A national poll conducted by Harris Interactive two weeks ago found that nine out of 10 Americans felt it was important to grow food at home instead of relying on imports.
These results were not surprising to Larry Combest, the former Chairman of both the House Intelligence Committee and the House Agriculture Committee. But he admits the strain being placed on producers today is making it harder and harder to grow food here at home.
High risks and high farming costs, coupled with low returns, have left America with just 125,000 farms to grow three-quarters of the country’s food and fiber.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the number of farms left to feed a growing U.S. and world population is contracting, and Combest believes that is because it’s so hard to make a living at farming—a profession that is under constant attack by foreign competitors, the nation’s urban media, and a handful of opponents in the halls of Congress.