There was a time in the not-too-distant past when hamburger was considered a luxury item. Our food policy was changed to focus directly on the cheap production of corn, soy, and wheat and this lead to beef that is priced astoundingly below what it once ones (adjusted for inflation). The fact that fresh produce is now considered a luxury item is exact problem that "locavores", myself included, are trying to address through demand and new policy.
With all due respect, to decry a movement because a portion of it caters to the affluent and that it hasn't completed it's goal is very cynical and I find the generalization about those who "spearheaded the movement" to be unfair and borderline insulting
I'm a supporter of locovorism to the extent that high-quality, high-taste, locally grown foods encourage families to make a meal together and to sit down and eat together. I think that buying locally grown from farmers markets does this, though its expensive.
There may be other arguments for locovorism. For example, growing marginal food crops may be a lower-cost-to-entry route into agriculture for young farmers, with a high cash return. And since our farm community is now dangerously old, that may be a good thing.
I don't hear too many proponents of locovorism and organic making their cases without trashing conventional farming. I work with farmers, they're the hardest working people I know. The ones I work with are far more knowledgeable and science-based in their discussions about farming methods and food production than just about anyone I've run across.
While I'm a proponent of locovorism for the reasons stated above, it's been advocated for on less than concrete grounds and my education was fairly strict in saying "ask the question" .... " do good science " ..... "live with the results." In too many food movements, our biases and emotions generate the answer and then we attempt to reverse engineer the science.
That can have negative consequences as we've seen with the change in composting regulations to facilitate large-scale organic vegetable production. We wanted organic and then compromised the science to get it. Hello salmonella.
Look at the old menus at the Berghoff and they were killing and cooking and serving everything that moved in the Midwest but people. Emmot Dedmon's Fabulous Chicago has an old turn of the centure menu illustrating this as well. We were the ultimate locovores and the result of that is that much of the wild game disappeared entirely from our geography. And that was when the population was a fraction of what it is today.
It's a science based fact that as societies become more affluent, meat consumption goes up. Everywhere in the world, whether they grow corn/wheat/soy or not. U.S. food policy did not create thousands of miles of corn fields. Our grandparents success and resulting purchasing behavior did, our parents continued that and we are sustaining it. My point is that the policy changes referenced in the quote above, if they are to be effective in reducing meat consumption, should not focus first on farming. Farming will follow and adjust itself for demand. But here and in other parts of the world, does not create demand.
Our industrial food production system is a reflection of us now feeding 300 million people on less and less land. Population growth and industrialization have walked in lock-step in food and most other areas. Not a lot of kids want to work on the farm. It doesn't pay well and the work is unkind and dangerous (so machines and technology make it possible for fewer to feed more).
I'm not clear where locovores and others who are anti conventional agriculture are drawing the line and perhaps that's by design. Is there a farm size that's appropriate? Is, say 499 acres ok, but 501 acres is not? Is this the same for technology? For example, is it ok for 10 farmers with 499 acres and smaller farms to pool their money and buy a piece of equipment such as a combine harvester but not for one farmer with 2,000 acres to buy the same piece of equipment? Or, is the farm size and equipment not a difference maker?
Since we're already on a path to "change policy" these would be really good things to share.
Might the policy get into true sustainability metrics. For example, should it set a cap on global warming impact per acre per year. This could be measured scientifically by a direct assessment of individual farm consumption and farming practices, inclusive of outbound shipping. This would give an accurate assessment of gwi, but would put the incredibly inefficient and low-tech smaller farms at a huge disadvantage (science will do that to you sometimes).
And so by "changing policy" and advocating for locovorism because its said by its advocates (are any of them farmers?) to be more environmentally sustainable, are we actually accelerating global warming. Do we know? And if we don't, is it really smart to "change policy."
Chatted with a farmer a couple weeks ago. He farms a few hundred central Illinois acres and rents a couple hundred additional. He's third generation on the farm. I was telling him that Walmart is going to start sourcing vegetables locally because people wanted to buy food with fewer food miles."
He smiled and said, "why don't they just buy a farm and work it."