Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!
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You create false conclusions and then build your opinion on top of it. What makes you think far ers are worse off? I've got more corn and soybeans in the field right now than I've ever had. I had a bumper wheat crop. Every field of every farmer anywhere near me has bumper crops , with more acres planted than ever. And not a single farmer that I know of is the slightest bit concerned about having a good market to sell in. In fact, given that China is facing massive famine very shortly I expect prices will set records this fall.
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
You create false conclusions and then build your opinion on top of it. What makes you think far ers are worse off? I've got more corn and soybeans in the field right now than I've ever had. I had a bumper wheat crop. Every field of every farmer anywhere near me has bumper crops , with more acres planted than ever. And not a single farmer that I know of is the slightest bit concerned about having a good market to sell in. In fact, given that China is facing massive famine very shortly I expect prices will set records this fall.
Yeah, good point about China, they are experiencing massive flooding. Hope it will bring down the CCP. The bastards deserve to get overthrown, especially for what they did to Hong Kong, and Taiwan is in their sights as it always has been. Anyway. . .
There is something about being out in a rural area, the boonies, away from city life, seeing the stars, experiencing nature.
That's somewhat of a memory for me, we live in the suburbs but my wife's family and extended family all are farmers in the country. And, I grew up with lots of camping and backpacking, lots of time in nature.I was thinking how beneficial it would be, for the protesters and rioters in Portland to just get the heck out of town, and learn to experience what life has to offer, where everything is not oppression and violence and so on. Going out into nature can be healing and get priorities in order.
So, because of Orange Man Bad, the cost of importing from China has skyrocketed for me. I don't like it (tariffs), but I certainly am not basing my vote on just my bank account. Like a farmer, I'll be forced to deal with costs and determine profit potential and cash flow, and like a farmer, I could get screwed by the floods in China, just like a farmer can have a crop destroyed. That's life.
The tariffs were supposed to ruin the soybean farmers and wheat farmers in eastern Oregon. The dems assured a calamity. Didn't happen. And Larry is certainly right that a famine is or will hit mainland China, where the evil Americans will be left out of the loop in political discourse, but in actuality will be supplying food products even if behind the scenes.
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You create false conclusions and then build your opinion on top of it. What makes you think far ers are worse off? I've got more corn and soybeans in the field right now than I've ever had. I had a bumper wheat crop. Every field of every farmer anywhere near me has bumper crops , with more acres planted than ever. And not a single farmer that I know of is the slightest bit concerned about having a good market to sell in. In fact, given that China is facing massive famine very shortly I expect prices will set records this fall.
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
What makes you think far ers are worse off?
Larry, I respectively disagree. You know more about farming than i do, but I have had a fair amount of discussions and research on farming in the US Midwest, so I am not completely ignorant on the subject
In general, the number of US farms is decreasing, and the decrease is mostly not voluntary. Even in Tennessee, the number of farms has decreased by over 20% in the last 20 years. Yes, in some cases, someone may "age" out of farming and may not have anyone to take it over, but in many cases, the economics just do not work out.
Farmers now receive (on average) 40% of their income from the government in the form of government aid tied to trade, disaster assistance, support programs in federal farm legislation and insurance payments.
Every farmer and farm family I have spoke with hates this. They love what they are doing and hate to receive aid, but very few I have spoke with are optimistic towards the future.
I was reading a recent report from an "agricultural economist" at Iowa State University, which said
"The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014 to 44% in 2019, according to the report that examines growers' ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock."
PS I truly am glad that you are doing well.
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You ever stop and think farmers are cashing in? I know more than one farmer, when offered a ridiculous price for his farm, took it.
As for subsidies, if the government offers it, you take it. Always nice to make a profit.
Lastly, there are less farmers, but bigger farms. How much acreage is being taken out of production?
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You ever stop and think farmers are cashing in? I know more than one farmer, when offered a ridiculous price for his farm, took it.
As for subsidies, if the government offers it, you take it. Always nice to make a profit.
Lastly, there are less farmers, but bigger farms. How much acreage is being taken out of production?
@Jolly said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
As for subsidies, if the government offers it, you take it. Always nice to make a profit.
Now you are nonjudgmental towards taking government welfare.
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You ever stop and think farmers are cashing in? I know more than one farmer, when offered a ridiculous price for his farm, took it.
As for subsidies, if the government offers it, you take it. Always nice to make a profit.
Lastly, there are less farmers, but bigger farms. How much acreage is being taken out of production?
@Jolly said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
As for subsidies, if the government offers it, you take it. Always nice to make a profit.
Yes and no. Farmers that I have talk to do not like taking aid. They would prefer not too if possible.
@Jolly said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
Lastly, there are less farmers, but bigger farms. How much acreage is being taken out of production?
From 1997 - 2018 in the US
total farm acreage decreased by about 8%
% of farms decreased by about 10%
avg. farm size was actually about the same
431 acres vs 441 acres -
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
What makes you think far ers are worse off?
Larry, I respectively disagree. You know more about farming than i do, but I have had a fair amount of discussions and research on farming in the US Midwest, so I am not completely ignorant on the subject
In general, the number of US farms is decreasing, and the decrease is mostly not voluntary. Even in Tennessee, the number of farms has decreased by over 20% in the last 20 years. Yes, in some cases, someone may "age" out of farming and may not have anyone to take it over, but in many cases, the economics just do not work out.
Farmers now receive (on average) 40% of their income from the government in the form of government aid tied to trade, disaster assistance, support programs in federal farm legislation and insurance payments.
Every farmer and farm family I have spoke with hates this. They love what they are doing and hate to receive aid, but very few I have spoke with are optimistic towards the future.
I was reading a recent report from an "agricultural economist" at Iowa State University, which said
"The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014 to 44% in 2019, according to the report that examines growers' ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock."
PS I truly am glad that you are doing well.
@taiwan_girl said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
What makes you think far ers are worse off?
Larry, I respectively disagree. You know more about farming than i do, but I have had a fair amount of discussions and research on farming in the US Midwest, so I am not completely ignorant on the subject
In general, the number of US farms is decreasing, and the decrease is mostly not voluntary. Even in Tennessee, the number of farms has decreased by over 20% in the last 20 years. Yes, in some cases, someone may "age" out of farming and may not have anyone to take it over, but in many cases, the economics just do not work out.
Farmers now receive (on average) 40% of their income from the government in the form of government aid tied to trade, disaster assistance, support programs in federal farm legislation and insurance payments.
Every farmer and farm family I have spoke with hates this. They love what they are doing and hate to receive aid, but very few I have spoke with are optimistic towards the future.
I was reading a recent report from an "agricultural economist" at Iowa State University, which said
"The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014 to 44% in 2019, according to the report that examines growers' ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock."
PS I truly am glad that you are doing well.
Well, I guess your "research" makes you more informed than me, then.... hahahaha
Farms in Tennessee have decreased because of several reasons. Most of the decrease comes as a result of small farmers leasing their fields to bigger farmers. They are no longer listed as two farms, but as one farm.
I can't win an argument with someone who gets their information from Google searches. What I can tell you However is that you have just enough information to be wrong. I own somewhere over 1200 acres, and I lease 6 more "farms" for another 600 or so acres. I have around 500 acres of corn in the field, 400 acres of soybeans, and I will laugh all the way to the bank come harvest time. Oh - and I don't get a single dime from government.
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@taiwan_girl said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
What makes you think far ers are worse off?
Larry, I respectively disagree. You know more about farming than i do, but I have had a fair amount of discussions and research on farming in the US Midwest, so I am not completely ignorant on the subject
In general, the number of US farms is decreasing, and the decrease is mostly not voluntary. Even in Tennessee, the number of farms has decreased by over 20% in the last 20 years. Yes, in some cases, someone may "age" out of farming and may not have anyone to take it over, but in many cases, the economics just do not work out.
Farmers now receive (on average) 40% of their income from the government in the form of government aid tied to trade, disaster assistance, support programs in federal farm legislation and insurance payments.
Every farmer and farm family I have spoke with hates this. They love what they are doing and hate to receive aid, but very few I have spoke with are optimistic towards the future.
I was reading a recent report from an "agricultural economist" at Iowa State University, which said
"The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014 to 44% in 2019, according to the report that examines growers' ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock."
PS I truly am glad that you are doing well.
Well, I guess your "research" makes you more informed than me, then.... hahahaha
Farms in Tennessee have decreased because of several reasons. Most of the decrease comes as a result of small farmers leasing their fields to bigger farmers. They are no longer listed as two farms, but as one farm.
I can't win an argument with someone who gets their information from Google searches. What I can tell you However is that you have just enough information to be wrong. I own somewhere over 1200 acres, and I lease 6 more "farms" for another 600 or so acres. I have around 500 acres of corn in the field, 400 acres of soybeans, and I will laugh all the way to the bank come harvest time. Oh - and I don't get a single dime from government.
@Larry Okay Larry. You win!!!
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@taiwan_girl said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
What makes you think far ers are worse off?
Larry, I respectively disagree. You know more about farming than i do, but I have had a fair amount of discussions and research on farming in the US Midwest, so I am not completely ignorant on the subject
In general, the number of US farms is decreasing, and the decrease is mostly not voluntary. Even in Tennessee, the number of farms has decreased by over 20% in the last 20 years. Yes, in some cases, someone may "age" out of farming and may not have anyone to take it over, but in many cases, the economics just do not work out.
Farmers now receive (on average) 40% of their income from the government in the form of government aid tied to trade, disaster assistance, support programs in federal farm legislation and insurance payments.
Every farmer and farm family I have spoke with hates this. They love what they are doing and hate to receive aid, but very few I have spoke with are optimistic towards the future.
I was reading a recent report from an "agricultural economist" at Iowa State University, which said
"The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014 to 44% in 2019, according to the report that examines growers' ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock."
PS I truly am glad that you are doing well.
Well, I guess your "research" makes you more informed than me, then.... hahahaha
Farms in Tennessee have decreased because of several reasons. Most of the decrease comes as a result of small farmers leasing their fields to bigger farmers. They are no longer listed as two farms, but as one farm.
I can't win an argument with someone who gets their information from Google searches. What I can tell you However is that you have just enough information to be wrong. I own somewhere over 1200 acres, and I lease 6 more "farms" for another 600 or so acres. I have around 500 acres of corn in the field, 400 acres of soybeans, and I will laugh all the way to the bank come harvest time. Oh - and I don't get a single dime from government.
@Larry Larry, I’m not well versed in the ins and outs of American farm subsidies, but my understanding is that soybeans and corn are subsidized.
Are those not available to you, or do you not avail yourself of them?
In your opinion, are subsidy takers poor operators?
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I do not want nor need any money from government, or the strings that are attached to it. I do things my way, I do not need some wormy little nerd from government who has never grown so much as a weed telling me what to plant and when, or what I can't do on my own land.
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I do not want nor need any money from government, or the strings that are attached to it. I do things my way, I do not need some wormy little nerd from government who has never grown so much as a weed telling me what to plant and when, or what I can't do on my own land.
@Larry said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
I do not want nor need any money from government, or the strings that are attached to it. I do things my way, I do not need some wormy little nerd from government who has never grown so much as a weed telling me what to plant and when, or what I can't do on my own land.
That’s a cagey answer. Feels like a hobby for you. Could you make more money if you took the subsidies?
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Didn't mean for it to sound cagey. Could I make more money if I took subsidies... That's a complicated question to answer. Once you take subsidies you also take the strings attached. Eventually the government is running your business instead of you, and you stop enjoying the job. Production drops. Just like everything else government tries to control. I think I offset any subsidy money I might get by producing better crops. I don't actually need the money from farming anyway, and I got to that point by running my business my way, not by taking handouts. If the day ever cones that I can't run my business my way, I'll shut it down and turn it into subdivisions and other things.
I turn 69 inext week, so I might turn it into subdivisions next year, anyway...
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@Horace said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
Larry grows artisan soy beans and sells them on Etsy.
Hahahaha
"We inspect each and every bean and hand pick it only once it has reached its optimal flavor"....
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@Larry Larry, I’m not well versed in the ins and outs of American farm subsidies, but my understanding is that soybeans and corn are subsidized.
Are those not available to you, or do you not avail yourself of them?
In your opinion, are subsidy takers poor operators?
@xenon said in Rahm: “Didn’t Get Your Medicine, Your Social Security Check?” It's Trump's fault!:
In your opinion, are subsidy takers poor operators?
You added that question after I had answered your original question.
No. I do not judge how other people choose to operate their business. If they think they need to take subsidies, that's fine. It's there, it's legal, it's purely a business decision, not a moral issue to wrangle with. I just happen to be one of those people who doesnt want the government up in my business.