FARMING

Page Three

8: Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth! -- ISAIAH 5:8    Holy Bible

From the Editors of www.SurvivalBlog.com:

Note: Permission to reprint, repost or forward the following article in full is granted, but only if it is not edited or excerpted.

The National Animal Identification System (NAIS)

http://www.survivalblog.com/nais.html

The USDA and the Agrobiz giants have been crafting a national animal identification scheme that threatens the traditional freedom of self sufficiency, the privacy of Americans, and the livelihood of organic farmers, and family farms. The National Animal Identification System (NAIS) is the creation of the Agrobiz giants Monsanto, Cargill Meat, National Pork Producers, and others to monopolize American food production using fear tactics to advance their agenda. The NAIS scheme was not created by any act of congress. Rather, it is merely a presumptuous bureaucratic dictate.

The NAIS plan requires two types of mandatory registration for everyone who owns even just one “livestock” animal. Every person who owns even just one horse, donkey, chicken, pigeon, goat, llama, sheep, pig, cow, alpaca, duck, farmed fish, etc. must register their name, home address, telephone number and Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates of their home in a Federal database.  Secondly, in order for any animal to leave its birth farm, the owner will be required to obtain a Federal ID number for it which will be kept in a national data base and have the animal biochipped. Animals will have to be registered if they leave the farm for any reason; to go on a trail ride, to go to a show or fair, to be bought or sold, to be bred by a stud on another farm, or to be taken to the local butcher, or anywhere else. The most likely type of ID will be a bio-microchip containing a low power radio transmitter so that the chips can be read from a distance. NAIS would allow “industry” to decide if retinal scans and DNA samples would also be required. Of course large scale Agrobiz has exempted itself from individual identification. (Agrobiz producers will be allowed to use one ID number for groups of hundreds or even thousands of animals that are raised and processed together.)
Americans will be required to report every time an animal enters or leaves their property, every time an animal loses a tag, every time a tag is replaced, the slaughter or death of an animal, or if an animal is missing. Such events must be reported in 24 hours or owners would suffer an as yet unspecified penalty. Small family farms and organic farmers will be driven out of business by the costs of premises registration fees, individual animal ID fees, event reporting fees, electronic tags or chips, electronic readers, home computers, Internet access, phone service, and reporting software. According to the USDA's plan all of these costs will be born by the animal owners.

NAIS might enhance Agrobiz’s export markets and allow tracing of animal movements to track disease outbreaks which is its stated goal. But it will not make the American consumer safer. The most common type of meat contamination in the United States is bacterial, such as E coli. and Listeria. It is not discovered until masses of people become ill. Since Agrobiz processes meat in huge packing plants with thousands of animals being slaughtered a day, NAIS is useless to determine if the contamination was from one animal, multiple animals, or unsanitary conditions at the packing plant itself. Contaminated meat from giant Agrobiz processor is sent to all 50 states endangering millions of consumers simultaneously. On the other hand family farms, organic farmers, and private citizens their animals in natural and healthy conditions because they are raising their animals for themselves and their neighbors’ tables. When they are driven out of the market, America’s food supply will become less safe not more so. The consolidation of America’s food supply by Agrobiz makes it more vulnerable to terrorists. As Americas meat industry becomes a giant monopoly where all meat is processed in a few giant packing plants then it becomes easier for terrorists to deliberately contaminate millions of pounds of meat in one attack.

I believe that many varieties of farm animals (not just rare breeds) will become extinct as individuals give up animal raising rather than submit to all the required fees and bureaucracy or agree to having their home pinpointed by satellite and their personal information put in a national database. The only animals that will survive will be those that Monsanto, Cargill and company deem the most profitable.
 

The USDA's NAIS Timeline:

• July, 2005: All States capable of premises registration.
• July, 2005: Animal Identification Number system operational.
• April, 2007: Premises registration and animal identification “alerts”.
• January, 2008: Premises registration and animal identification required.
• January, 2009: Reporting of defined animal movements required; entire program becomes mandatory.


I urge you to take immediate action in fighting the implementation of NAIS. Widespread objection by Americans can still stop the implementation of NAIS or at least create exemptions for religious objectors, home breeders, and/or small scale farmers and ranchers.

Please e-mail this posting to everyone that you know. Contact breed associations, organic and sustainable farming groups, neighbors, and family and ask them to oppose NAIS. Ask them to organize letter writing campaigns to the USDA. Write to your Federal and state legislators. Oppose any state level implementation of NAIS. (Some states such as Wisconsin are already implementing NAIS registration and biochipping.)

In particular, the USDA’s planned issuance of a NAIS rule for public comment in July 2006 will be a crucial juncture. Regular updates on the status of NAIS will be posted at http://www.SurvivalBlog.com. When the public comment period is open, submit an individual comment letter, strongly expressing your disapproval. Get involved, or our another piece of our precious liberty will slip away.

Web Sites:

There is a blog at http://NoNAIS.org to educate people about NAIS.

Stop Animal ID has many resources and a message board.

USDA resource about NAIS: http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/index.shtml

 

Regular updates on the status of NAIS: http://www.NoNAIS.org

You can find contact information for Federal and state legislators at: http://www.vote-smart.org/index.htm  or http://www.firstgov.gov

Special Thanks to Mary Zanoni, Ph.D. (e-mail: mlz@slic.com) whose excellent article in the Jan./Feb. 2006 issue of Countryside and Small Stock Journal alerted us to NAIS.


Copyright 2006., 2007. All Rights Reserved by James Wesley, Rawles - www.SurvivalBlog.com Permission to reprint, repost or forward this article in full is granted, but only if it is not edited or excerpted.

About the Author:
James Wesley, Rawles is a former U.S. Army Intelligence officer and a noted author and lecturer on survival and preparedness topics. He is the author of the novel "Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse" and is the editor of SurvivalBlog.com--the popular daily web journal for prepared individuals living in uncertain times.

http://www.survivalblog.com/nais.html

 

BACK TO TRADITIONAL FARMING

Protect Traditional Rights to Farm

http://nonais.org/

NAIS is 'No Turkey Left Behind'

 

RURAL HERITAGE MAGAZINE & WEB SITE

http://www.ruralheritage.com/

RURAL HERITAGE, a bimonthly journal in support of small farmers and loggers who use draft horse, mule and ox power. In print since 1976, online since 1997.

 

RURAL HERITAGE - STOP NAIS

http://www.ruralheritage.com/stop_nais/index.htm

http://www.ruralheritage.com/stop_nais/compliance.htm

Stop National Animal ID

 

 

Small farms

23: Be thou diligent to know the state of thy flocks, and look well to thy herds.
24: For riches are not for ever: and doth the crown endure to every generation?
25: The hay appeareth, and the tender grass sheweth itself, and herbs of the mountains are gathered.
26: The lambs are for thy clothing, and the goats are the price of the field.
27: And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for thy food, for the food of thy household, and for the maintenance for thy maidens.

-- Proverb 27: 23-27       Holy Bible

 

 

The Inalienable Right To Farm

PROTECT TRADITIONAL FARMING

http://nonais.org/

  •  

    • "USDA's proposed program could be compared to a finely crafted blueprint for a concrete blimp." -LivestockWeek
    •  
    • "NAIS is like driving thumb tacks with a 100 lb sledge hammer." -WJ
    •  
    • "The USDA's version of voluntary is like auto licenses." -Paul H.
    •  
    • "BSE announcements do not affect consumer buying." -USDA Study
    •  
    • "It is difficult to imagine any acceptable basis for the (USDA) to subject the owner of a chicken to more intrusive surveillance than the owner of a gun." -Mary Zanoni
    •  
    • NAIS is "No Chicken Left Behind" - government mandates with little funding. -S. Maricle

NAIS is "No Chicken Left Behind"

http://nonais.org/

 

 

National Animal Identification System (NAIS)

http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/index.shtml

http://www.newswithviews.com/Stuter/stuter91.htm

http://www.survivalblog.com/nais.html

 

 

Arkansas Animal Producers Association

http://arkansasanimalproducers.8k.com/

The Real Reason For Animal ID

http://arkansasanimalproducers.8k.com/whats_new_14.html

 

 

National Property Owners Association

http://nationalpropertyowners.org/

How Do You Say No To NAIS In Japanese?

http://nationalpropertyowners.org/nonais.html

 

 

National Animal Identification COST & REGULATIONS

 

Cow Chips: Controversial microchips will ID all livestock

http://www.sierratimes.com/06/01/22/65_170_243_147_24947.htm

 

 

RFID Chips and the Amish

"RFID Chips, (radio frequency identification) are a very controversial subject for any reason.  For the Amish, however, this technological development is extremely alarming.  In  the normal course  of living, they avoid technologies as much as they can.  However, numbering themselves, or their animals, to them  is the 'mark of the beast,' something they cannot cooperate with under any circumstances.  In two states, Wisconsin and Indiana, the voluntary national program, NAIS, has  been made compulsory at the state level.  The Amish have opposed cooperating with the states in  chipping  their animals, feeling  that it  is  only a matter of time before the government chips humans.  This lense is about this challenge facing the  Amish, and  us."

http://www.squidoo.com/amishrfid/

 

 

RFID is OUT ON A LIMB

Students at the University of Washington in Seattle are using RFID tags to identify trees that have been genetically modified to grow quickly.

http://www.rfidjournal.com/magazine/article/907

http://www.rfidjournal.com/

 

System and method of forestry management using radio frequency identification tags

http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/7100817.html

 

Precision Forestry Cooperative

 

Advances & Challenges for RFID in Trees

 

Survival Stockpiling of Food

for Your Family and Castle

 

husbandry

http://www.ruralheritage.com/bookstore/catalog_details.cgi?recno=143

http://www.ruralheritage.com/bookstore/index.htm

http://www.ruralheritage.com/

An old-fashioned approach to modern-day subsistence farming. This all-in-one volume discusses land, water, energy, rough construction, livestock (hens, goats, cows, hogs, sheep, rabbits, bees, and draft beasts) pasture, cropping, gardening, and food storage. The book is packed with lots of useful how-not-to advice, along with all the how-to tips.

"Making money and making a living are not the same thing," says the author. Accordingly, this little book is not about making money; it's about making a decent living as a farmer. The author tends to be opinionated, but have you ever met a farmer who wasn't?

Author: Nathan Griffith

Details: 300 pages, 5.5x8 paperback

Price: $18.00 (US$)

ISBN: 0-9665103-0-5

Contents:
1. Parting
2. Away at Last
3. Getting Started
4. Farming for Money
5. Land & Autonomy
6. Buying Land
7. Husbanding Labor
8. Water
9. Preparing Land
10. Hens
11. Goats
12. Cows
13. Hogs
14. Sheep
15. Rabbits, etc
16. Draft Beasts
17. Oxen
18. Dairy
19. Poultry
20. Pork
21. Charcuterie
22. Mutton
23. Pasture
24. Meadow
25. Potatoes
26. Pulses
27. Small Grains
28. Maize
29. Root Crops
30. Gardening
31. Fruits and Nuts
32. Husbanding the Harvest
33. Sweets
34. Dung
35. Energy
36. Smithing
37. Rough Construction
38. Vermin
39. Odds & Ends
Epilogue
Hungry Gap
Donkeys and Dogs
Useful Addresses

 

Horses & Mules

Horsepower & Headaches

Training Work Horses/Training Teamsters

http://www.ruralheritage.com/bookstore/catalog_details.cgi?recno=143

 

http://nonais.org/

 

Tractors

For the mechanically inclined

 

 

FARMING - PAGE THREE

LINKS

BACK TO FARMING - PAGE ONE

BACK TO FARMING - PAGE TWO

FARMING - PAGE FOUR - Coming Sooner or Later

Agriculture

FOLKWAYS

Building a Proper Log Cabin

Building a Proper Log Cabin - Page Two

Agrarianism

 

American Reformation Ministries

       

Keltic Klan Kirk

American Rebel Militias

PASTOR JOE JOHNSON   P.O. BOX 1166   MALVERN, ARKANSAS 72104