Ep 94 The Great Disfarmament - The Great Disarmament Part 6: Regeneration & Resistance
Description
In this episode, Avis Kalfsbeek marks the final chapter of The Great Disfarmament—and the quiet rise of a different kind of power.
As war tactics evolved from Cold War standoffs to post-9/11 surveillance and global contracting, the logic of control continued to infiltrate the land. Seeds were genetically modified, patented, and, in some cases, designed never to reproduce. Farmers were no longer growers but users—dependent on licensing, chemicals, and contracts. The soil was stripped. Sovereignty was sold. And the disfarmament, it seemed, was complete.
Yet even as these systems tightened their grip, something ancient stirred beneath the surface.
This episode honors the seed savers, the land listeners, and the quiet movements that began to push back. We meet Indigenous leader Winona LaDuke, whose work on food sovereignty and cultural memory reminds us that “food is medicine—not only for the body, but for the soul.”
We also reflect through the lens of Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, who teaches that reciprocity, not ownership, defines our relationship with the earth. In a time of mechanized control, these voices call us to remember the seed not as a product, but as a promise.
This is the story of regeneration and resistance—
Of choosing ceremony over commodity, memory over monopoly, and kinship over control.
Next, we begin Part II: The Great Disarmament.
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🎵 Music is by Javier “Peke” Rodriguez: The Red Kite
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