Wanted: A Few Good Books

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Getting books in the hands of incoming freshman as they prepare for their first year of college has become a summer regimen for many universities and colleges across the country. Nearly 300 now ask their incoming freshmen to read a particular book before the fall semester begins.

Just don’t assume that this leads to extra servings of Shakespeare, Hawthorne, or Hemingway. A new study by the National Association of Scholars (NAS) says that the books most commonly assigned display “a surprisingly low level of intellectual difficulty.” Da bi zadeve Å¡e slabÅ¡e, a distressing number of schools select books that launch one-sided attacks on the modern food industry.

This is a shame because food production is an important subject that informed citizens should strive to understand and learn more about. Yet these summertime assignments aren’t helping. Some of them are actually hurting the public’s understanding of agriculture.

One of the most suggested authors for summer-reading assignments is the best-selling controversialist Michael Pollan. Students at ten campuses must digest one of his books, according to the NAS survey. They range from little Albion College in Michigan to the prestigious University of California at Berkeley. Another popular writer is Barbara Kingsolver, an advocate of the “local foodmovement who is required reading at Virginia Tech and elsewhere.

Professors often talk about the importance of diversity, but I wonder if they really mean it: By assigning books by Pollan and Kingsolver, they’re exposing students to only one part of what is an important global discussion regarding what tools and technology are needed to feed a growing world population in a sustainable manner.

My preference is to recommend a more pragmatic and balanced reading list for the students as they prepare for the next phase of their educational journey. Because the current college and university reading lists imply little interest in alternatives to a narrow-minded and politically correct critique of food production, I thought I’d suggest three books that offer a more rounded understanding of the subject.

  • Denialism: How Irrational Thinking Hinders Scientific Progress, Harms the Planet, and Threatens Our Lives, by Michael SpecterThe media bombards us with facts every day. They are intellectually stimulating, mind numbing, and confusing all at once. But the difference between good information and bad information is crucial. Specter’s approach recalls a quote from the late senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan: “You are entitled to your own opinions, but not to your own facts.Specter encourages us to recognize that science-based facts are often the very best kind of facts. We need more of them, not fewer. They allow us to see through agenda-driven ideologues and special-interest groups. They also help us debunk popular myths about everything from organic food (which is no way to feed the world) to genetically modified crops (which is a part of the solution).
  • Food Politics: What Everyone Needs To Know, by Robert L. Paarlberg – Pred dvema letoma, Truth About Trade and Technology named Paarlberg’s Starved for Science as the “book of the yearbecause of its sensible call for the developing world to accept agricultural biotechnology. Now Paarlberg is back with a new volume that’s jam-packed with the type of science-based facts, figures, and arguments that Specter says we must learn to value. This book informs readers about the basics of agriculture and challenges notions about farming and food production that are regrettably popular in the faculty lounges. Food Politics truly nourishes the mind.
  • The Time It Never Rained, by Elmer Kelton: The author passed away last year, but his novel of a 1950s drought in West Texas is timeless. Its gripping story provides an excellent look at the opportunities and hardships that people in agriculture constantly face. The main character, Charlie Flagg, is a lovable grump who says that “a farmer’s concern is always the land.The novel goes on to show why this is true, and why farmers and ranchers are some of the best stewards we have. This book is a perfect example of fiction’s ability to provide powerful insights into the way the world really works.

These three books are worthwhile on their own terms as well as for their value as antidotes against the propaganda that a few college and universities are peddling in their summer reading programs.

There’s nothing like a good book.

Mary Boote serves as Executive Director of Truth About Trade & tehnologija. www.truthabouttrade.org

Mary čolni
NAPISAL

Mary čolni

Mary Boote je izvršna direktorica Global Farmer Network. Vzgojeno v mlekarni v severozahodni Iowi, svinjina, koruza, in sojino kmetijo, imela je privilegij služiti kot kmetijska svetovalka guvernerja Iowe Terryja E.. Branstad iz 1997-1999.

Preko globalne mreže kmetov, Mary sodeluje s kmeti po vsem svetu pri razvoju in zagotavljanju komunikacijskih platform, ki vključujejo perspektivo in glas kmetov kot sestavni del dialoga o svetovnem kmetijsko-živilskem sistemu. Poslanstvo: Okrepiti glas kmetov pri spodbujanju trgovine, tehnologija, trajnostno kmetovanje, gospodarska rast, in varnost hrane.

Imenovan kot eden od svetovnih nazorov 100: Vrh svetovne industrije 100 Vizionarji in voditelji v biotehnologiji s strani American American Worldview v Ljubljani 2015, Marija je imela priložnost potovati v tujino, službovanje na vodstvenih misijah v kmetijstvu, ki so se osredotočale na različna vprašanja, kot so navodila o strateškem načrtovanju in osebno zastopanje privatiziranih kmetov v novih neodvisnih državah, učenje več o majhnih projektih koruze za opazovanje trgovinskih pogajanj pri Svetovni trgovinski organizaciji.

Mary je obiskovala Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa in je bil privilegiran, da je sodeloval v 2009 Seminar za agrobiznis na Harvardu.

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