b'ically modified. While we are arguing about GMOsabout their safety for human consumption, the accompanying increased use of glyphosate and its impact on soil life, the emergence of super-weeds, the impact of reduced tillage on soil erosionwe may not notice that trust is eroding faster than soil. GMOs erode trust. Glyphosate kills affection. Farm fields devoid of earthworms and conversations devoid of neigh-borliness are cultural markers of a society that is tilting away from Making a Living and towards Making a Killing. 14Perhaps the idea of neighborliness has always been a bit of a myth in America. I grew up in a suburban New York neighborhood during the 1950s and remember limited interaction between families on our block. In the heartland, counties full of 2,000-acre farms put a different cast entirely on the idea of neighborliness. Search neighborhood on Google and you land on Nextdoor, The private social network for your neighbor-hood. The site boasts 208,000 neighborhoods across the country:Nextdoor is the best way to stay informed about whats going on in your neighborhoodwhether its finding a last-minute babysitter, planning a local event, or sharing safety tips. There are so many ways our neighbors can help us, we just need an easier way to connect with them.14 I just worked the sugar beet harvest. I kept asking everyone how come theres not 1 worm in the black, rich soil? The whole time I was there working for one month, I did not see one worm in the black soil. Amazing and scary. Steve Holt, commenting on https://livingnongmo.org/2018/06/25/gmo-feature-sugar-beets/ 17'