Save our soil - save the world
Health, February 05, 2020
Our current system of food production involves mono-culture, the tilling of soil, and the adding of biology destroying chemical crutches. This destructive dis-empowering process is slowly decreasing the earths health, and our health along with it. We need to be more expansive on our view of health - without our natural world thriving, then we have no chance.
The loss of biodiversity is recorded all over the globe. In North Dakota, USA, the top soil has reduced by 50-70% in less than 60 years (1960 34 inches of top soil and 8% organic matter, 2014 15 inches topsoil and less than 3% organic matter). The soil functions based on it's biology, the plants get the nutrients from the biology and when this whole process is upset then human added chemicals further destroy natures process. When synthetic fertilisers are used more weeds are created, to deal with more weeds herbicides are added. The chelate within the herbicides binds metals like magnesium, manganese, iron, zinc, and copper meaning the plant can't uptake these making them more prone to disease (the plants then contain less nutrition for us). To assist with the weakened plant fungicides are added - further degrading the natural soil biology; pesticides are added - destroying predator insects that take care of the pests. It has been stated by Jonathon Lundgren (research entomologist at USDA's agricultural research service) that for every insect species that's a pest there are 1700 that are beneficial - our chemical warfare farming methods are more destructive than we understand. Our current production models are all about killing - we are killing weeds, pests, and ultimately biological diversity. This has a massive effect on our overall WELLNESS and health. It is widely reported that the nutrient density in our foods have decreased by 15-65% (depending on where on earth) in the last 50 years. The USA spends more on health of it's population than anywhere on earth ($10,224 per person per year in 2017, compared to around $4000 in NZ) yet the US leads the world in diagnosis of cancer, heart disease, parkinsons, Alzheimers, ADHD, auto-immune diseases, and osteoporosis. Rather than spending billions on research to try and prevent disease with genetic mapping we need to fix the major contributing issue from the ground up.
Save our soil and save our planet......natures way is the original conventional model
We have a fast growing population (even before fixing our sick soil we need to discuss population control- talk to our kids about no more that 2 children until we get things under control) and the triple threat of 1 billion people starving, 2 billion eating themselves to obesity related illness, and environmental destruction with complete unbalance of our natural world (10,000 years ago the mammalian biomass was 99% wild animal and 1% human and livestock - now it's 4% wild animal and 96% human and livestock) the problem of sorting out our food systems can't wait. We are called to "drastically change" the way we live by the IPCC report of 2018; changing the way we produce food is a huge piece in the jigsaw. I've heard so many big industry capitalists tell me that we have to grow industrial mono-crops, and raise animals with cramped industrial methods to feed the world when in fact over 500 million small holder farmers produce more than 70% of the worlds food - yet these food production hero's that are attempting to cling to more nature enhancing, less environmental destructive methods are the most affected by poverty, and the most marginalized from legislation.
References
"The Rapid Decline of the Natural World is a crisis even bigger than climate change" by John Vidal March (environmental editor of Guardian for 27 years) 2019, Huffington Post
"Rosie Bosworth: Are Dairy and meat on the way out?" by Newstalk ZB 19 Jan 2020 - radio interview
My book 'Holistic Human - Expansive Wellness Habits for thriving humans on a healthy planet' is available through my site for NZ and Australia https://everfit.co.nz/Store/holistic-human-book