November/December 1974
By the Mother Earth News editors
DESPITE GLOWING CON SUMER ADS ABOUT "PERPETUAL HARVESTS", top officials of some of the nation's largest timber companies now admit that we are, indeed, cutting North America's trees faster than they can grow. Charles W. Bingham--Vice President of Weyerhauser Co.--recently addressed a meeting of the North American Containerized Forest Seedling Symposium and said, "Unless we reestablish priorities so that financial support may be given to the basic public forestry function, Canada and the United States will run out of forest resources within 50 years. The $30 billion that the U.S. has spent on space programs would finance nearly 1,000 years of the Forest Service's regeneration program." (MOTHER'S thanks to Dean B. Wheeler for this report.)
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SOCIAL SECURITY IS IN TROUBLE. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare estimates that this year, for the first time, over half the nation's taxpayers will pay more in Social Security taxes than in federal income taxes. And, d spite even stiffer increases in the "old age insurance" bite during coming years, some members of Congress (which is currently investigating the matter) now flatly predict that the Social Security System will completely collapse within a decade. Why? Because the average 1975 retiree will draw 10 times much in benefits as he or she ever paid into the system in taxes ... and that, obviously, can't go on forever.
"ORGANIC FARMIN G will soon be the only way food can be grown economically says Colin Fisher, Director of the Pye Research Centre in Suffolk, England. Colin bases his prediction on data developed by over 50 ongoing research projects conducted at the 300-acre facility. Careful records of all expenditure and yields for matched crops of grain, vegetables and livestock show that "organic" methods of farming produce harvests almost as large as chemical agribiz, but cost far less. Result: Net profits are higher with the natural faring approach. Added bonus: The holistic approach preserves and improves the land while chemical methods exhaust and deplete it. "I've got no axe to grind," says Fisher. "Nothing tells me that there is anything intriniscally wrong with chemical fertilizers. I can only give you the results of our experiments. "