Corn Agriculture In Beowulf

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Beowulf was recently married, and had just welcomed a beloved baby boy into his family. As a part of Beowulf’s wedding gift, Beowulf’s father decided to pass down their family corn farm to him. In fact, Beowulf lived in the village of Corniville where all generations of residents and other local industries had always replied on corn agriculture; without corn production, Beowulf’s community will practically cease to exist. Competition from neighbouring towns urged farmers in Corniville to make use of the recently developed fertilizer, which was produced in a newly established factory plant located within the Corniville village. While the farmers expected an exponential expansion in their corn production, the opposite happened; Beowulf noticed …show more content…
The black, block-like building had not one window on its walls; instead, a prolonged polymer pipe protrudes from the back side of the factory, into the Corn River, where all farmers had their irrigation systems connected to. The plant-irrigator sneaked into the quarantine zone at the back of the factory, and watched as rainbow-coloured waste was being discharged from the factory’s pipe, into the river! The food-nurturer gathered other villagers to collect evidences from the farmer-foe, and together they made a complaint to the government, while some shrewd ones chose to inform the media. During the course of the following weeks, numerous newspapers, magazines, and websites had made reports about the water-polluter. Consequently, the public entered into a state of wild rage and a hysteria of protesting and boycotting because of the affective reports by the media. The government eventually intervened because of the pressure from the public. After sending inspectors and going through a series of complicated administrative processes, the government had finally concluded that the related regulations shall be

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