For amusement, I searched out a few of the local farms here that I personally know and grew up around.
I found instead a site for "Citizens for Environmental Sustainability", which lists the state licenses for CAFO Permits. They wish to eliminate these "abominations" one and all.
I read through the list, and saw many of the farms I grew up around, many of the folks I know personally, saw around town, folks who when we had a tornado hit our farm (not a CAFO heh, just a horse breeding and training farm), came out and brought their equipment, food, water, and supplies. We didn't need to rent or pay for the equipment to clean up the disaster, the "CAFO" owners brought out their heavy equipment and bulldozed and piled it for burning. When it was burned, they came back and buried it (we pulled the proper permits). Free. They hauled in water from their farms to water the horses left. They hauled in their feed to feed the horses, and stored what hay we could salvage. They cooked meals and brought them to us. Free.
When we had a dump truck get stuck behind the barn, they brought their 8 wheel tractor (similar to an MT900)over and hauled him out. Free.
This is ag land out here. Though many of the old farmers from my childhood now spend their time at the diner drinking coffee all day, their children my age have degrees in Ag Management and are running their "CAFO's" with a whole heap of chemical knowledge, research and willingness to try and keep up with demand for more, faster, cheaper and better. They aren't burecrats. Most of these farms have proudly displayed the Centennial farm signs - showing that this is a farm that has been worked and owned by the same family for over 100 years. One of them is about 4000 acres. The son now running it is my age, and a pleasant person to deal with, especially when his "pet" longhorns got loose and invaded the horse farm (which my brother now runs with his wife).
So, while it's easy to darn CAFO's, the term is loose, and you might be damning the very people who make up a community, even a small one such as these areas.
As for GMO's, the biggest I'm betting that is darn is RoundUp Ready. I agree, I don't care for Monsanto's blacklisting of seed washers, they're so small it's almost insignificant. I'm not quite sure I like the effects it potentially causes, but then, I'm not really big on soy - it doesn't like me. However, I remember when it came out, and the disbelief these guys had, the skepticism. Something that would magically be tolerant of being sprayed, so you could kill the weeds but not the beans? Bull pucky! Cutting how many hours and dollars in the field? No way. However, it did work, and as long as the weather cooperated, much higher yields resulted, which meant more of a chance of possibly breaking even or close to it. These CAFO guys aren't getting rich on anything - they still drive beat up trucks, live in small farmhouses, and while they may mortgage their farm for a new tractor every 10 years, most of the equipment they use is ancient, tied together with twine and mud it seems.
I'm rambling, but while it's easy to paint CAFOs and GMO with a broad red brush, it's not as easy when these are the folks you live and grew up with. There are no big businessmen around here with fancy stuff. There are no greased palms. Just a bunch of folks who make a living feeding the world and barely get by doing so. They smell like the manure they spray sometimes, but they are still the first ones there to help out when anyone needs help. The old guys didn't go to college, they didn't have to. The young guys now did go to college, and have to in order to sort out the regulations and restrictions, learn to chemistry and management, taxation and business. They have to in order to keep up with ever changing demands of safety and public concern, but they are still the same hard working, helpful, down to earth folks that they were born to. I'm not going to darn them.