auxen1,
I had thought that our exchange of Thurs.-Fri. kind of left things off at an appropriate ending. The links that you asked for and I presented didn't cause you great concern, and I was fine with that. I can answer your pointed questions, but I don't think that it really contributes to this discussion.
I don't want to be pushed into the corner of "under no circumstances should a chemical be used". I am not a 100% organic buyer, nor do I believe it's an overall solution. I have never made this assertion here. I believe there is significant room for reform and change in the US food systems. I do not believe that it will happen through demonization or soap-box preaching, (to quote Jim). I'm trying very hard to avoid that.
I have said more than once in this thread that I am not alleging Mr. Hursts practices are dangerous or more environmentally dangerous than his tilling operations. But, I have also said that I just don't want to take his word for it. I'm sure the dry cleaner down the block from me would tell me that everything they're doing is clean and tidy too.
My original point was that Mr. Hurst's piece fell odd to me when he essentially said, "the soil used to go down river, now it doesn't because I have herbicides". I think most laymen would read what he said and ask, "which herbicides? and where do they go?" Not an attack, not a demonization. A request for more information where I felt he glossed over it.
Still, this is a side point to me that arose out of Jim pointing out that he learned something and I felt the article fell short of educating by just making an assertion.
Still, that's a side issue to my biggest problem with the article. My biggest issue, and the point that I originally made in this thread, is that Mr. Hurst attacks points that Pollan never made.
To wit:
Michael Pollan, The Omnivore's Dilemna wrote:Perhaps the greatest challenge to farming organically on an industrial scale is controlling weeds without the use of chemical herbicides. Greenways tackles its weeds with frequent and carefully timed tilling.....But this approach, which I discovered is typical of large-scale organic operations, represents a compromise at best....
...he goes on to
make Mr. Hurst's exact point. Then, he goes on, rather cogently, to say that he believes we can do better work in achieving the ideal that you and I both agree is a positive: fewer synthetic chemicals.
This is why I didn't like the article. I don't think he read the same book I did, or that he rose to the level of the arguments Mr. Pollan presented.
Mr. Pollan presents an ideal, and he calls it an
ideal. He recognizes challenges and believes we should not accept the status quo, as it is pushed and endorsed by expensive corporate lobbyists, as the only possible way to do things.
An ideal may be impossible to achieve, but that doesn't mean we should not present it and pose the challenge to achieve it.
Best,
Michael