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Locate and examine
the geographical characteristics
of the following types of agriculture:
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The country we know today as the United States of America was created through various means, legal and illegal. Check out the map. Where does all the wonderful food come from that we eat everyday? An example of a food giant is Archer Daniels Midland. Agricultural regions reflect the diverse topographic, physical, political, economic, and dietary characteristics of the United States. The number of counties dependent on farm income has dropped sharply: look at a map. Check out the U.S. government's suggested food pyramid for consumers and what crops the government subsidizes! If you are interested in how a vegetarian diet impacts the environment, go to Green Living Ideas. |
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Consult
your atlas for a copy the map.
The structure of US agriculture is very problematic. U.S. government farm policies and programs reward larger-scale farmers and harm smaller-scale farmers, yet all farmers vote disproportionally for Republicans -- see map. Look at the spatial consequences of the large-scale farm bias of U.S. agricultural subsidies. The markets in sugar, coffee, cotton, and other commodities that tropical farmers can grow cheaply can find no markets because of subsidies of $300 billion a year to rich-world growers. For sugar alone, the European Union puts 140% tariffs on many imports from Africa, such as cocoa, supports its own sugar-beet farmers by $1.6 billion a year, and dumps sugar surpluses in overseas markets. The Fidelity Investment company keeps 25 cattle on its corporate campus near Fort Worth, TX, and thus saves $328,000 in taxes from Texas "agricultural" exemptions! This is called tax loss farming which produce little or nothing of value yet saves money from reduced taxes. Similar schemes are available from the federal government. This is what conservatives call business as usual, but if this same principle is applied to ordinary people in need of income, medical services, and food it is called welfare. what a difference words make! International, countries like China, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar are now buying up farmland in foreign countries to assure themselves adequate food supplies. |
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The sugar industry swears it is not subsidized; but it
rests on a system of daunting price supports and import restrictions.
Each year, the Department of Agriculture decides how much sugar
can be imported at low tariffs; anything above that level is charged prohibitive
rates of duty. U.S. producers account for about three-quarters
of domestic sugar consumption. Protecting sugar has three sour
results:
Local versus national fruit distribution: what are
the geographical consequences? Answer. |
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Optional: 1) Read about one fast food chain: McDonald's, and its critics -- take one of the guided tours [the commentary is on the left side; McDonald's pages, on the right side]! Consult a comparative chart of the absolute and relative cost of a BigMac around the world! 2) Read John Robbins (of ice cream fame), The Food Revolution: How your diet can help save your life and the world. Berkeley, CA: Conrai Press, 2001. 3) Read Ingolf Vogeler, Myth of the Family Farm: Agribusiness Dominance of US Agriculture. Boulder, CO; Westview Press, 1981. 4) Read about the "lowly" potato. 5) Look at amazing ways food can be turned into art! 6) Genetically modified (GM) crops are very common for some crops in the USA; whereas in Western Europe GM crops and foods are banned. Read about this important environmental and health food issue. ![]() 7)
What does
Ingolf Vogeler think about
genetically engineered food?
8) Examine the unique agriculture of the Central Valley in California. 9) Read about the continuing miserable life of agricultural migrant workers. 10) Read about some very interesting research findings on why people in the USA eat more than they think and how this is affecting their health and pocketbook. Be sure read all the pages about food illusions, shown at the bottom of each web page. |
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Created by Ingolf Vogeler on 30 April 1996; last revised on 08 March 2011. |
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