I'm convinced it's a psyop that the Midwest isn't covered in Osage Orange/red cedar/wild plum/locust windbreak/hedge rows and each county doesn't have a contract to maintain them.

Free cattle proof fencing that sheep will prune and provides food for an insane amount of wildlife(and humans if shtf) AND high quality lumber.

I can't help but think jobs like this will be the "learn to code" for us in IT that will be replace by AI. #permaculture

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Once AG subsidies end. This could come to pass.

Hugely in favor of their being no farm bill what so ever. To play devils advocate, would we have to have tariffs on imported food? Otherwise won't ag land be converted into other subsidized industries posthaste?

This seems to be a consistent problem. The incremental creep of government policies or even our own personal choices and the incentives and environments they “nurture” (self effect). How do we find away out? Is it incremental or is drastic? And all the risks associated with both. I guess i just had a reactionary opinion without any true idea to a better solution. I’m just in such an antigovernment mood as of late! That sometimes makes me stupid.

I definitely think your perspective is correct. Possibly you could couple the end of subsidies with a timelock (10-30years) for zoning changes from ag to something else on ag zoned properties. That would have the simultaneous affect of dropping the cost of farm land, which we need currently cuz the young generations can't afford farm land these days.

That might further exacerbate the housing crisis, but if we actually closed the fucking border maybe not. Since ending oil subsidies at the same time would likely decrease suburban demand, maybe counties and municipalities would be willing to fool with their zoning in innovative ways to spur more village creation, but the boomers can't be trusted to do this bc they're the rent seeking generation.

Could also do something cool where the feds override local zoning codes for ag to make them temporarily less restrictive, for example permitting ag properties to build unlimited housing if it's inhabbitted by family and mobile tiny houses if not related. That'd get us back to multigenerational farms (incentivizing boomers to take lower profits on their homes and build a retirement home on their child's farm) and create the workforce needed for regenerative agriculture.

There is so much innovation that could be done if the ag subsidies ended that the right states and counties could definitely capitalize.

I like your idea.

Yea you can thank Big Ag for this. Its not a psyop, It's a conspiracy between Big Ag companies and local govts

The answer to most questions is 1971

Its a lot of consequences stacked

Like...

In addition to this, what if the old "Great Black Swamp" was restored using "Veta la Palma" as the inspiration.

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#permaculture #aquaculture #foodforeveryone

Locust is of the devil and I do my best to rid my property of it. Those damn thorns go right through boots, feet, tires and hands.

I wear Kevlar inserts. But that is why it makes a perfect hedge fence. And the pods are good food for humans and animals.

I’ve thought this for years. Add some honey locust, mulberry, and also some blackberry to the mix and the “fedge” is almost bulletproof. Persimmons would add some longevity into the fall season as well.