German farmers deploy the milk weapon
Johannes Simon/Getty Images HOFSTETTEN, GERMANY – MAY 27: Farmer Jakob Moesl (C) blocks the access to his farm with a empty milk tank and a placard reading ‘Stop milk delivery!!! For a fair price’ on May 27, 2008 in Hofstetten near Landsberg am Lech, Germany. Germany’s dairy farmers are furious. Many have them have stopped ...
Johannes Simon/Getty Images
HOFSTETTEN, GERMANY – MAY 27: Farmer Jakob Moesl (C) blocks the access to his farm with a empty milk tank and a placard reading ‘Stop milk delivery!!! For a fair price’ on May 27, 2008 in Hofstetten near Landsberg am Lech, Germany.
Germany’s dairy farmers are furious. Many have them have stopped shipping milk to factories because they want 43 eurocents a liter, rather than the 28 to 34 cents they get now. But there’s a problem: What to do with all the milk they are still producing? The cows don’t go on strike just because the farmers do.
According to Deutsche Welle, “the unsold milk is being fed to calves or dumped in farm-waste tanks.”
It’s a shame when so many people around the world are struggling to buy food, but Romuald Schaber, who heads an association of some 30,000 dairy farmers, says the boycott is the only tool in the farmers’ arsenal:
All we can do now is use our milk as a weapon…. Milk is might, and we have the milk.”
Blake Hounshell is a former managing editor of Foreign Policy.
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