world.
 
In fact, the United States supplies nearly half of the world market for soybeans, more than a third for corn and more than a tenth for wheat. And it would be even more if other nations lowered their protectionist barriers to American farm exports.
 
So, as we sit down tomorrow to a dinner of turkey and dressing, we Americans have something for which we truly can be thankful – the millions of farmers who till the soil and tend the livestock, who put meat on America's tables and provide our daily bread.
 
Advertisement

By

Public Policy Examiner

Joseph Perkins is a political commentator based in the San Francisco Bay Area. He's previously toiled as a nationally-syndicated columnist for the...

Comments

  • classical liberal 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Well said Mr. Perkins. You put it in a realistic context.

  • walrus 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    all well and good...I'm proud of our farming output...did you buy a bottle of water today or drink from the faucet?...the fertilizing and pesticide runoff is making $1 a bottle of water sound more tempting then the faucet water, huh?...every bottle of water sold is a vote for lack of trust it the healthiness of our environment...if you don't believe the "environment alarmists", put your money where your mouth is: stop buying bottled water and drink from the faucet.

    BTW: I'm not an alarmist, I drink from the faucet...I think both sides are half right and half wrong.

Add a new comment

Join the conversation! Log in here or create a new account if you've never registered before.

Got something to say?

Examiner.com is looking for writers, photographers, and videographers to join the fastest growing group of local insiders. If you are interested in growing your online rep apply to be an Examiner today!

Don't miss...