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From: Barry Schier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2000 3:45 PM
Subject: [CubaNews] Forum discusses farm crisis and Cuba


The Militant - upcoming issue with Christmas 2000 date

Forum discusses farm crisis and Cuba 
(front page)

BY ROMINA GREEN AND PAUL SILER 
DES MOINES, Iowa--Two Midwest farmers discussed "the worldwide crisis 
of agriculture--from Iowa and Wisconsin to the United Kingdom and 
Cuba" at a Militant Labor Forum here December 2. 
One speaker was Wisconsin dairy farmer Randy Jasper, who had just 
returned from a trip to the United Kingdom where he participated in a 
November 14 rally organized by farmers and truckers against soaring 
fuel prices. The other, Larry Ginter, is an Iowa hog farmer active in 
Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement and other struggles. 
Ginter noted the national and international competition between 
agriculture-related corporations lies behind the economic squeeze on 
farmers, and workers as well. Jasper said that four companies now 
control 80 percent of cattle and hog slaughter, and three control 80 
percent of grain production. 
He noted that this trend toward consolidation of companies during the 
years of the Clinton administration is "going just as fast as it did 
under the Republicans." 
Jasper explained how one consequence of this concentration is that 
farmers confront high prices from their suppliers and low prices for 
the commodities they sell. "My milk prices now are what they were 30 
years ago," he explained. "Take your wages back 30 years and leave 
your rent and food prices alone--where would you be?" 
Both farmers also took up the question of biotechnology--genetically 
engineered crops--under capitalism. Ginter noted that biotechnology 
has the potential to "solve the age old problems of hunger, sickness, 
and unsafe food." But it has a "sinister side or an ulterior motive 
of power and greed" as well. "It is truly the double-edged sword." 
Thousands of farmers are facing problems with StarLink corn, which 
has not been approved for human consumption. Many farmers were not 
told of various problems with growing the corn and now cannot sell 
their crop because StarLink corn has been mixed in. 
Ginter gave the example of the "aptly-named terminator gene," which 
sterilizes seeds to prevent them from being used again the following 
year to plant with. Many Third World peasant farmers who replant the 
seeds of their recently harvested crops, "would be forced to buy year 
after year from the agribusiness conglomerates," he said. 
Jasper told of the big impact that the negative side of biotechnology 
had on him as an activist and fighter. "Everybody reaches a line in 
the sand," he explained. "For me, it was when Bovine Growth Hormone 
[BGH] came around." This substance speeds up the production of milk 
in dairy cows, he explained, but in a manner that endangers the 
health of the cows and the quality of dairy products. 
Out of their experiences fighting the crisis conditions generated by 
capitalism on the land, both of these veteran activists have learned 
about the land reform and socialist revolution in Cuba, a country 
where unlike in the United States or United Kingdom, as Jasper put 
it, "Farmers are highly respected and make money." 
Jasper's observations, based on his participation in a delegation of 
U.S. farmers and workers hosted by the National Association of Small 
Farmers (ANAP) of Cuba last Spring, were a particular focus of 
interest at the forum. He said there were 900 cooperatives 
represented at the congress, noting the high number of small farmers 
in the country. 
Despite the collapse of trade and aid from the former Soviet Union in 
the early 1990s, something Cubans "called the Special Period--we'd 
have called it the disaster area--Cuban farmers have actually raised 
their production," Jasper explained. "They have their own school, 
health care, doctor, a community building right on their farm." 
"In reality," Jasper stated, "I think the Special Period probably 
made them a lot stronger. Because they've actually increased 
production considerably without chemicals. 
"In reference to what we have," he said, "Cuba is a poor country. But 
they're happy. They have what they need, so they're not poor. About 
80 percent of what they produce on their farms is sold to the 
government at a good price, where they make money. Five percent more 
is paid in taxes. Fifteen percent is sold on the open market." 
Jasper was struck by the respect for farmers and farming shown by the 
people he met in Havana. He noted that delegates to the ANAP congress 
stayed with people in the city who volunteered to put them up. 
The U.S. government "is scared of Cuba for one reason: the attitude 
of the people," Jasper insisted. "Because if people here felt the way 
people do there, the government we have, which is run by big 
business, would be in trouble. That's the fear of Cuba." 

Right to farm 
"It's against the law to repossess a farm in Cuba," he explained. "If 
you're working that farm it cannot be repossessed. The government 
will send people out to help you. Twenty-five thousand families were 
put back on the land in Cuba last year alone. You tell the government 
you want a farm and they'll give you a deed to a chunk of land. There 
is a little limitation there. You and. There is a little limitation 
there. You have to work it. You can't sell it or rent it. You can 
pass it on to your children. It can stay in the family. So basically, 
as long as you want to farm, it's your land." 
"It's entirely different here," Jasper said. "They're driving us out 
in droves. Six dairy farms a day in the state of Wisconsin are going 
out of business right now, the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture 
tells us." 
"I've been to Washington, D.C., three times this year at Black farm 
rallies," he added, to back their fight against discrimination at the 
hands of the United States Department of Agriculture. 
"There's always a bottom rung on a ladder," he explained. "If the 
Black farmer is on the bottom rung and you tear that bottom rung off, 
I'm the next rung on the ladder. There's always a bottom rung. So 
it's not a Black farm fight. It's not a white farm fight. It's not an 
England fight. It's a worldwide problem." 
"The big thing," he said, "is that farmers and workers both sell our 
labor. That's the connection. And also food is the connection. 
Everybody eats every day and we need to somehow harness that. If you 
want to bring this country to its knees and straighten it out, 
control food." 
"I was in Cuba for six days, by the way," Jasper noted. "I didn't see 
everything. That's why I need to go back. Because there's too many 
things I missed," he said. "I'm not saying things are perfect over 
there. But we could learn an awful lot." 
In response to a question following the presentations, Jasper 
stressed the need for "more conversations like tonight" to educate 
people. "Five years ago, if you told me I'd be here speaking I'd have 
said, 'No way!' Now it's fun! We need to go out to a ton of churches, 
schools, and organizations and speak to them." 
"Next year is the 40th anniversary of ANAP, Jasper pointed out. "That 
would be an ideal time for farmers and workers to go back and visit. 
We probably could make arrangements to be part of it. It would be an 
excellent opportunity. It would be great if a lot more people could 
go there." 
--


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