Farms Not Arms
is an organization of farmers who wants to provide work opportunities
for Iraqi War veterans and give rural people a voice against war.
Michael:
We realize that agribusiness opposes the vision of holding onto family
farms, and opposes strengthening our rural communities and family farms
that are growing local produce. 90 percent of the fuel spent in our
food production system is the distribution, only ten percent in actual
production. So let’s grow the produce closer to home. Let’s grow our
own fuels. Let’s support the Midwest and get out of the wars in the
Middle East. Let’s bring veterans back to work on our farms as a place
to heal and to gain vocational training. As the people who are taking
care of the land and feeding the country, we can help bring our country
back to earth and get it a little more grounded, and offer not just a
protest against the war but a positive alternative of a better way of
living and a more democratic society based on the Jeffersonian concepts
of distribution of land, production, wealth and power.
AM: Are you a veteran?
Michael:
No. I’m an anti-war veteran. I went to jail six times during the
Vietnam protests. I was very active in that before I went into farming.
I’ve been a lifelong pacifist and I’ve stayed true to that my whole
life.
AM: How many farms are signed up for Farms Not Arms?
Michael:
About 300 around the country and also a number of farming
organizations. We’re finding energetic support in the Midwest. We
probably signed up another 100 farmers while at the Eco Farm
Conference.
AM: One of your goals is to provide an opportunity for healing for soldiers coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Michael:
We talk to vets and they are very excited about the project. All of us
who went into farming as young men and women were attracted to farming.
The military has an attraction for young people. It has to do with
having a sense of purpose. It has to do with having a sense of
camaraderie, and a sense of working for a common good. Also it’s a way
of feeling your oats and strength and physicality. We think the farm is
an alternative lifestyle. It’s a peaceful alternative for young people
who are drawn to the military. You know, “Be all you can be.” Yes, be
all you can be, but leave the guns out of it.
AM: How has war affected you and your family?
Michael:
On 9/11 my daughter Ann was working at One Liberty Plaza in the
building facing the Twin Towers and was in the street when the plane
hit. She waited at the door facing the people who left the building;
some were burned and some were without clothes, some dying, and people
jumped out of the building in front of her. My youngest son, raised in
a pacifist family, within a few days signed up for the military with
the idea of wanting to protect his family. He ended up having to leave
his four children, including a new baby, to spend a year in the Coast
Guard guarding the coast of Cuba off Guantanamo. Our farm almost went
belly-up because our production is based in Mexico. The U.S.-Mexico
border was shut for several weeks. We lost several million dollars. We
had to cut labor back; everyone had to take a day off without pay every
week for several months until we could build back up the company. So I
realized that not doing something about the insanity of the cycle of
war and terror would be like not weeding my fields. It would be as
crazy as not watering the crops. It’s just part of what I have to do.
It’s just one more thing we have to do and we all have to do it.
Isaiah
had 20 pages in the Bible, but the words that everyone remembers are
“Take the swords and pound them into ploughshares. And take your spears
and beat them into pruning hooks.” So how do we take that thing which
is threatening everybody on earth right now, this insane growth of
military power, and physically beat it and change it and turn it into
something positive? It’s not just a protest. It’s not just “No Arms,”
but it’s “Farms not Arms.”
Will:
I grew up on a farm in southern California when there were lots of
farms in southern California. My folks had a small farm in the San
Fernando Valley. My dad was really a good farmer. We raised a lot of
pigs, and we had big gardens. In those days a 10-acre farm was a fairly
good-sized farm. The average cotton farm was 17 acres in 1946. Now the
average cotton farm is 1,000 acres. That time period was the end of the
subsistence agriculture in California and the beginning of enormous
urbanization. Land was just being sold as fast as people could sell it.
My folks sold out when I was in high school. And I went into the Marine
Corps afterwards because I got into a little bit of trouble as a kid
and really didn’t have a direction. So I was in the Marine Corps for
three years between Korea and Vietnam. I got out in ’58 and went to
college and got a Ph.D. in anthropology of agriculture, studying
tropical forest farmers in Peru. So I didn’t fall very far from the
nest. Then I got totally involved in the Vietnam War because I started
teaching at the University of California Santa Barbara in 1966. I was
the faculty advisor to the student body, a radical student body. There
was SDS, Black student unions, and MACHA, which is the Mexican American
community.
I went to some of the first anti-war marches in
Chicago. In those days people threw coffee cups at you and they were
full of coffee. I mean, you would be marching down the street and be
pelted with stuff all the time. That was the very early days of the
anti-war movement and the civil rights movement. When I came back to
Santa Barbara, the anti-war and the civil rights movement was really
getting hot. By 1968 it was a full-blown movement. I was fired by the
University of California because I was too radical, and the students
went nuts. They did all these demonstrations over my firing. Angela
Davis came and spoke for me. All these radicals of the ‘60s were
saying, “Look, this is ridiculous. This guy is political, and that’s
why you’re firing him.” There was a series of demonstrations. Then
there was a Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young concert on campus that Jerry
Rubin and several other high profile anti-war people came to. The
police decided to pull the plug prematurely on the concert. So people
stormed out of that place. They had been assaulting the Bank of America
for about a month. So when people came roaring out of that concert they
lit some Dempsey dumpsters on fire and pushed them into the bank and
burned the bank down, literally burned it to the ground. I got accused
with 19 other people of burning a bank. But there were thousands of
people surrounding the bank when it burned. So they put me in jail,
gave me a year, and it was time well spent. I learned a lot and it
really changed my perception about people that are in jail because
they’re for the grace of God go you or I. Just one little mistake.
After
I got out of jail I felt like my career in academia was really over so
I decided to go back into farming. But I stayed an anti-war activist, a
civil rights activist and a social justice activist all the time. I
felt the same way Michael did. There was never any representation of
the rural community. It wasn’t just farmers; there were no rural people
there. All of us farmers are way too busy. Every farmer I know is
maxed. You don’t feel like you can take a lot of time away from your
farm because it’s going to fail if you do. So a lot of people don’t get
involved who have the passion for it. So Michael came to me and said,
“Look we’re trying to start this organization called Farms Not Arms.”
My wife Kate and I became the Eastern co-chairs because we live in
Vermont.
AM: Why is Farms Not Arms important to you?
Will: It’s
a vehicle for rural people to get involved. There’s such a
disproportionate number of people from rural areas that are dying and
getting injured. Vermont is a state with the highest percentage dead
and injured from this war. I think a lot of people go into the
services, especially out of the countryside to try to get that
discipline and to try to get a skill that they can market. A lot of
farmers we know are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder
related to bankruptcy and the fear of bankruptcy. The highest injury
rate among occupations in this country is farmers. A lot of them have
lost a hand. A lot of them have lost a finger, lost a foot, lost an
eye. So we are natural allies.
The other thing
about it is the centering aspect. We don’t pretend that we’re going to
heal these people. We’re going to need to get a lot of psychological
help through the VA, through a wide variety of resources to help us do
this project. We want to provide a place to heal. What are you going to
do in the inner city to heal? You’re not going to be able to heal in
the inner city.
Michael:
I really feel like it’s going to take profound changes in how we live
our lives and how we relate to the rest of the world. We have to give
up this sense of being the super power. We have to let it go and we
have to start treating countries like China and India better. We have
to start treating the people that are going to be stronger than we are
in another 10 or 20 years very nicely right now, so that we just might
be treated fairly nicely when we’re not in the position of power.
Bioneers deals with the concept that how we live makes a difference. I
believe that’s the story that has to be told. The American people need
to see a different way to live without the oil. We can live without
controlling the rest of the world. We can have a more peaceful world
without a huge military. We could spend a fraction of the money on the
military and feed and give medical attention to the billions of people
in the world that live on a dollar a day.
Will:
There were four points that Bush made when he decided that he was going
to up the ante in Iraq and send in 22,500 more troops. His fourth point
was we have to protect U.S. resources in the region. A lot of people
focus all their attention on the oil, but flowing through Baghdad are
the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which are the backbone of agriculture.
People are not starving because they’re in the breadbasket of the
Middle East. Iraq produces an enormous amount of food. Those rivers
don’t just flow in Iraq, they flow south. It’s really important for
people to realize we didn’t take that place just for oil, although oil
is a critical piece of it. It’s also to control the water in the Middle
East, and to control agricultural development. The U.S. wants to change
the agriculture that exists there now, which is mostly small-scale
agriculture. The U.S. wants it to be large-scale agriculture. That’s
something that the rest of the peace movement is not talking about. I
think there’s some real opportunity for Farms Not Arms to talk about
that issue and talk about the farming realities. Ultimately what would
be the most desirable thing is to bring some Iraqi farmers here.
Michael:
Israel went into Lebanon for water also. At the mouth of the Jordan
River there are Israeli settlements on the West Bank. It’s a desert
with pockets of water. And all the settlements are on the pockets of
water. They’re fighting for the ability to feed themselves and they’re
fighting over the future of the control of water.
AM:
One of the first things that the U.S. did when it took over in Iraq was
to pass a law that prohibited saving of seeds. Iraqi farmers have been
planting and saving heirloom wheat and other seeds that go back
hundreds of years—as you said, the original breadbasket of the Middle
East. The U.S. set up a legal structure that forces Iraqi farmers to
buy commercial seeds many of which are genetically engineered. So
you’re absolutely right, farming is high on the list in terms of U.S.
ambitions in the region.
Michael: Who’s going
to tell this story to the farmers? We need to do that. Our biggest
challenge is that we want a group that the farmers control because we
want a voice, we want our voice. But at the same time we’re looking for
folks in other organizations that can help, help us get that word out
to other farmers and get our story out to other people.
Will:
People are going to realize the farmers really do need to have a voice
and that voice can be a loud one because people are not going to get
their produce at the farmers’ market until they listen to our rap. It’s
that simple. You don’t get your change back until you hear this.
When
Vietnam vets came back the government blew them off, just blew them
off. Now those are our homeless population. Nobody took care of them.
Nobody tried to heal them. And now they cut two billion dollars out of
the budget that was going for vet rehabilitation. The vets knew right
away they were being blown off. We were cannon fodder and now we’re
going to be Swiss cheese. So we feel like any kind of effort you can
make to try and rehabilitate these kids because they went believing
that they were going there to do the right thing. A lot of them are
just sweet kids that got stuck in the wrong place.