someoneyouknow
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2006
- Posts
- 28,274
A man in Georgia was on the verge of buying his own orchard rather than working someone else's land, but the shutdown prevented him from doing so. The local Farm Service Agency office that would have processed his loan application was shut down.
A dairy farmer had run up $350,000 in debt when 31 of their cows died from pneumonia. They were waiting for a last ditch loan from the government which won't come because of the shutdown.
There was the cotton farmer who could not get disaster assistance to help him recover from Hurricane Michael. The woman in her 90s facing foreclosure on her family farm. The dairy farmer trying to make one last attempt to renegotiate her loan with the Farm Service Agency.
A farmer in Wisconsin is waiting on $9,000 the government said would come to help offset his losses from the trade war and help reduce erosion from runoff.
In New York, a farmer is waiting on $15,000 from the government due him for the trade war losses he's suffered which would be used to pay his mortgage which is due at the end of the month.
Story after story of farmers who are on the verge of or have all but gone out of business, or waiting for government assistance because of the easily winnable trade war, are unable to either get the money owed them, get any government-backed loans to buy seed and supplies, or get in touch period with anyone at the various farm agencies because of the shutdown. This includes using data to determine which and how many of what crops to plant.
One farmer had the following to say:
Conversely, a farmer in Mississippi, the least educated state in the nation, said:
As the con artist's shutdown turns into the longest government shutdown in this nation's history, as more farmers than these suffer the ravages of his pathetic trade war and beg for the government to prop them up, a government which isn't open and can't do anything for them, expect to hear slews of stories of farms going up for sale as our nation's food supply is devastated thanks to the ineptitude of the con artist.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/10/us/farmers-trump-administration.html
A dairy farmer had run up $350,000 in debt when 31 of their cows died from pneumonia. They were waiting for a last ditch loan from the government which won't come because of the shutdown.
There was the cotton farmer who could not get disaster assistance to help him recover from Hurricane Michael. The woman in her 90s facing foreclosure on her family farm. The dairy farmer trying to make one last attempt to renegotiate her loan with the Farm Service Agency.
A farmer in Wisconsin is waiting on $9,000 the government said would come to help offset his losses from the trade war and help reduce erosion from runoff.
In New York, a farmer is waiting on $15,000 from the government due him for the trade war losses he's suffered which would be used to pay his mortgage which is due at the end of the month.
Story after story of farmers who are on the verge of or have all but gone out of business, or waiting for government assistance because of the easily winnable trade war, are unable to either get the money owed them, get any government-backed loans to buy seed and supplies, or get in touch period with anyone at the various farm agencies because of the shutdown. This includes using data to determine which and how many of what crops to plant.
One farmer had the following to say:
“You could hardly call it a political stunt,” said Mr. Myer, who voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. “It’s a personal power stance because he doesn’t really care about anything, I don’t think, besides himself.”
Conversely, a farmer in Mississippi, the least educated state in the nation, said:
“I may lose the farm, but I strongly feel we need some border security,” Mr. Nunnery said.
As the con artist's shutdown turns into the longest government shutdown in this nation's history, as more farmers than these suffer the ravages of his pathetic trade war and beg for the government to prop them up, a government which isn't open and can't do anything for them, expect to hear slews of stories of farms going up for sale as our nation's food supply is devastated thanks to the ineptitude of the con artist.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/10/us/farmers-trump-administration.html