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Osha Gray Davidson quotes a farmer, "They call it economic development, but they don't realize the consequences. It's just unbelievable the smell that comes off of there. Remember, I've raised hogs. I know what hog manure smells like. This is different. It's unbelievable, within 3 miles are 6,400,000 chickens and 26,000 hogs. Now it's one neighbor against another. We're called revolutionists because we're stopping progress. I know what's happening to gas stations and grocery stores, now it's happening to farmers."
Davidson quotes another farmer, "It has ruined our whole environment. We cannot live here. We've become angry." [1]
In 1995, a dike surrounding a 12ft manure-lagoon broke allowing ~25,000,000 gallons of feces and urine to flow into the New River[?]. This resulted in the deaths of thousands of fish and contamination for miles downstream.
Between 1982 and 1987 some 21% of Iowa hog farmers went out of business. By 1992, another 12% had gone out of business. Critics argue that this is, in large part, a result of hog lot expansion. [1]
Osha Gray Davidson writes: "As the rural economy continues its slide, the beachhead established by the far right will continue to grow. A significant number of rural ghetto residents are going to be cut off and are sure to seek their salvation in the politics of hate."
Davidson adds, "Adam Smith argued that market concentration is a threat to society. I believe democracy is endangered by the destruction of the family farm. The countryside is dominated by superfarms, corporate hog lots, and factory towns where people labor for poverty wages in unsafe and unhealthy conditions."
[1] Osha Gray Davidson: "In the wake of huge hog lots, what is replacing the heartland's family farms?" Des Moines Register (January 5, 1997). Adapted from his book Broken Heartland: The Rise of Americans' Rural Ghetto.
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