The Next Farm Bill Will Probably Stink Worse and Cost More
Asking America's agriculture industry to stand on its own two feet remains a third rail in American politics.

Renewal of the dreaded Farm Bill looms anew. "Even though there is still over a year remaining on the current Farm Bill, discussions have already been ongoing since earlier this year on developing the next Farm Bill," Kent Thiesse, a columnist with Farm Forum, wrote this week.
As I've detailed in my book Biting the Hands that Feed Us: How Fewer, Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable and in countless columns (including, for example, here), the Farm Bill is a recurring nightmare that's generally passed by Congress every five years. It was first introduced as a temporary measure nearly 90 years ago during the New Deal era—the same year of singer Willie Nelson's birth. Today, the overwhelming majority of costs come from directives to the U.S. Department of Agriculture to provide taxpayer funds to some American farmers and many low-income Americans.
While my writings on the Farm Bill generally focus on payments to farmers (including in this column), in the case of food and nutrition funding for low-income Americans, "[t]he government should do no more and no less than giving cash to those in need," I explained in 2018. "They're best positioned to determine their food needs and—objectively—are the only ones who know their food preferences and those of their families."
As for taxpayer payments to farmers, while the makeup of those payments has changed over the years, today, farm subsidies operate by allocating tens of billions of taxpayer dollars each year to pay for approximately two-thirds of an eligible farmer's crop insurance premium payments.
Now, Congress is gearing up to consider a new Farm Bill. "We only do a Farm Bill every five years, and that…. gives our producers the kind of predictability that they need to make decisions," Rep. Dusty Johnson (R–S.D.) told Forum News Service this week. "We don't want farm policy changing every election or every quarter. But it puts extra pressure on us to get it right."
When it comes to the Farm Bill, get it right they do not. Not once. Not ever
There are many reasons this Farm Bill will likely just be a bigger and smellier heaping of manure than the last one. Cost is one such reason. Though Democrats and Republicans in Congress always claim the next Farm Bill will be the one to save taxpayers money, that's never the case, I explain in my 2016 book. The falsehood that the Farm Bill will save money will no doubt be repeated this year.
Another shopworn Farm Bill myth is the notion that America's small farmers need and benefit from the bill. Nope. Rather, because farm subsidy handouts typically go to America's largest and wealthiest farms, they've helped promote consolidation and upsizing of America's farms. While I'd oppose farm subsidies with equal fervor if more, most, or all of them went to small farmers, the fact is nearly 7 in 10 American farms receive no subsidies. While it's great to know that the great majority of American farmers are still in business without receiving farm subsidies—which maybe suggests the big guys don't need subsidies, either—the massive influx of cash to a small number of big farmers widens the competitive gap between the bigger haves and smaller have-nots in American farming.
There are other reasons to detest farm subsidies. As I also detail in my book, farm subsidies have had a profound negative impact on everything from Americans' diets to our waistlines and wallets and the environment.
It is no exaggeration to say that farm subsidies have been a disaster for America. Despite that fact, powerful Members of Congress and the big farming lobbies who back them make the continuation of farm subsidies (in the form of crop insurance) all but a certainty.
"Major U.S. agricultural production groups are pulling together their requests for the next farm bill… with crop insurance… on the top of their lists," The Pulse reported this month. "The really important thing to our members is to make sure that crop insurance survives the way it is," a top American Farm Bureau Federation official told Farm Week Now earlier this month. "Maybe we can improve it some, but the bumper sticker message on crop insurance is 'Do no harm.'" Elsewhere, a Montana Farm Bureau Federation official said the group's greatest priority for the upcoming Farm Bill would be "protecting risk management tools," or crop insurance payments.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D–M.N.), who sits on the powerful Senate Agriculture Committee, assuaged these special interests' gratuitous concerns this week, suggesting the current pork-laden Farm Bill will form the basis of the next one.
Though most Democrats and Republicans in Congress vote in favor of the Farm Bill each cycle—hence why it generally becomes law—criticism of farm subsidies crosses partisan boundaries. You'll find Farm Bill critics everywhere, from the conservative Heritage Foundation to the (pro-Klobuchar) editorial board of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune (which a decade ago dubbed subsidized crop insurance a "boondoggle [that] throw[s] money at farmers, whether they need it or not").
At a time of sky-high food costs, the Farm Bill should be a means to help Americans grow and buy more food for less money. But that would require the government to both regulate and spend less. Alas, given the fact the Farm Bill is, well, the Farm Bill, it instead helps Americans spend more money than we should to grow more food than we need.
There's nothing inherently strange or wrong about the fact many farmers want to insure their crops against loss. It may be a smart idea for farm owners to buy insurance. But that decision should be up to individual farmers, who should choose either to buy insurance with their own money or to operate at a higher risk. Forcing taxpayers to subsidize farmers' insurance makes no sense. Farm subsidies generally and subsidized crop insurance specifically constitute wasteful spending that should be abolished—entirely and immediately.
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Pathetic at printing cuurency of no value, yes. The private sector has to deal with those clunky Legal Tender Laws.
Why even have a government if we can't use it to take money from some people and give it to others?
You know what's worse than farm subsidies?
Export-Import Bank subsidies?
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Salaries, pensions and benefits for 87,000 new tax collectors?
Plus, shiny new sidearms.
Are they really going to be able to fill all of those 87,000 positions?
Good defense of the bill.
So, Reason did one of its periodic logouts, and I saw JesseAz’s comment.
Apparently, I’m a Democratic shill because I questioned whether the Democrats can actually hire 87,000 new IRS inspectors. Really odd conclusion since Democratic shills don’t typically point out holes in the Democrat’s plans.
There’s these things called “threads” in these comments, where people’s comments are responses to other people’s comments, which are responses to another person’s comments, etc.
In this thread, Human skeptic asked what was worse than farm subsidies, then CE responded that all the new IRS agents will be worse. Then you responded, questioning if they’ll actually be able to fill all those positions.
Now, anyone who’s not completely dishonest or retarded would deduce that the purpose of your response was to rebut CE’s response that all the new IRS agents would be worse, because they won’t exist.
Therefore, the purpose of your response was NOT to poke holes in the Democrats plan, but to argue that all the new IRS agents won’t be worse. Which is defending the plan to any honest reader.
You’re not fooling anyone with this dishonest tactic.
The FBI?
EV subsidies.
California’s public pension system?
Inflation is a wingnut.com myth. Recession is a wingnut.com myth. This is the best economy ever.
#TemporarilyFillingInForButtplug
CNBC is a wingnut.com site. Don't trust it when it says Back-to-school shopping takes ‘a major financial toll’ amid high inflation. As long as you're not buying spittin' tobaccy you won't spend any more on any item than you did in January 2021.
#MoreButtplugInsights
The Democrats have raised the minimum wage by 0.00 dollars per hour and Reason benefactor Charles Koch's personal net worth has increased by 8.7 billion dollars thanks to the Biden Boom.
#fillinginforOBL
My current figures have Mr. Koch's net worth increasing $8.04 billion rather than $8.7 billion but I appreciate the effort. 😉
Just trying to help. You are the expert, they/them.
Not only that they decreased the value of the dollar meaning min wage has gone down!
Dr Jill says no Biden Boom Boom.
MORE PRUNE JUICE STAT!
My kids school made us bring in cana of spittin tobaccy for the teachers =/
How much in drilling rigs is that?
Think it increased the soccer field rigs by 2.
I don’t really care about farm bills. What I’m here for is more pathetic excuses for why exactly Dear Leader had classified documents at his cheesy hotel. And to hear them from the GOP’s most reliable voting block, libertarians. Go ahead, GOP suck-offs, let’s hear ‘em.
Dick score: 9/10
I'm just glad he finally took our advice and realized his "Ali Akbar" character was embarrassingly unfunny.
Can't wait to hear more bragging from our favorite "socialist" about how the Biden economy is making him so rich he can eat at California's $1,000-per-plate restaurants 7 days per week instead of only 5 like during the #DrumpfDepression. 🙂
#VoteDemocratToHelpTheRich
Dear website moderator: when exactly did the denizens of this website go from assholes bragging about how rich they were compared to this socialist to assholes complaining about how they don’t have as much money as this socialist? Seems like around 2018 to me.
Regular reminder that AmSoc is one of shrike's sockpuppets:
https://reason.com/2021/08/31/americas-longest-war-is-over/#comment-9076679
Jesus… everyone thinks all my socks are Shrike. He gets mad at that. I’m not him/her ok?
Are you they/them then?
As an obedient #Resistance Democrat you've probably already gotten this message. But just in case it wound up in your spam folder, understand that as soon as Drumpf goes to prison we will switch our message from "Drumpf is literally an existential threat to the survival of humanity" to "OMG DeSantis is even worse than Drumpf!"
#LizCheney2024
The right-wingers who congregate here are NOT libertarians.
The leftists here trying to gaslight and cooperate libertarianism are not libertarians. This includes you, jeff, brandy, sarc, shrike and others.
Co-opt not cooperate.
White Mike wouldn't know libertarianism if it teabagged him.
Reminder that Mike thinks "well-crafted" regulations are libertarian.
https://reason.com/2020/12/18/the-bipartisan-push-to-gut-section-230-will-suppress-online-communication/#comment-8647905
Reminder: morons like you think forced pregnancies and border patrol agents are just peachy. Just suck some more of that government dick while you claim to be a libertarian. GET THAT GUV’MINT OFF MY BACK, MAN!!!*
*Does not apply to abortion policy, gay rights, immigration, policing, drug policy, and any other thing Dear Leader opposes for the day
Really weird thing is Lament is Canadian.
With American family. Why is that weird?
It's all he's got.
Also Reason magazine has been sold at newstands and by subscription in Canada since 1980, but Mike insists "Only Americans allowed!"
Somehow that's not tribalism.
Maybe tell him you plan on moving to the states illegally and he will start defending you.
Fiona can do an article. Mother's Lament Laments leaving with Canadian Coyote - Fiona J. Harrigan
Trump had an open standing order that any documents taken to Mar A Lago were declassified throughout his presidency. This is on the heels of two orders under Bush and Obama.
The president's defense is rooted in the legal principal that the president and vice president are the ultimate declassifying authority of the U.S. government and through executive orders most recently issued in 2003 by George W. Bush and Barack Obama in 2009 that specifically exempt the president and vice president from having to follow the stringent declassification procedures every other federal agency and official must follow.
So the idiots asking for where is the declassification paperwork, none is required as many have said here and is a continuation of presidential policy.
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/breaking-trump-describes-process-how-he-declassified-documents
"He had a standing order that documents removed from the Oval Office and taken into the residence were deemed to be declassified," the statement added. "The power to classify and declassify documents rests solely with the President of the United States. The idea that some paper-pushing bureaucrat, with classification authority delegated BY THE PRESIDENT, needs to approve of declassification is absurd."
Two former senior aides who worked for Trump in the latter half of his term said they were aware that Trump routinely took documents to the residence rather than return them to the Staff Secretary or the intelligence official who provided them. Asked whether there was a standing order, one former official "I don't know anyone or anything that disputes that."
One prior administration official related an instance where his boss, while talking to a foreign leader, gave top-secret information to the leader, declassifying simply by sharing what he had seen in a top-secret marked document. Another official related an instance he witnessed in which a president, during a meeting, received a top secret document and one official got up to leave because his clearance was only at the secret level.
And I know of at least one compartmentalized test shot where Obama and Gates went on television to crow about it, but the engagement and test were classified.
Obama's executive order no. 13526, issued in 2009, laid out the stringent process all federal officials and agencies needed to follow for declassification, but explicitly exempted the sitting president and vice president from having to follow those procedures.
"Information originated by the incumbent President or the incumbent Vice President; the incumbent President’s White House Staff or the incumbent Vice President’s Staff; committees, commissions, or boards appointed by the incumbent President; or other entities within the Executive Office of the President that solely advise and assist the incumbent President is exempted from the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section," the Obama order stated.
"I declassified nuclear secrets so I could bring them to my house"
Nope, lying mfer. Presidents can view classified documents wherever they are. He's actually trying to say "I declassified the docs so I could keep them at my house without violating the law." We'll see mfer.
Now do Hillary.
They got 'em this time, Strudel!
Joe Lancaster hardest hit.
Haha! Seriously, his articles was absolute trash.
But they got him this time! Under what charges? Can't tell you; it's secret.
What's secret? Can't tell you; everything about it is secret, but they got him this time!
THEN WHY ISN'T TRUMP SHOWING US THE WARRANT?!!
He did?... Shut up!
And he didnt redact agent names!!!!!
Margot Cleveland has a good thread on what they are attempting. She believes the classification issue is a distraction. They are trying to make it illegal for a president to have any presidential documents.
https://mobile.twitter.com/ProfMJCleveland/status/1558263903276204038
At least "that" president. Or, as they said starting in 2016, "president".
It’s under the Espionage Act you fucking useless geezer. I’d post the statutes but you’re too dumb and senile to fucking even look at them. PRAISE BE DEAR LEADER!!
Just like Charles Schenk.
They don't pay Shrike enough to bother to look that up.
Do you mean Biden or Garland?
More fun information. It is now being reported that the FBI agents involved in the raid were involved in the Trump russia hoax and are part of the J6 investigations.
https://redstate.com/nick-arama/2022/08/13/twitter-suspended-paul-sperry-but-hes-still-reporting-some-troubling-things-about-fbi-raid-n611587
You know this information is valid or Twatter wouldn't be suspending Paul Sperry's acct.
This sounds promising for Trump. What's needed next is some kind of corroboration just to prove he didn't make this up on the spot. Surely if he had this as a standing order, someone got him saying it on a recording, or else wrote it down somewhere, contemporaneous with his presidency.
I mean, I have to automatically be skeptical of just the naked assertion that he was doing this during his Presidency because it's a self-serving statement. But that doesn't mean it's untrue. He just needs to finds someone or some evidence that corroborates this and it nakedly exposes the FBI.
Multiple people on his staff said this existed months ago. It isnt a defense that is created on the fly.
I will also add it is on the government and DoJ to disprove the statement, not for Trump to prove it.
I can't find a reference to this. If you know where there's others who claim this standing order existed prior to a few days ago, I'm happy to view and read that.
As for where the burden of proof is, if you make a claim, you should always have evidence to back up your claim. Trump is the one claiming there was a standing order. If Trump also claimed that he sent documents to store on the dark side of the moon, it's not the responsibility of the DOJ to send a manned mission to the moon to disprove him. You should back up your claims with some manner of evidence.
My skepticism runs both directions. I believe people lie and those lies are often self-serving. But again, if this was a standing order Trump had during his administration, it should be pretty easy to find some corroboration that's contemporaneous with the practice.
Officials said it is likely the FBI will seek to find any officials or witnesses who knew or can confirm there was a "standing order" as described by the Trump statement. But in the end, officials said the president's declassification powers were sweeping and likely would be viewed as such by the courts.
The FBI is going to look into it...allegedly. I'm not sure how interested they are in backing up this claim. But perhaps sometime in the next few days we'll hear from a few people on the record who will back this up, and maybe even provide documentation. There's already, of course, Democratic Representatives in the House who say that it's bullshit, but that's exactly what you expect them to say, so I don't give it any weight.
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2022/08/12/kash_patel_all_the_documents_at_mar-a-lago_were_already_declassified_unilaterally_by_president_trump.html
And from May.
https://welovetrump.com/2022/05/06/kash-patel-says-that-classified-documents-at-mar-a-lago-are-another-establishment-myth/
A few others have been referenced in other JTN stories as well.
I was specifically talking about Trump's claim that he had a "standing order" about documents taken to his home as being declassified. That's a new claim that I can't find any evidence existed prior to yesterday. I'm open-minded as to its existence but without evidence, it's pretty self-serving.
Clearly Trump agreed that SOME documents he took to Mar-a-lago needed to be returned, since he returned documents back in May. Whether he'd concede that those were still classified is a different matter but he did hand them over.
My position here is that the DOJ is in the wrong, but that doesn't mean Trump is telling the absolute truth, either. We know that the government uses "classified" as a way to avoid FOIA. Obama didn't even bother hiding it, he said he the government can pre-empt any FOIA request by retroactively declaring requested materials classified (most transparent administration ever! He did this in his FIRST YEAR). So I'm happy to assume that there's loads of stuff that's marked Classified that should never be given that designation just to avoid embarrassing a politician or a federal agency.
I also believe that the authority of the President to declassify materials is, and should be, absolute. I can picture plenty of situations in which the President needs Person X to review Document Y, but they don't have security clearance for it, so he simply declassifies it on the spot. That is perfectly acceptable to me.
But I also know that Trump isn't above bloviating in self-serving ways. So his claim that there was a persistent "standing order" about declassifying all documents removed to his home is very convenient now, since it would automatically mean he was incapable of removing classified material. I won't call bullshit on it yet because such a standing order would be very easy to provide evidence for, so we just need substantiation of the claim that predates Trump saying this. But I'm not going to just swallow that he's absolutely telling the truth on that claim based solely on his word in a self-serving manner.
Nobody on his staff has disputed it.
Are you asking for an Executive Order? Because a verbal statement from him to his staff is more than enough to qualify.
Are you asking for an Executive Order? Because a verbal statement from him to his staff is more than enough to qualify.
Literally any evidence that this "standing order" existed prior to yesterday will do. I'm not asking for much. Find someone who said that Trump had a standing order in place about declassifying materials he took home who said that prior to August 11, 2022, and I'd consider that sufficient.
Even better than that would be if someone had a filed report saying "President took documents to his residence, which are automatically declassified consistent with President's standing order." Surely someone would have written some manner of report at some point that would mention or make oblique reference to this practice of the President to take stuff home that were automatically declassified. A scribbling on a cocktail napkin, "President is going to take these documents home so now they're not classified."
I can only imagine there's heaps of stuff like this if Trump did make this a standing order.
This story is that. Him and others on his staff saying he had a standing order.
Unless you are expecting multiple people on his team to lie for him, thats probably what you're going to get.
Note I posted an interview since May, before this defense became necessary. Nobody has conflicted the report.
No, the story you shared is that Trumps current staff put out this statement about the standing order. Basically, that is someon representing Trump putting out Trump's words. No corroboration from any single named individual in the administration has gone on the record.
Yet.
There's plenty of time for someone to corroborate this, but Trump putting out a statement through his spokesperson or his attorney doesn't count as corroboration.
Also in a court of law it is on the prosecution to provide evidence claim is false.
Unless the defense makes an affirmative claim. If you claim self-defense and the dead person has three bullet wounds in the back, you have to show SOMETHING to prove that they were attacking you or providing some threat to you. If you fail to provide even a smidgeon of evidence that you were acting in self-defense, a judge will not allow you to present that at trial.
Staff: we had a standing order all documents at Mar a Lago were declassified.
That is the limit of the requirement for the defense.
Obama EO does not require a written memo. A verbal statement is enough.
Staff: we had a standing order all documents at Mar a Lago were declassified.
That's Trump's response from his office post-presidency, not any official representation of Trump's former cabinet. Beyond that, I would like to know that people aren't just chiming in because Trump said there was a standing order and they're now agreeing with him after the fact. Surely someone said this was routine during the past five years if Trump had a standing order in place.
I just think you're asking for the impossible. Outside of a diary entry how can anybody prove what was said in an office setting?
That's one of the reasons this track Garland took is so questionable.
I just think you're asking for the impossible. Outside of a diary entry how can anybody prove what was said in an office setting?
Are you serious with this shit? Meetings are recorded literally all the time. People record them, transcribe them, sometimes people take notes during meetings, people file reports covering what they said in meetings so they can share with other people. It's almost a scandal when the President has a conversation that ISN'T recorded to be reviewed after the fact.
You can tell me it may take a ton of effort to dig through records to find the specific moment someone made a reference to this in however many meetings, but you can't tell me there's never any proof of what gets said in office settings. "Impossible?" Be slightly serious, please.
Not if it's in DC, then they will be found guilty regardless
Maybe his order was classified.
Where things get really, shall we say, elastic is subsection (c). It permits the seizure of “any government and/or Presidential Records created” throughout the four years of Trump’s presidency.
Plainly, this has nothing to do with classified information. It is mainly designed to use the criminal law — the search warrant, an intrusive tactic for retrieving evidence of crimes — to enforce the Presidential Records Act, which is not a criminal statute.
Can DOJ get away with this? Perhaps. Section 2071 is very broad, targeting anyone who “removes” or “destroys” “any” government record. If you are wondering how this did not apply to Hillary Clinton’s removal of tens of thousands of government-related emails and willful destruction of tens of thousands of others, you are not alone. In any event, Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure permits the seizure not only of evidence of a crime but also of “items illegally possessed.” It seems clear from the context that this phrase is meant to apply to items derived from criminal activity. Literally, though, it is clearly broader than that.
Since Congress did not choose to attach criminal penalties to violations of the Presidential Records Act, what we see here amounts to the Justice Department fashioning a new crime for Donald Trump. This is not my idea of the even-handed enforcement of the law — no partisan discrimination — that Attorney General Merrick Garland insisted he pursues in his remarks on Thursday. But there will be plenty of time to discuss that.
https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/08/trump-warrant-furthers-justice-departments-january-6-investigation/
Trump had an open standing order that any documents taken to Mar A Lago were declassified throughout his presidency.
So where's the standing order?
Are you just going to accept every word out of his mouth as the truth?
Seeing your responses above to Thinking Mind, the answer is yes.
Which is just pathetic, really.
Just move the Iowa caucuses to after Super Tuesday and none of the candidates will care about farmers.
Will Lizzie Warren, nee Red Herring, have a penis by then?
As a bankruptcy expert, Lizzie Warren would be perfect running this economy.
You don't need a penis to be a dick.
Hmm, this reminds me of the penny tray by the cash register, but for progressives: "Take a penis, leave a penis"
Forcing taxpayers to subsidize farmers' insurance makes no sense.
That's a great insight! You should run for Congress on that idea, I bet you'd get literally dozens of votes. While you're at it, you could promise to cut all pork-barrel spending and trim the fat out of the federal budget and eliminate whole swaths of Executive Branch agencies that exist solely to funnel taxpayer largess to special interest groups, mostly the special interest group known as government employees. .
While my writings on the Farm Bill generally focus on payments to farmers (including in this column), in the case of food and nutrition funding for low-income Americans, "[t]he government should do no more and no less than giving cash to those in need," I explained in 2018. "They're best positioned to determine their food needs and—objectively—are the only ones who know their food preferences and those of their families."
So instead if a Farm Bill, Baylen wants a Fat Acceptance/Fat Pride Enabling Act? Eh, no, Baylen. You're doing Libertarianism all wrong.
And since the poor would inevitably spend their subsidies on either junk food or novelty Vegan foolishness, it would inevitably subsidize the farmers who produce the raw ingredience for thkse items anyway.
If you're going to cut farmers loose from subsidies, that means inevitably cutting off consumers from subsidies too. As one who works in grocery/retail, I can tell you that would mean many leaner, healthier, more economical choices by consumers would follow.
It's important to note these things since ultimately cutting subsidy increases prices at the grocery store. Farms are heavily subsidized to keep prices artificially low. One can think that's a good thing, or a bad thing, or even somewhere in between.
I don't think most American's would really change much about their eating habits without subsidy, but poorer people might have to. That said, a lot of poorer American's are already using SNAP or similar programs so ultimately your taxes are either going to the farmer or to the consumer directly. Usually both, ironically.
I thought farmers were subsidized via price supports to keep their wares artificially high. The high price of Vegan stuff even without inflation surely would be an indicator.
The high price of 'vegan' foods has just about nothing to do with price supports. It's because of how it's grown and how it needs to be certified.
Looking at a specialty product and inferring into the wider market is a fools errand.
Restaurant scraps plant-based dishes after becoming fed up with ‘holier-than-thou’ vegans
Me? I'd like to open a dining spot that feeds grass fed Eloi to hardworking Morlocks.
This is great. Funny. I'm glad a restaurant finally stood up to those Vegan bullies. Order a potato and the veg of the day with a salad. Don't like it? Go somewhere else. Losing .o4% of bitchy, complaining business is a net gain. haha
Welcome to the farmer's rebellion in the Netherlands. https://t.co/HOYIHPDiPW
The Espionage Act is independent of the executive branch so it doesn’t matter if Dear Leader declassified it or not. Why don’t all you guys who think it’s no big deal that Dear Leader was storing classified Top Secret documents next to Melania’s vibrators AND who spent five years on this website talking about Hitlery’s emailz really, really go fuck yourselves.
As a result, the Espionage Act makes no reference to whether a document has been deemed classified. Instead, it makes it a crime to retain, without authorization, documents related to the national defense that could be used to harm the United States or aid a foreign adversary.
Prosecutors could argue that a document meets that act’s standard regardless of whether Mr. Trump had pronounced it unclassified short before leaving office;
Another bombshell.
We've reached the tipping point.
The walls are closing in.
It's the beginning of the end.
#ItsMuellerTime
PS — Just remember on the day Drumpf goes to prison to update your talking points to "DeSantis is even worse! The GOP needs to get back under Cheney control if it wants my respect!"
Of course we in #TheResistance believed Keith Olbermann when he proclaimed "Trump is finished" in November 2017 but now — nearly 5 years later — we really mean it. 🙂
#BetterLateThanNever
I feel like #BetterLateThanNovember might be a good one to start up...
+1
Garland issued a fishing license to FBI.
Still no catch, though.
I'm surprised that both the article author and the commenters here are completely ignoring the major change to our food supply chain that is already happening now. It's part of the Great Reset: a combination of substantial new limits on nitrogen fertilizer use, forced culls of most livestock, seizures of many farmers' water rights, and destruction of most of the food processing industry; all of which are going to leave a lot of shelves empty this fall, not just in the US but over most of the world. It's all deliberate, and heads need to literally roll over it. Why isn't Reason even paying attention?
Sure would be nice to see some cites to back up those claims.
You seriously are unaware of Sri Lanka, the farmers revolt in the Netherlands, what's going on in Canada, not to mention rumors of what's coming down the pike in Germany and Poland? It's not just carbon dioxide, it's now nitric oxide, nitrogen, with the big culprits being cattle urine and nitrogen fertilizer. They're ordering 30% to 50% reductions in nitrogen emissions, which means smaller cattle ranchers will be driven out of business as well as crop yields plunging. Turdeau is an absolute dictator in Canada who doesn't give a shit, whether enough people are aware of what's going on in the Netherlands (the government wants to seize farmland to build immigrant housing) to put a stop to their plans, and how long until Joe Biden announces a new 5 Year Plan to cripple agriculture in the US and whether we start shooting bureaucrats are open questions.
Yes, fully aware of Sri Lanka and Holland, but have seen no attempts to cull livestock in the US, for instance.
I'm with Sevo here. Cites please. I hear of a few random incidents, but is this happening large scale in the US? Seems unlikely. But I'm open, if you provide evidence...
It is not being implemented in the US….for now. But this is part of the watermelon new deal being kicked around by the ecoterrorists.
Too local.
Hey we've got a big problem with food trucks going on. Worldwide starvation thanks to the great reset is too local.
While my writings on the Farm Bill generally focus on payments to farmers (including in this column), in the case of food and nutrition funding for low-income Americans, "[t]he government should do no more and no less than giving cash to those in need," I explained in 2018. "They're best positioned to determine their food needs and—objectively—are the only ones who know their food preferences and those of their families."
As for taxpayer payments to farmers, while the makeup of those payments has changed over the years, today, farm subsidies operate by allocating tens of billions of taxpayer dollars each year to pay for approximately two-thirds of an eligible farmer's crop insurance premium payments.
It's hard to imagine a more disingenuous sentence or portrayal. From your own source:
"Sure, we hand ~$500B to consumers and farmers to control the market from both ends. What we really ought to do is hand ~$495B straight to consumers to control prices and cut the ~$5B that farmers actually consume for crop insurance on the premise that if they actually applied for and got $30B, that would be too much. I, The Government, and consumers understand farmers' risks better anyway." - Baylen Linnekin
I wonder if this story is too local.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/13/nyregion/rushdie-video-stabbed-ny.html
Reason contributor, Brendan O'Neill has something to say about it.
He was only stabbed with a knife. All is fine. It's not like the assailant used an assault fire extinguisher loaded with deadly explody HO2.
Thats traditional folk dancing in "urban" areas
Spent many summers of my youth in Chatauqua County, along Lake Erie, about 20 miles from the institute. Sad to see this happen there.
Those darned white supremacists at it again.
Two things I'm sure will be in the next farm bill.
Huge subsidies for the largest corporate farms. To help drive small farmers out of business by making them less competitive.
Huge subsidies for leaving farmland unused. To help make Bill Gates investment in farm land pay out. Doubles as a nod to the WEF - working toward making poor people starve to death.
If the Supreme Court would've done it's job and upheld "the people's" law over their government then there wouldn't be a USDA.
Remember that day the people changed the law over their union government (U.S. Constitution) giving them authority over agriculture???
Yeah; me neither.
F'En Nazi's(Treasonous National Socialists)