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Fabulous
Farm Aid Rocks Corporate Ag While Bush Babbles
by
Harvey Wasserman
September
11, 2003
COLUMBUS,
OHIO---The volcano that is Neil Young doing "Down By the River" was
erupting to the roar of a sold-out Farm Aid crowd. Accompanied by Crazy Horse and Willie Nelson, the patron saint of
American farming, the stage sagged with a psychedelic constellation of rock
stars and native American dancers fully decked in ceremonial garb. Neil was totally in another world. Rock and roll does not get better than
this. Before "Homegrown" and
a seismic rendition of "Rockin' in the Free World," Young had a few
words. "We need a Bill of Rights
for the farmer," he said.
"Corporate agriculture is killing the family farm. Don't go to those big stores. Stay away.
Buy organic, direct from the farmer."
Now
in its eighteenth year, Farm Aid has become a national institution, working to
save the family farm. Originating with
the ageless Willie Nelson, and with Young and John Mellencamp---"our
little band of outlaws,"
says
Nelson---the annual day-long show has become a treasured icon of vibrant
culture and progressive politics for an age in desperate need.
It
has not mellowed with age. As George W.
Bush babbled on national television, demanding billions more to
"rebuild" Iraq, Mellencamp delivered a blistering indictment of an
administration defined by death and pillage.
Why are we spending all this money over there, he wondered, when our own
farms are in such tough shape here.
Dressed in his signature blue jeans and a plain white t-shirt, the
Indiana-based Mellencamp mixed a ballad to peace and justice into a strong set
built around vintage rock classics.
No
lasers, no gimmicks, no out-of-control egos, the show cruised through a stellar
line-up that balanced a hard-rocking Sheryl Crow with the ethereal Emmylou
Harris, who's lost none of her crystalline beauty through a quarter-century of
stardom. An acoustic set from Dave
Mathews shone alongside a blast from Hootie and the Blowfish.
Harvey Wasserman and Willie
Nelson at Farm Aid |
But the meaning of this show is its message. At a packed 11am press conference preceding the all-day marathon, Nelson anchored two tiers of high-powered rock stars, farmers, activists and native spiritual leaders. Ohio Congressman Ted Strickland delivered a moving tribute to
his own upbringing on a family farm (as did Crow). Cleveland Representative Dennis Kucinich, the progressive
Democratic candidate for president, attacked corporate agriculture with a
demand for anti-trust action.
"Eighty percent of all the beef and sixty percent of all the pork
in this country is controlled by four corporations," he said. "They are crushing the aspirations of
the family farmer. This is a fight
for freedom." Guided by a core staff of long-time executive director Carolyn
Mugar and Glenda Yoder, Ted Quaday and Mark |
Smith,
Farm Aid has become the rock on which American small farming relies. Over the weekend in central Ohio, the Farm Aid
team highlighted the tangible realities of the issues by helping to organize a
tour of local farms, where my kids and I bought some honey, took a hayride and
watched a sheep shearing. On the eve of
the concert, Quaday helped coordinate a three-hour outdoor gathering of farmers
from around the nation, held at a nearby environmental center. One after the other the farmers blasted the
Bush Administration's attempts to water down standards for organic food while
subsidizing the march of corporate agribusiness. "We don't want just the NAME organic," says Young,
"we want the reality."
A
prime target for Farm Aid activism has been the nation's factory farms, where
cows, hogs, chickens and turkeys are crammed en masse under horrific
conditions, yielding massive pollution and poisonous drug-laden
food. A long Ohio campaign against the
mega-polluter Buckeye Egg brought solidarity from the Ohio Environmental
Council and other eco-groups, accompanied by a blast from the United Food and
Commercial Workers Union against brutal working conditions at Tyson Foods.
Corporate
sponsorship did play a role with Silk Soymilk/WhiteWave and Horizon
Organics. The hugely successful soy
dairy has recently been bought by Dean Foods, but retains its commitment to
organic produce and small farming.
White Wave founder and president Steve Demos presented a check to
FarmAid at center state. Both White
Wave and Horizon distributed free organic products throughout the show.
Fittingly, PBS will broadcast two hours of the show from 9-11pm EST, November
27 (check your local listings).
As
America digests its Thanksgiving dinner, it might contemplate Willie Nelson's
message that this is "more
than
a struggle about farms, it's about the little guy vs. the big guy, about the
family farm vs. the factory farm, and about the community vs. the
corporation."
Amidst
all else it's doing, the Bush Administration is working hard to turn over the
last bit of farmer-owned agriculture to the mega-corporations. From pesticides, herbicides and chemical
fertilizer to genetically modified foods and financial pillage, the American
family farm is hanging on by a thread.
As times get harder and the nature of our food is even more under
attack, Farm Aid has become increasingly essential. "The key to securing healthy food for tomorrow is to keep
family farmers on the land today," says Nelson. "It's about the very future of our country."
For Further
Information see www.farmaid.org. For photos go to www.farmaid.org/press.
Harvey Wasserman is senior
editor of www.freepress.org and
co-author (with Dan Juhl) of Harvesting Wind:
Energy As A Cash Crop: A Guide to Locally Owned Farming (www.danmar.us).
Harvey Wasserman is senior
editor of The Free Press (www.freepress.org)
and author of The Last Energy War (Seven Stories Press). He helped start
the No Nukes movement against atomic power. His newest book, Superpower of
Peace v Bush Et. Al., co-authored with Bob Fitrakis, will be available
through The Free Press in September.
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