Farming while Black: farmers allegedly sold fake certified seed in an effort to bankrupt them
by Seamus Bellamy from on (#3TSNY)
Thomas Burrell, president of the Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, explained how black farmers were receiving one-tenth of the yield as their white neighbors."Mother nature doesn't discriminate," Burrell said. "It doesn't rain on white farms but not black farms. Insects don't [only] attack black farmers' land"why is it then that white farmers are buying Stine seed and their yield is 60, 70, 80, and 100 bushels of soybeans and black farmers who are using the exact same equipment with the exact same land, all of a sudden, your seeds are coming up 5, 6, and 7 bushels?""All we have to do is look at here: 80 years ago you had a million black farmers, today you have less than 5,000. These individuals didn't buy 16 million acres of land, just to let is lay idle. The sons and daughters, the heirs of black farmers want to farm, just like the sons and daughters of white farmers.""So we have to acknowledge that racism is the motivation here," Burrell concluded.Of course, the Stein Seed Company is poo-pooing the farmer's claims, calling them false and factually unsupportable. With so much money at stake, not to mention the very real possibility of racial discrimination, the affected farmers have filed a class-action lawsuit against Stein with the United States District Court for the Western Division in Memphis, Tennessee. The case has also caught the eye of Tennessee Rep. G.A. Hardaway, who's said that the issue would be investigated by the government of Tennessee.Image via PixaBay