“Cultivators of the earth are the most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country and wedded to its liberty and interests by the most lasting bonds.”
“I hope we shall … crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations.”
– Thomas Jefferson
The idea that American agriculture would one day be dominated by “moneyed corporations” would have been unthinkable to Thomas Jefferson – the man who, more than any other American, defined the nation’s farmers as the paragons of republican virtue.
Over the last several decades, however, Jefferson’s independent yet community minded “cultivators of the earth” have been eclipsed by a few, large, often multinational corporations in deciding how America’s food will be produced. In towns where family farmers once gathered to make decisions that shaped the future of their communities, today it is often the case that the most important decisions are made in corporate boardrooms hundreds of miles away – or even on another continent.
“Today, however, corporate agribusiness giants hide behind the wholesome image of the American family farmer to evade responsibility for their pollution.”
The shift to corporate agribusiness has done more than change the nature of American farming; it has also triggered an environmental crisis. Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello home sits near the Rivanna River, which flows into the James River and ultimately the Chesapeake Bay – an important and once ecologically vital waterway that has been degraded over the course of decades by agricultural pollution, in particular waste from factory farming of chicken. The Chesapeake is not alone – from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes – and in countless lakes and streams in between – pollution from agricultural activities is fueling algae blooms, threatening wildlife and fouling drinking water supplies. Farming families and nearby communities suffer the impacts of chemicals in the air they breathe and contamination of the water they drink.
That pollution is the result of an agricultural system that increasingly produces the nation’s meat on farms that pack thousands of animals onto small plots of land, producing waste on the scale of entire cities and making pollution of nearby waterways a near certainty. It is a system that increasingly feeds those animals with corn planted in vast plots across the nation – corn that requires pesticides and fertilizers, some of which wash into our waterways, to thrive.
It is also a system that is largely molded to the design, and designed to the benefit, of a few massive corporations, one in which family farmers still participate, but in which they are increasingly vulnerable and lack the independence that Jefferson once praised.
Four decades ago, Americans were confronted by an environmental crisis of a similar scale – the massive water pollution problems caused by industrial dumping into our nation’s rivers, streams and lakes. Those problems were so intense that the Cuyahoga River caught fire and nearby Lake Erie was considered “dead.”
At the time, few Americans waxed poetic about the wholesomeness of the neighborhood sewage treatment plant, or rhapsodized about the republican virtues of the steel mill. Instead, we acted on the principle that no one – especially not powerful, well-resourced corporations – has the right to pollute with impunity and endanger the public’s health and our natural resources. We took action, and while the job of stopping industrial pollution is far from done, we’ve made tremendous progress.
“Today, however, corporate agribusiness giants hide behind the wholesome image of the American family farmer to evade responsibility for their pollution.”
Archer Daniels Midland, Cargill, Perdue, Tyson, Smithfield – these are among the corporations whose actions have contributed to the devastation of American waterways. They are also corporations with vast resources to implement better, more sustainable ways of producing America’s food.
The time has come to hold corporate agribusiness accountable for its pollution – just as Americans a generation ago did with industrial polluters. It is up to Americans to insist on better practices that repair the damage already done, and eliminate the massive burden that agricultural pollution inflicts on our waterways and our health.
Brad Heavner - Brad spent 14 years as a policy advocate with Environment America and the State PIRGs. He is now helping to build the solar power industry in California with Solmentum.



















