Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

Heartfelt words from this tenant farmer who is now considering using a foodbank to survive. “How ridiculous is it that somebody who produces food can’t afford the food that they’ve produced in the supermarket?”

118,496 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

11 Comments

down the rabbit hole's profile picture
down the rabbit hole1 year ago

Tenant farmers are some of the most disadvantaged people in society. They are treated like feudal serfs by their landlords on one side and on the other they have a goverment that persecutes them through misguided social envy. They have no rights compared to most people.

Ancestral Supplements's profile picture
Ancestral Supplements1 year ago

"Why are so many people experiencing life-changing health benefits with Beef Liver? It’s simple: they’re addressing the root cause of their health issues—nutrient deficiency. Try Beef Liver today and discover the difference it can make in your life."

DavidSaker YNWA's profile picture
DavidSaker YNWA1 year ago

@JamesMelville No words for how attrocious this is 😫

Tracey Ellis's profile picture
Tracey Ellis1 year ago

This government are a disgrace and traitors but I bet their bosses are happy! 😢

UK In Trouble's profile picture
UK In Trouble1 year ago

Why are the farmers putting up with this?! Stop producing food and the morons in charge will soon come running!!!

Lite's profile picture
Lite1 year ago

Weak leadership.

David Kavanagh's profile picture
David Kavanagh1 year ago

Shocking. Shameful. Embarrassing for a nation of farmers.

Brandon Donnelson's profile picture
Brandon Donnelson1 year ago

Insane that farming is being squeezed!

G13Wheelz's profile picture
G13Wheelz1 year ago

🙏❤️💪

ShellyWelly's profile picture
ShellyWelly1 year ago

This is insane. And not right. Labour must go. They are squeezing ever last drop of blood and morale out of us. We must stand up!!

Steven Seagull's profile picture
Steven Seagull1 year ago

How much is the landowner charging him in rent?

Related Videos

WARNING for anyone buying beef mince this week. I’m a working British farmer and primary producer, and I’m going to give you 6 reasons I do not trust supermarket mince – and why you should think twice before putting it in your trolley. With mince now often £7–9 a pack in the big supermarkets, the question isn’t just “can I afford it?” – it’s “who’s actually getting that money?” In this video I break down: • Why the “cheap” mince is usually higher in fat (and why that’s not obvious on the front of the pack) • How pack size tricks hide the real price rise in the £/kg • What it really means when supermarket mince is sold at or below the true cost of production • Why traceability from farm to pack matters – and how supermarket mince dilutes that accountability • How “fresh” mince can actually be previously frozen meat that’s been thawed for the chiller • How Union Jacks, welfare logos and “trusted farmers” slogans can become a smokescreen when prices are hammered down This isn’t about telling you never to buy supermarket beef. It’s about showing you the games that get played with labels, fat content and pricing so you know what you’re actually paying for. There is no such thing as cheap food – only food where someone else is paying the bill. When you spend £7–9 on supermarket mince, a lot of that vanishes into the system. When you spend £7–9 with a British farm, it pays for actual feed, actual bedding, actual people – and it stays in your local area. Same money. Completely different impact. If you want more no‑BS breakdowns from a farmer who actually produces food for a living, hit subscribe and turn on notifications. — More videos exposing supermarket smokescreens and “cheap food” myths: This is my view as a working British farmer. Always do your own research and make your own choices – but at least now you know what questions to ask next time you’re standing at the mince shelf Want real meat? Shop now : Memberships: Get 10% off Ridgeline of New Zealand with code: RadmoreFarm

Ben Aveling- Radmore Farm

103,587 views • 4 months ago