Give Us This Day
by Harold Brewer
(Harold Brewer was born in Wichita and raised on a farm in
central Kansas. He served in the U.S. Air Force during the Berlin
Airlift and the Korean War. After leaving military service, he
attended the University of California and received degrees in
agricultural engineering from Berkeley and Davis. He has done
research at the university and federal government levels on advanced
agricultural systems. This article is adapted from his recent book
Fig Leaves And Masks http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0967545501/vdare)
My favorite season on the farm during the 1930s was summer, when
we harvested wheat, oats, and alfalfa. Harvest started when we
rolled out a binder and thresher, stored since last summer. The
binder cut stalks, tied them into bundles, and dumped them into
rows. The thresher separated grain from straw and chaff. At
threshing time, several neighbors and many itinerant workers
assembled at our farm. With luck, no rain fell and the grain was
safely stored in the granary within a few days.
Now, a combine rolls into a field. In a matter of hours, one or
two workers harvest and store the grain. Labor is reduced at least
tenfold.
Similarly, for harvesting alfalfa. What took many days and people
is now accomplished in a few days with one or two people.
Childhood ended. I left the farm, completed military service,
then enrolled at the University of California at Davis in the
Agricultural Engineering Department. Its researchers were
world-renowned for developing machines for field production. Field
production machines are important because each replaces ten or more
workers. Nations with the lowest percentage of workers on farms are
the wealthiest. For example, the U.S.A. has 2% of its population
working on farms, while Ethiopia has 84%. More? Japan 5% and China
68%.
My major at UCD, power and machinery, brought me into contact
with people developing harvesters for crops such as grapes, peaches,
and tomatoes. The tomato project was particularly interesting.
Several people contributed in various ways, such as developing a
variety that could withstand mechanical handling. But the key
element of the harvester proved elusive. This finally fell into
place when Steven Sluka, a refugee from the 1956 Hungarian
Revolution - some immigrants can be useful! - conceived the idea of
cutting vines loose from the ground, lifting them, then shaking the
tomatoes off the vines. His technique was the basis for the first
successful mechanical tomato harvesters.
Growers in California were faced with the loss of workers who
were hand-harvesting their crops. Politicians and Labor had teamed
up to discontinue the bracero program, so that wages paid domestic
laborers could be driven up. However, UCD researchers, with grower
funding, had just successively tested the mechanical tomato
harvester. When braceros walked out of the fields, mechanical
harvesters rolled in.
Several years later, the mechanization program at UCD was shut
down and dismantled. Politicians did not intend to have their
labor-friendly policies thwarted again. Just to make sure, they and
their allies reached out to the Agricultural Research Service in the
U. S. Department of Agriculture and dismantled all field
mechanization programs there, too. Mechanical lettuce harvesters
were under development in the 1960s. That work was stopped. Today,
lettuce is still harvested by hand in the field.
The dismantling occurred over a period of years starting in the
1960s. Nothing overt, just not renewing any mechanization projects
or starting any new ones. The mechanical tomato harvester had
rankled a lot of labor-friendly people. When we say "labor," we
might as well say Mexican workers, legal or illegal.
But the precipitating event - I am relying on memory - was when a
Secretary of Agriculture was due for a photo op in Northern
California with UCD researchers, spotlighting a fruit-catching frame
used in mechanization. Word got out and the next thing we knew the
event was called off. Cesar Chavez, head of the agricultural workers
union, pulled the right strings and stopped it cold. He didn't want
any more mechanization, which would put his union members out of
work. [For Chavez' conflicted attitude to immigration, see http://www.vdare.com/la_causa_or_la_raza.htm]
That big hole in the Mexican border started in earnest when
politicians and their labor allies stopped the development of any
new agricultural field machines. The stopper on mechanization went
all the way through the 1980's and extended into the Agricultural
Research Service of the USDA. Finally, around 1990, it was all right
to "quietly" do mechanization research again, but it had to be
labeled as being for the environment, or for food quality, or
whatever. Field mechanization to save labor was still not
allowed.
Meanwhile, across the Pacific at an Institute outside Tokyo, the
mechanization work continued without interruption.
And rural America fills up with foreigners.
November 1,
2000