Peasants,
Pitchforks and a Perfect Food Supply
Published: April
22, 2009
Yesterday,
the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association held its
third
annual Farm Food Voices lobby day on Capitol Hill in
Farm Fresh Food Feast Served to Congress
Liz Reitzig and Two Capitol Hill Staffers
At the end of a tiring day of meetings with
legislative
aids, Congressmen and Senators, the citizen lobbyists invited Congress
to a
lavish Farm Food Feast, held in the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and
Forestry
Committee Room (at least our U.S. Senate makes the connection between
agriculture and nutrition!)
The
reception was catered by Jerry Hollinger of Dish Catering, and he was
assisted
by Monica Corrado, of Simply Being Well,
Eric Johnson, of Krishon Chocolates, Carla
Hall of Alchemy Catering, and
Camille Dierksheide, of The Beehive
catering. All the food at the event was sourced or donated from
sustainable,
traditional small farms.
Eric Johnson Presents the Roasted Pig
Many
of
the farmers who supplied the food were in attendance and personally
introduced,
by Liz Reitzig of the Maryland Independent Consumers and Farmers
Association,
who coordinated the donations.
Emcee
for
the event was Joel Salatin, gentleman farmer and self confessed farm
food
radical. He opened the reception by saying, “Illegal food has descended
on
Congressman
Ron Paul was unable to attend at the last minute, but he did send his
legislative aid, Paul-Martin Foss, who thanked the crowd for making
their
voices heard on the Hill. He spoke of Ron Paul’s commitment to limited
government, personal liberty and freedom to access the food of one’s
own
choice. He gave as an example, Congressman Paul’s sponsorship of HR
778, which would allow the interstate sale of raw milk to resume
(Interstate
sales of raw milk were banned in 1986 by the FDA).
Joel
then
introduced Congressman Tom Perriello, who told the crowd, “We will
never
begin to address the American health care crisis, unless we look at
what we are
putting in our bodies. And, we will never solve our environmental
crisis unless
we look at the carbon footprint issues. How we produce food and where
it comes
from are at the core of these bigger issues.”
The
next
speaker, Sally Fallon Morell, President of the Weston A. Price
Foundation, was
introduced by Salatin as the person who was doing more to stimulate the
re-connections between local farmers and consumers, than anyone else in
Sally Fallon Morell and Monica Corrado
Sally’s
remarks rebutted the common mis-perception that only industrial
agriculture can
feed the world. She cited numerous disease outbreaks in confinement
farms as
proof that large scale farms create large scale disasters. She also
brought out
the fact that, “the genetic pool of livestock breed for factory farms
is
very narrow which makes our food supply vulnerable to being wiped out
completely by disease, creating an animal “dust bowl.” She
echoed Salatin’s sentiment, that our only hope for restoring a
health-giving food supply is the mixed use, small family farm, which
would not
only feed the nation safely, but bring our
Alexis
Baden-Mayer, who represented the Organic Consumers Association at the
event,
said that the Farm Food Voices was the most exciting event she ever
attended in
Farm Food Feast at NICFA Lobby Day 2009
William
Bradford, an activist from
To
learn
more about the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association,
please
visit their website, nicfa.org.
Please consider
joining NICFA and attending next year’s event. Meanwhile, keep those
cards, letters and phone lines buzzing! Congress needs to know that
people like
you want real food! Here is a link to my
complete set of photos for the event.
Moderator
