{"id":17662,"date":"2011-06-23T01:47:31","date_gmt":"2011-06-23T08:47:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/?p=17662"},"modified":"2011-06-23T17:51:25","modified_gmt":"2011-06-24T00:51:25","slug":"everything-i-want-to-do-is-illegal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/everything-i-want-to-do-is-illegal\/","title":{"rendered":"Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/images\/Forbidden.png\" hspace=\"5\" align=\"left\" \/><a href=\"http:\/\/www.sott.net\/articles\/show\/230156-Everything-I-Want-to-Do-Is-Illegal\" target=\"_blank\">Sott.net<\/a> | Everything I want to do is illegal. As if a highly bureaucratic  regulatory system was not already in place, 9\/11 fueled renewed  acceleration to eliminate freedom from the countryside. Every time a  letter arrives in the mail from a federal or state agriculture  department my heart jumps like I just got sent to the principal&#8217;s  office.<\/p>\n<p>And it doesn&#8217;t stop with agriculture bureaucrats. It includes all sorts  of government agencies, from zoning, to taxing, to food inspectors.  These agencies are the ultimate extension of a disconnected,  Greco-Roman, Western, egocentric, compartmentalized, reductionist,  fragmented, linear thought process.<\/p>\n<p><strong>On-farm Processing<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I want to dress my beef and pork on the farm where I&#8217;ve coddled and  raised it. But zoning laws prohibit slaughterhouses on agricultural  land. For crying out loud, what makes more holistic sense than to put  abattoirs where the animals are? But no, in the wisdom of Western  disconnected thinking, abattoirs are massive centralized facilities  visited daily by a steady stream of tractor trailers and illegal alien  workers.<\/p>\n<p>But what about dressing a couple of animals a year in the backyard? How  can that be compared to a ConAgra or Tyson facility? In the eyes of the  government, the two are one and the same. Every T-bone steak has to be  wrapped in a half-million dollar facility so that it can be sold to your  neighbor. The fact that I can do it on my own farm more cleanly, more  responsibly, more humanely, more efficiently, and in a more  environmentally friendly manner doesn&#8217;t matter to the government agents  who walk around with big badges on their jackets and wheelbarrow-sized  regulations tucked under their arms.<\/p>\n<p>OK, so I take my animals and load them onto a trailer for the first time  in their life to send them up the already clogged interstate to the  abattoir to await their appointed hour with a shed full of animals of  dubious extraction. They are dressed by people wearing long coats with  deep pockets with whom I cannot even communicate. The carcasses hang in a  cooler alongside others that were not similarly cared for in life.  After the animals are processed, I return to the facility hoping to  retrieve my meat.<\/p>\n<p>When I return home to sell these delectable packages, the county zoning  ordinance says that this is a manufactured product because it exited the  farm and was reimported as a value-added product, thereby throwing our  farm into the Wal-Mart category, another prohibition in agricultural  areas. Just so you understand this, remember that an on-farm abattoir  was illegal, so I took the animals to a legal abattoir, but now the  selling of said products in an on-farm store is illegal.<\/p>\n<p>Our whole culture suffers from an industrial food system that  has made every part disconnected from the rest. Smelly and dirty farms  are supposed to be in one place, away from people, who snuggle smugly in  their cul-de-sacs and have not a clue about the  out-of-sight-out-of-mind atrocities being committed to their dinner  before it arrives in microwaveable, four-color-labeled, plastic  packaging. Industrial abattoirs need to be located in a  not-in-my-backyard place to sequester noxious odors and sights. Finally,  the retail store must be located in a commercial district surrounded by  lots of pavement, handicapped access, public toilets and whatever else  must be required to get food to people.<\/p>\n<p>The notion that animals can be raised, processed, packaged, and sold in a  model that offends neither our eyes nor noses cannot even register on  the average bureaucrat&#8217;s radar screen  &#8211;  or, more importantly, on the  radar of the average consumer advocacy organization. Besides, all these  single-use megalithic structures are good for the gross domestic  product. Anything else is illegal.<\/p>\n<p><strong>On-farm Processing and &#8216;Agritainment&#8217;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In the disconnected mind of modem America, a farm is a production unit  for commodities  &#8211;  nothing more and nothing less. Because our land is  zoned as agricultural, we cannot charge school kids for a tour of the  farm because that puts us in the category of &#8220;Theme Park.&#8221; Anyone paying  for infotainment creates &#8220;Farmadisney,&#8221; a strict no-no in agricultural  zones.<\/p>\n<p>Farms are not supposed to be places of enjoyment or learning. They are  commodity production units dotting the landscape, just as factories are  manufacturing units and office complexes are service units. In the  government&#8217;s mind, integrating farm production with recreation and  meaningful education creates a warped sense of agriculture.<\/p>\n<p>The very notion of encouraging people to visit farms is blasphemous to  an official credo that views even sparrows, starlings and flies as  disease threats to immunocompromised plants and animals. Visitors  entering USDA-blessed production unit farms must run through a gauntlet  of toxic sanitation dips and don moonsuits in order to keep their germs  to themselves. Indeed, people are viewed as hazardous foreign bodies at  Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs).<\/p>\n<p>Farmers who actually encourage folks to come to their farms threaten the  health and welfare of their fecal concentration camp production unit  neighbors, and therefore must be prohibited from bringing these invasive  germ-dispensing humans onto their landscape. In the industrial  agribusiness paradigm, farms must be protected from people, not to  mention free-range poultry.<\/p>\n<p>The notion that animals and plants can be raised in such a way that  their enhanced immune system protects them from kindergarteners&#8217; germs,  and that the animals actually thrive when marinated in human attention,  never enters the minds of government officials dedicated to protecting  precarious production units.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Collaborative Marketing<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I have several neighbors who produce high-quality food or crafts that  complement our own meat and poultry. Dried flower arrangements from one  artisan, pickles from another, wine from another, and first-class  vegetables from another. These are just for starters.<\/p>\n<p>Our community is blessed with all sorts of creative artisans who offer  products that we would love to stock in our on-farm retail venue.  Doesn&#8217;t it make sense to encourage these customers driving out from the  city to be able to go to one farm to do their rural browsing\/ purchasing  rather than drive all over the countryside? Furthermore, many of these  artisans have neither the desire nor time to deal with patrons  one-on-one. A collaborative venue is the most win-win, reasonable idea  imaginable  &#8211;  except to government agents.<\/p>\n<p>As soon as our farm offers a single item  &#8211;  just one  &#8211;  that is not  produced here, we have become a Wal-Mart. Period. That means a business  license, which isbasically another layer of taxes on our gross sales.  The business license requires a commercial entrance, which on our  country road is almost impossible to acquire due to sight-distance  requirements and width regulations. Of course, zoning prohibits  businesses in our agricultural zones. Remember, people are supposed to  be kept away from agricultural areas  &#8211;  people bring diseases.<\/p>\n<p>Even if we could comply with all of the above requirements, a retail  outlet carries with it a host of additional regulations. We must provide  designated handicapped parking, government-approved toilet facilities  (our four household bathrooms in the two homes located 50 feet away from  the retail building do not count)  &#8211;  and it can&#8217;t be a composting  toilet. We must offer x-number of parking spaces. Folks, it just goes on  and on, ad nauseum, and all for simply trying to help a neighbor sell  her potatoes or extra pumpkins at Thanksgiving. I thought this was the  home of the free. In most countries of the world, anyone can sell any of  this stuff anywhere, and the hungering hordes are glad to get it, but  in the great U.S. of A we&#8217;re too sophisticated to allow such bioregional  commerce.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Employing Local Youngsters &amp; Interns<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Any power tool  &#8211;  including a cordless screwdriver  &#8211;  cannot be  operated by people under the age of 18. We have lots of requests from  folks wanting to come as interns, but what do we call them? The  government has no category for interns or neighbor young people who just  want to learn and help out.<\/p>\n<p>We&#8217;d love to employ all the neighboring young people. To our  child-awning and worshiping culture, the only appropriate child activity  is recreation, sitting in a desk, or watching TV. That&#8217;s it. That&#8217;s the  extent of what children are good for. Anything else is abusive and  risky.<\/p>\n<p>Then we wonder why these kids grow up unmotivated and bored with life.  Our local newspaper is full of articles and letters to the editor  lamenting the lack of things for young people to do. Let me suggest a  few things: digging postholes and building a fence, weeding the garden,  planting some tomatoes, splitting some wood, feeding the chickens,  washing eggs, pruning grapevines, milking the cow, building a compost  pile, growing some earthworms.<\/p>\n<p>These are all things that would be wonderfully meaningful work  experience for the youth of our community, but you can&#8217;t simply employ  people anymore. A host of government regulatory paperwork surrounds  every &#8220;could you come over and help us . . . ?&#8221; By the time an employer  complies with every Occupational Safety &amp; Health Administration  requirement, posts every government bulletin requirement, with-holds  taxes, and shoulders Unemployment Compensation burdens and medical and  child safety regulations  &#8211;  he or she can&#8217;t hire anybody legally or  profitably.<\/p>\n<p>The government has no pigeonhole for this: &#8220;I&#8217;m a 17-year-old  home-schooler, and I want to learn how to farm. Could I come and have  you mentor me for a year?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>What is this relationship? A student? An employee? If I pay a stipend,  the government says he&#8217;s an employee. If I don&#8217;t pay, the Fair Labor  Standards board says it&#8217;s slavery, which is illegal. Doesn&#8217;t matter that  the young person is here of his own volition and is happy to live in a  tee-pee. Housing must be permitted and up to code. Enough already. What  happened to the home of the free?<\/p>\n<p><strong>Build a House the Way I Want<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>You would think that if I cut the trees, mill the logs into lumber, and  build the house on my own farm, I could make it however I wanted to.  Think again. It&#8217;s illegal to build a house less than 900 square feet.  Period. Doesn&#8217;t matter if I&#8217;m a hermit or the father of 20. The  government agents have decreed, in their egocentric wisdom, that no  human can live in anything less than 900 square feet.<\/p>\n<p>Our son got married last year and wanted to build a small cottage on the  farm, which he now oversees for the most part. Our new saying is, &#8220;He  runs the farm, and I just run around.&#8221; The plan was to do what Mom and  Dad did for Teresa and I  &#8211;  trade houses when children come. That way  our empty nest downsizes, and the young people can upsize in the main  family farmhouse. Sounds reasonable and environmentally sensitive to me.  But no, his little honeymoon cottage  &#8211;  or our retirement shack  &#8211;   had to be a 900-square-foot Taj Mahal. A state-of-the-art accredited  composting toilet to avoid the need for a septic system and sewer leach  field was denied.<\/p>\n<p>When the hillside leach field would not meet agronomic standards and we  had to install it in the floodplain, I asked the health department  bureaucrat why. He said that essentially the only approvable leach  fields now are alongside creeks and streams, because they are the only  sites that offer dark-enough colored soils. Sounds like real  environmental steward-ship, doesn&#8217;t it?<\/p>\n<p>Look, if I want to build a yurt of rabbit skins and go to the bathroom  in a compost pile, why is it any of the government&#8217;s business?  Bureaucrats bend over back-wards to accredit, tax credit, and offer  money to people wanting to build pig city-factories or bigger airports.  But let a guy go to his woods, cut down some trees, and build himself a  home, and a plethora of regulatory tyrants descend on the project to  complicate, obfuscate, irritate, frustrate, and virtually terminate. I  think it&#8217;s time to eradicate some of these laws and the piranhas who  administer them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Opting Out of the System<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I don&#8217;t ask for a dime of government money. I don&#8217;t ask for government  accreditation. I don&#8217;t want to register my animals with a global  positioning tattoo. I don&#8217;t want to tell officials the names of my  constituents. And I sure as the dickens don&#8217;t intend to hand over my  firearms. I can&#8217;t even use the &#8220;U&#8221; word.<\/p>\n<p>On every side, our paternalistic culture is tightening the noose around  those of us who just want to opt out of the system  &#8211;  and it is the  freedom to opt out that differentiates tyrannical and free societies.<\/p>\n<p>How a culture deals with its misfits reveals its strength. The stronger a  culture, the less it fears the radical fringe. The more paranoid and  precarious a culture, the less tolerance it offers.<\/p>\n<p>When faith in our freedom gives way to fear of our freedom, then  silencing the minority view becomes the operative protocol. The Native  Americans silenced after Little Big Horn simply wanted to worship in  their beloved Black Hills, use traditional medicinal herbs to cure  diseases, educate their children in the ways of their ancestors, and  live in portable homes rather than log cabins. By that time these people  represented absolutely no threat to the continued Westernization and  domination of the North American continent by people who educated,  vocated, medicated, worshiped, and habitated differently.<\/p>\n<p>But coexistence was out of the question. Just like the forces that  succeeded in making it illegal for me to use the &#8220;O&#8221; word, the Western  success at Wounded Knee quashed the little guy. What does the Organic  Trade Association have to fear from me using the &#8220;O&#8221; word? If society  really wants government certification, my little market share will  continue to deteriorate into oblivion. If, however, the certification  effort represents a same-old, same-old power grab by the elitists to  exterminate the fringe play-ers, it is merely another example of fear  replacing faith.<\/p>\n<p>Faith in what? Faith in diversity. Faith in each other. Faith in  people&#8217;s ability to self-educate, thereby making informed decisions.  Faith in seekers to find answers. Faith in marketplace dynamics to  reward integrity and not cheating. Faith in Creation to heal. Faith in  healthy plants and animals to withstand epizootics. Faith in earthworms  to increase fertility. Faith in communities to function efficiently and  honorably without centralized beltway interference. Faith in Acres  U.S.A. to arrive every month with a cornucopia of insight and  information.<\/p>\n<p>Our culture&#8217;s current fear of bioterrorism shows the glaring weakness of  a centralized, immunodeficient food system. This weakness leads to  fear. Demanding from on high that we irradiate all food, register every  cow with government agencies, and hire more inspectors does not show  strength. It shows fear.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, official policy views all these minority production and  marketing systems that have been shown faithful over the centuries to be  instead things that threaten everyone and everything. As a teepee  dwelling, herb healing, home educating, people loving, compost building  retail farmer, I represent the real answers, but real answers must be  eradicated by those who seek to build their power and fortunes on a lie   &#8211;  the lie being that genetic integrity can be maintained when  corporate scientists begin splicing DNA. The lie that, as Charles  Walters says, toxic rescue chemistry is better than a balanced  biological bath. The lie that farms are disease-prone, unfriendly,  inhumane places and should be zoned away from people.<\/p>\n<p>Those of us who would aspire to opt out  &#8211;  both consumers and producers   &#8211;  must pray for enough cleverness to circumvent the system until the  system cannot sustain itself. Cycles happen. Because things are this way  today does not mean they will be this way next year. Hurrah for that.<\/p>\n<p>Often, the greatest escapes occur at the moment the noose becomes  tightest. I&#8217;m feeling the rope, and it&#8217;s not very loose. Society seems  bound and determined to hang me for everything I want to do. But there&#8217;s  power in truth. And for sure, surprises are in store that may make<\/p>\n<p>society shake its collective head and begin to question some seemingly  unalterable doctrines. Doctrines like the righteousness of the  bureaucrat. The sanctity of government research. The protection of the  Food Safety and Inspection Service. The helpfulness of the USDA.<\/p>\n<p>When that day comes, you and I can graciously offer our society honest  food, honest ecology, honest stewardship. May the day come quickly.<\/p>\n<p><em>Joel Salatin raises grass-fed beef, pastured poultry, rabbits and  more on a model diversified farmstead, Polyface Farm, in Virginia&#8217;s  Shenandoah Valley. He is the author of <\/em>Salad Bar Beef, Pastured Poultry Profits, You Can Farm, and Family Friendly Farming<em>, available from Acres U.S.A. for $30 each, plus shipping and handling. To order, call 1-800-355-5313 or visit our <a href=\"http:\/\/www.polyfacefarms.com\/default.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">website<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Sott.net | Everything I want to do is illegal. As if a highly bureaucratic regulatory system was not already in place, 9\/11 fueled renewed acceleration to eliminate freedom from the countryside. Every time a letter arrives in the mail from a federal or state agriculture department my heart jumps like I just got sent to [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[294],"tags":[133,499],"class_list":["post-17662","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-article","tag-free-market","tag-regulation"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17662","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=17662"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17662\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=17662"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=17662"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/oooorgle.com\/BeyondTheCorral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=17662"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}