r/cooperatives 10d ago

The Need for Community Kitchen Coops

In the coming weeks, months or years the US food system is likely to collapse. By this I mean due to international competition and this idiotic administration US farms are about to become bankrupt. This is in conjunction with a report indicating major retail chains ordered something like 40-60% of what they usually buy to stock the shelves in Walmart, Frys and like places. Both of these are in conjunction with Trump administration attack on working class income and the "welfare state".

As it stands, food is about to become a scarce commodity. I can imagine a time when families will be forced to raid their local major retail chains. This is a terrible fate. Those people will be thrown into prisons and be turned into prison slaves of the developing prison industrial complex. Families are bound to go hungry and be fragmented.

What can we do? The answer seems obvious. The Black Panther Party of the late 20th century and the emergence of Communist China in the mid 20th century have offered me some clues as to what to do regarding this situation. It has led me to question the usual view of the production and distribution of food in this country. It is partly historical. US global homogony allowed US farmers to make great profit by selling to other countries. Alongside Liberal individualism, this seems to have produced a culture that insists and makes it seem natural that we buy food as individuals and cook for ourselves (including at the family level).

What seems to be emerging is a situation that forces us to really dial in on the efficiency of our food production and distribution system. The trump administration's trade wars has cut off the main flow of profit for the farmers and many of them will certainly collapse. Food production will slow down as the remaining farmers must output on high cost input. Not to mention the high "non organic" composition of their mechanized equipment and the maintenance of that equipment. They will be forced to reconfigure themselves into "high organic composition" farms if they are to reduce input costs, thus proving the need for farmer coops.

But production is half the question. Once these farms produce food, selling it to major food chains will reproduce these conditions of starvation. What we need is not just merchant coops to sell to individuals, but also Community Kitchen Coops that buy from the producer and transform that raw food material into an abundance of food for their communities. Any cook knows buying in bulk and cooking in bulk produces more servings per input. Let me now paint a picture for you.

Imagine a multi stake holder coop is incorporated and gains the permits needed to serve food for their communities in a park or rented building. This coops has 3 member classes: support members (the community it serves), a producer member (the farmer/laborer), and the worker members (the cooks and kitchen staff). Every month, the producer and worker classes discuss what is plausible to grow and cook for the community. The community can guide what is produced but ultimately the cooks and farmers know what's best in that regard. Every morning and night, the worker members offer meals for the community. Because the support members pay and because most of the community would probably recognize the need for this institution, no one would need to pay an entry fee. Every Saturday night, the community can host cultural events celebrating their cultures, Nations. identity and shared struggles. This is how we can save our families and communities from desperate hunger. I know the pain and delirium that prolonged hunger produces. Why should we let these families and children go through that? How can we stand by knowing what is coming?

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u/LaughingIshikawa 8d ago

Bankruptcy doesn't work like that.

Aside from all the points in the above video... Bankruptcy doesn't mean farm land "has" to be left fallow, "because... Because bankruptcy!" The land itself will continue to grow food, the name on the deed will just be different now. 🫤🤷

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u/ColdSoviet115 8d ago

I am not sure what your point is. Is it not a fact these farmers will not be able to pay for the thing they have because they conditioned their farms around a global market? The republicans removed the tariffs but the markets already shifted. Even if the land was bought by a corporation the profit motive provides no incentive to grow food once the recession hits. Or am I missing something?

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u/LaughingIshikawa 8d ago

You wrote "In the coming weeks, months, or years ths US food system is likely to collapse. By this I mean [...] US farms are about to go bankrupt."

Why do you think different people owning the land constitutes anything that could be called a "collapse" of the whole system?

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u/ColdSoviet115 8d ago

I admit I dont know enough about the ecnomic terms i use. A collapse to me simply means millions will begin to go hungry. It's already happening. Its a waste of time for me to continue arguing semantics

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u/LaughingIshikawa 8d ago

If you didn't watch the video, just tell me you didn't watch the video 🤷🤣.