Without farmers, you'd be hungry, naked and sober | Eric Sannerud

91,278 views ・ 2020-04-18

TED


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00:13
So what do people usually say when you're about to give a public talk?
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It's to imagine that your audience is naked.
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(Laughter)
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Well, I'm doing a different trick tonight,
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and I'm going to imagine all of us without farmers,
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and well, it's not so much different.
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[Without farmers you'd be hungry, naked and sober]
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(Laughter)
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And our farmers do so much more for us
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than simply feed and clothe and provide us excellent things to drink.
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Our farmers are an important part of all of our communities,
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particularly our rural communities.
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And more than that,
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they're a strong driver of resilient economics.
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Think about it this way:
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When a brewer buys hops from me, grown here in Minnesota,
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90 percent of that dollar stays in our state,
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compared to just 10 percent when they buy it from somewhere else.
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What that means is a lot.
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That 90 percent means local jobs.
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It means tax revenue for better schools and roads.
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It means support for the co-ops, the mechanics,
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all the support staff that are needed for a farm to thrive.
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And they're our best stewards of the land.
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This quote, I think, exemplifies what our family farmers do for us
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in stewarding our shared natural resources.
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"That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology,
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but that land is to be loved and respected as an extension of ethics."
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Now, they sure do a lot of good stuff for us.
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And our family farmers are great, we'd all agree.
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However,
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the trends in agriculture today are dire.
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The average age of a farmer in America,
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according to the latest agricultural census --
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58.3.
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Of all the farmers,
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33 percent are 65 plus.
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That's a little caricature of my grandpa.
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(Laughter)
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He's still farming,
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and he's much older than 65.
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But to put that in perspective,
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another important public service job, teaching,
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average age of teachers is 42.
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Our farmers are pretty old in this country.
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And unfortunately,
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when they retire, if they retire,
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we're not really replacing them.
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Of all the farmers that we added in this country
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between 2008 and 2012,
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across the entire United States --
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see if you can catch this difference --
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we added 2,000 under the age of 30.
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I'm one of those.
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I'll be around to autograph some photos later, if you'd like.
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(Laughter)
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But, you know, our farmers are getting older
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and we're not replacing them --
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what's going on here?
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What are we going to do?
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And I think there's a reason folks aren't coming into it,
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and that's prices.
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We're going to go through a couple of slides like this.
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Milk: This is the average retail price of a gallon of milk in the United States.
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Four dollars forty-nine cents.
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How much do you think the farmer gets?
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Dollar thirty-two.
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We'll try again with bread.
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Average retail price of bread in America, three forty-nine.
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Farmer gets ...
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Twelve cents.
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03:13
Audience: Oh!
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And so how are we supposed to have strong local farms
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in this scenario?
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What are we supposed to do if there aren't any local farmers left?
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And this isn't just a farmer problem,
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it's not just something for the few of us farmers to sort out.
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This is an all-of-us problem.
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This is rural and it's urban and it's statewide and it's nationwide.
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So what do we do about it?
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I'll tell you that.
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But first, a story.
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The green movement, we're all kind of familiar,
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started in the '60s, planting trees.
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And now we've come such a long way.
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Green is part of our day-to-day lives.
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It's part of the day-to-day lives of Fortune 500 businesses.
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It's the subject of international treaties,
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the subject of presidential debates.
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You and I, we switch our light bulbs,
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we use reusable bags.
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We participate in the green movement each and every day.
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Yet ...
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and this is how we get to the idea --
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the food movement,
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relatively younger, but also somewhat familiar, I imagine.
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You go to the grocery store,
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you see a sign that says "Buy local,"
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you go to the farmers market, you go to the co-op,
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you read books by prominent authors.
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The food movement to date
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could be summarized as voting with your fork.
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The idea is: you pull a dollar out of your wallet --
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how you spend that dollar affects the food system.
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It supports farmers close to home.
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And that's all well and good, but where are we going?
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How do we get to our renewable-energy moment
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like the green movement did?
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And this, I think, is what we need to do.
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Just voting with our fork is not solving the issues
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that our farmers are facing.
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And so we need to do more than that.
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I believe we must move on from just voting with our fork
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to voting with our vote.
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We need to take our dollars
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and continue to spend them locally.
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We also need to show up at the ballot box for our farmers.
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This is bigger than just buying local strawberries
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once a year at a pick-your-own.
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This is a year-round effort that we must make together
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to make the change we need.
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Changes like fair pricing for farmers.
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That's quotas, supply management,
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guaranteed prices.
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Changes like fair and open trade.
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That means ending trade wars.
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And yeah, of course it means voting.
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Now we all knew that one already, though.
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For example, it's working.
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Hey, who's that?
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(Laughter)
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Just this year in Minnesota,
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we've passed a historic, first-in-the-country tax credit.
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The Beginning Farmer Tax Credit.
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It incentivizes our transition of land
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from the existing generation to the next generation.
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That was done by a handful of us young farmers --
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we certainly don't have money, you saw that earlier.
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We don't have political experience.
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But we showed up, and we made our voices heard.
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And thanks to the support of farmers and non-farmers alike,
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we got something incredible done here in this state.
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If we can do it, anybody can do it.
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Now, that was all light and fuzzy and feels pretty happy.
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Skeptics in the audience, you're here.
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That would be me, if I were here.
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Skeptics are thinking,
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"Wow, what do we need to change about our food system?"
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Farmers are great.
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We have unlimited food, and it's real cheap, too,
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isn't that great?
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Well, unfortunately,
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in the '80s and the '90s in this country, we went down a path of policy
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that could be described as "get big or get out."
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And what "get big or get out" means is you maximize production
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while minimizing costs.
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On its face value, that sounds pretty simple.
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However, that shift turned our farmers from a venerated class
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and a valued class in our society
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into a cost to be minimized.
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That shift made it so that my great-grandfather,
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who supported the family with six cows,
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that same dairy,
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trying to support their family, has to be 600 cows today.
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Six-thousand-cow dairies are not unheard of.
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What happens when there's this one dairy farm
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in an entire county,
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where there used to be hundreds?
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The same could be said with corn or beans or field crops.
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What happens when it takes 10,000 acres for one person to support themselves?
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When it used to only take 40.
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We know what happens, we read about it in the news.
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Broadly determined, rural decline,
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but schools close, schools consolidate,
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post offices close, grocery stores close.
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People leave,
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the community suffers and goes away.
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I believe all of us in this audience with ties to rural Minnesota
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know this story well.
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This is not a problem that we can solve with farmers markets and good intentions.
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We have to do more for our farmers.
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Policy got us into this mess,
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and policy can get us out.
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American farmers are only getting older, fewer and poorer,
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yet they are crucial to our state.
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They're the vibrancy in our rural communities.
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They're the drivers of economic growth and stability,
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and they are our best protectors of our shared resources
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of land, water and air.
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So we have to do better for them.
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So join me, would you?
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Let's fight for our farmers.
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You can see it,
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we're already doing it in Minnesota, having great success.
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And together, we can do even more.
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And we must.
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So we were voting with our fork before,
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and we want to keep doing that.
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But if I could have one idea for you to go home with today,
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it's vote with your vote.
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And so to that end,
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on the count of three, I'd like all of us to say it together.
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Are you ready?
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OK, one,
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two,
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three.
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Audience: Vote with your vote.
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Very nice, thank you.
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I think you got it.
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(Applause)
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