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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:45 PM

    Heat is in the news bc a lot of places are getting Heat Stroke Weather, that don't usually have that!

    But did you know: farm workers have been dealing with Heat Stroke Weather forever.

    That's how food gets to your table! No matter where you live! And it'll still be, after heat is out of the news!

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Replies

  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:45 PM

    Which means! Farm workers know a LOT about dealing with the heat.

    We have tips for you!

    And, heat waves are a good chance to get informed on what farm workers are dealing with, and how we can keep them from getting heat stroke on the job.

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:45 PM

    Since farming in the US is kind of an upper-class pursuit at this point, you'd be amazed how many farmers.......don't really understand working in the heat that well.

    Which makes it hard to supervise a crew responsibly! 🙃

    Which makes worker protection laws REAL IMPORTANT!

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:45 PM

    And we ain't gonna get those worker protection laws, if everybody's too scared of "offending farmers" to do it.

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:45 PM

    And before someone gets in the comments with "Well if a farmer is wealthy & doesn't have experience with manual labor, they're not a REAL FARMER!"

    Look bud. If they're hiring farm workers... it doesn't matter what virtue-signalling-based filter we use for "real farmer."

    That's a farmer!

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:46 PM

    I have never, once in my LIFE, seen or heard a farm worker say "Actually, WE'RE the real farmers."

    Or engage in a pissing match over who "counts" as a "real farmer." If they're hiring farm workers, that's a farmer!

    Don't make this more complicated than it has to be!

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:46 PM

    What farm workers ask for is WORKER PROTECTION LAWS.

    Not "Hey, could you guys argue some more over what the definition of a farmer is?"

    Arguing over "who's the real farmer" is just.... so far removed from the actual point.

    Thank you for coming to my TED talk 🙏

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 6:06 PM

    @sarahtaber

    The point of saying that the real farmers are those who work the farm, is to advocate for land reforms ("the land belongs to those who work it").
    So, I'm not sure that it's so far removed from the actual point ?

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 8:26 PM

    @lienrag That might be true in some places, but not the US.

    What Americans generally mean when they say "the workers are the REAL farmers" is it's a quick way to stop uncomfortable conversations about how farmers are behaving badly.

    We have a culture that farmers are sacred & can't be spoken ill of. So instead of holding farmers accountable, we just do word games about "Who's a REAL farmer?" and call it a day.

    It's a good way to SOUND pro-worker, while doing absolutely nothing for workers.

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 8:28 PM

    @lienrag I would also point out- as a farmer who is married to a historian- land reform movements are way more likely to end in horrific bloodshed for the peasants they're supposed to "help," than to actually help anybody.

    "Don't take muh land!" is the one threat wealthy landowners are actually well-prepared to respond to & fight back on.

    It seems like people who actually care about helping peasants might pay attention to that.

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 8:30 PM

    @lienrag Wealthy landowners are often incompetent at everything else, like "putting their property to work effectively."

    Which means that basic measures like "Yes, you have to pay inheritance tax. Yes, on your land too. Yes, really" are way more likely to break up estates, make farmland accessible, etc over the long term than the more dramatic tactics that people usually mean when they say "land reform." In the USA certainly, & likely elsewhere as well.

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 8:33 PM

    @lienrag My feeling is if one is serious about breaking up estates & other land reform goals, it's best to wage that campaign on territory wealthy landowners struggle on (putting their property to work).

    Rather than try the one approach that wealthy landowners have a good history of winning on, e.g. the conventional approach of "we're taking your land."

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 8:35 PM

    @lienrag Which brings this discussion full circle!

    "Workers are the real farmers" feels smart to the person who says it! But if its main benefit is pushing for land reform, which is a tactic with a weak track record of success & a strong one of getting farm workers killed...

    Who are we really saying "Workers are the real farmers" for?

    It's almost like... there's a reason farm workers, at least in the US, DO NOT go around telling people "We're the real farmers." It's a tactical dead end!

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  • Jul 12, 2026, 2:49 PM

    @sarahtaber Florida repuglicans actually passed a law saying employers don't have to give heat/water breaks to employees working out in the heat/sun...or something to that effect 🤬

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