JBB's Musings


Sunday, July 05, 2009
Chesterton and Dervaes

From "Food Frenzy," by Roy F. Moore in the March 2009 issue of Gilbert Magazine, a magazine devoted to the work and legacy of G. K. Chesterton. This essay applies Chesterton's economic principle of distributism.

Chesterton said in Orthodoxy: "We must hate the world enough to want to change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing." Among the things that make the world go 'round, the most important is food. How we grow it, sell it, and ship it is more vital than ever before. [...]

Thanks to the domination of global food exchanges by modern agribusiness, ownership and control of food production is shrinking into even fewer and fewer hands. Despite their allies in big government, family farms and food cooperatives are being squeezed out of existence on purpose. [...]

But there are those who set shining examples of resistance to the dark vision of these self-proclaimed elites. One particular family of five is leading the way in a unique manner.

The Dervaes family of Pasadena, California, has redefined the name of "small farm," or rather they have revolutionized the concept of "urban homestead." On a plot no larger than a quarter of an acre, this family of five are able to produce six thousand pounds of produce per year. They're aiming for a goal of ten tons [edit: ten thousand pounds or five tons] from the tenth-of-an-acre. Their Dervaes Institute Web site (http://www.pathtofreedom.com) is a cornucopia of information for admirers and imitators worldwide.

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Thursday, May 15, 2008
Path to Freedom in the news

For all three readers who still might stop by here occasionally, check out ABC Nightline tonight to see a story about Path to Freedom.

Edit 5/16/08: The story may now be viewed online.

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Sunday, November 11, 2007
Homegrown Revolution at Path to Freedom

If you've not yet seen this video about the dangerous occupation of growing your own food, dangerous because you are on the way to becoming free (to paraphrase Jules Dervaes), I'd highly recommend it. It just might change your life.



For more on the philosophy behind Path to Freedom, that a step backwards is progress, read this interview with Jules Dervaes at Celsias.

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