Tough economic times spawned a radical new kind of farm organization in
the wake of the Korean War, a time when the combination of drought and
depressed farm prices gripped the rural midlands. In this scenario the
National Farmers Organization (NFO) was born. No one sensed then that
this new farm group would order a series of controversial food market
boycotts in an attempt to obtain its objectives for collective
bargaining for American agriculture. The NFO called its boycotts holding
actions, and staged such campaigns to try and force food processors to
bargain for higher prices for farmers. This book explains the reason for
the development of the NFO along with descriptions of the scenarios
about specific holding actions and protests.