and the reasons for said starving tactic? Being told "You are few, your voice is meaningless! Obey the voice of the majority, or lose your lands!" is somehow a better narrative?
Protip: replacing the farmers wont make that cause go away. You just victimize more people.
... if you want to ignore the fact that someone making themselves an existential threat is going to be treated like an existential threat, or that the ag sector doesn't have nearly as much negotiating power as some folks seem to be portraying, I'unno what else to say.
So a question I have is - if city dwellers could magically make this automatic equipment that can do all agriculture, why don't we have it today? Why isn't food "free"?
I wouldn't mind that actually.
Been ninja'd a bit since I started typing, but eh. Free isn't what happens, but what does happen and has happened is the amount of people needed to support a nation's agriculture needs have shrunk, and shrunk
drastically. Used to be gigantic chunks of a country's population was needed to keep it fed -- can't recall the exact percentage and don't particularly feel like wrestling a search engine to check, but iirc was somewhere over
half. Nowadays it's, what, <3% of the population? Ah, sorry, checked. Less than 2% of the workforce, for the US. To produce enough it's an export. Food is cheap. Food is plentiful. It's not magic, but it's close. And the point is, what's making it cheap and plentiful isn't really long earned experience or somethin', for all it helps to whatever degree in some areas. It's advances in ag science, in farming machinery, in crop genetics, and so on -- and none of that, as noted, is somehow magically the unassailable domain of the rural population. They don't have enough of a lock on the tools and expertise needed to really be able to leverage withholding that as a credible threat, for all it's generally far less trouble to not work around or over them.
Ultimate point being, rural communities've got room to push on some subjects, but not an infinite amount, and the rural ag sector doesn't have nearly enough power to make it approach -- and that's not even getting into what actually controls gigantic chunks of said sector (hint: it's not people interested in antagonizing urban centered anything). Stuff like actual starvation threats or some kind of agriculture revolution just in't on the table. Not in the US, not since a long, long time ago.
Well, I did say "free", not actually free... but food is actually pretty inexpensive as it is.
So it's not so much really about food production. The bigger issue is really what do you do with all those people that are being marginalized? Even if - and especially - if you don't agree with the views of the marginalized group?
That, well. You talk to them, work out compromises, try to help deal with the marginalization. Sometimes pressure can be used, if it's not stupid pressure. Even if they're not an actual threat it's still generally better and more effective to be working together rather than working at odds. Which is why, y'know. Oodles of federal and state money have been pouring into rural communities all our lives, at least when the GOP isn't screwing things on that front for the Nth time. Why folks have been trying to work with these rural/ex-manufacturing communities for as long as we've been alive, and so on.