I am the mother of four and a birth doula. I gave birth to my two youngest children at home attended by an excellent CPM. I find what you have written to be thought provoking mostly because as an aspiring midwife, I think about the issues surrounding the education of midwives endlessly. It was a struggle to decide which path to take. On the one hand, CPM training through a MEAC accreditted school would be the most APPEALING to me as a woman who wishes to attend low risk mother's at home, but complications in low risk women can and do happen and often without much warning. Knowing this fact and realizing that losing a baby or mother as a result of my lack of knowledge or experience is just not an option. This is why I have decided to earn my Bachelor's degree in nursing and then go through a CNM graduate program. I have made this decision, not because I feel ALL CPM's are undereducated, but because I believe a minority of them do not appreciate the weight of attending births at home and don't have sufficient experience. There are many opportunities for new CPM's to get EXPERIENCE with a myriad of complications, but it entails working at a birth center in Texas or going out the country to attend foreign women. Usually a midwife who chooses to do this sees complications and issues she would never see working with a homebirth preceptor in the US, not once but many times. It helps her to learn not only how to manage these kinds of complications, but how to recognize them in time. This type of enrichment in the current CPM training is, in my opinion, essential to building a good homebirth midwife, but it is not a requirement. Working in a hospital (to gain experience) will be very hard for me, but I will see complications and high risk cases and that is what I need in order to feel comfortable and confident caring for low risk moms and babies at home. We all need to work together to keep homebirth safe and legal. Pretending that there aren't tragic, preventable accidents that happen at homebirths caused by a lack of knowledege is counter productive to this cause. It does happen and when it does, it gives midwifery a bad name. Here is a birth story from MDC illustrating what I'm talking about.
http://www.mothering.com/discussions/showthread.php?t=691709
I realize that many atrocities also happen to women when attended by OB's in the hospital. However, I'm not trying to become the best OB, I'm trying to become the best MIDWIFE I can be. I want to keep homebirth a viable, safe option for low risk families and in order to do that I think the next generation of midwives need to make demands of themselves to go above and beyond with our education and experience.