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Dead End Path: How Industrial Agriculture Has Stolen Our Future
Contributor(s): Brown, David L. (Author)
ISBN: 0996608540     ISBN-13: 9780996608541
Publisher: Moab Bookworks
OUR PRICE:   $12.30  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Technology & Engineering | Agriculture - Sustainable Agriculture
- Nature | Natural Resources
- Business & Economics | Industries - Agribusiness
Physical Information: 0.69" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.98 lbs) 332 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Open your mind and look around ...and you will see a world in distress. Each day seems to bring news of fresh disasters. The media spill out an endless stream of stories about growing threats to the environment, troubled economies, and dangers to the climate. We are overwhelmed by reports of failing nations, crime, intolerance, disease, terrorism, piracy, war, natural disasters, drought and spreading famine. What's happening to bring so much misery into the world? The subject may seem complex and multi-faceted, but there's a single culprit responsible for most of the troubles we face - an "unusual suspect" that is the root cause of nearly everything that's wrong on Planet Earth. Aha, you may be thinking: If there's a single cause for most of our troubles it should be easy to solve them, simply by eliminating that cause. But you would have to think again when I reveal that the culprit is agriculture, and in particular the aggressive style of industrial farming that has replaced traditional methods in developed countries and is being spread across the world by multi-national corporations through the process of globalization. But...isn't agriculture a force for good? It puts food on all our tables. Its bounty makes possible the comfortable lifestyles most Westerners enjoy. It feeds the less fortunate. It allowed our species to thrive and build great civilizations. Agriculture lies at the heart of humanity's finest achievements. Doesn't it? This book explores the developing crisis resulting from the collision of population and resource depletion. Humankind has set itself on a dead end path through an industrial form of agriculture that is dependent upon fossil fuels. The Green Revolution merely delayed the time of reckoning. The author explores the history of technological agriculture and the economic theories that underpin the so-called "progress" that has resulted through the destruction of natural resources.