It has been 14 years since the first report of the National Commission for Farmers—the Swaminathan report—and Parliament could not find time for a special discussion on it. The session has to deal with more than just loan waivers and MSP. It’s important to pass the two private bills, supported by 21 parties, to address the issue of remunerative prices and indebtedness in the immediate situation. Then, for three days, you can discuss the models of agriculture—do we want a chemical-soaked, corporate-driven agriculture, or a community-controlled ecological agriculture? Also, for 25 years, we have systematically sucked agriculture credit out of the hands of farmers and handed it over to agri-business. That’s why we are in a credit crunch now. And while land reforms remains the critical part of rural India’s unfinished agenda, you have clowns today who think reform means freeing land for corporates.