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Hell No! We Won’t Go (to Kansas City)!
American Greatness ^ | 6/17/2019 | Joshua Sharf

Posted on 06/18/2019 5:31:40 AM PDT by simpson96

On Thursday, a gaggle of civil servants protested the proposed relocation of a couple of Agriculture Department bureaus from Washington, D.C. to Kansas City, Missouri by boldly turning their backs on a speech delivered by Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue.

Perdue announced that the Economic Research Service, which provides research and statistical analysis for lawmakers, and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, which allocates federal research funding, would be moving most of their personnel and operations by the end of September.

These employees have had a year either to make peace or make plans, but instead, they decided to wait until the final announcement to purse their lips, cross their arms, and stare off into space.

Clearly, the USDA has been violating child labor laws by hiring toddlers. Watch CNN’s reporting of the incident:

The long-haired guy in the middle is holding his breath until he matches his shirt color, and the man in the plaid shirt to his right looks like he’s auditioning for the Actor’s Studio. The bald fellow to the left doesn’t look entirely committed to the cause.

You would think Perdue is exiling these people to a remote outpost in Greenland. It may come as a surprise for these protesters to discover that, according to the latest U.S. Census figures, literally millions of people voluntarily live in the Kansas City metropolitan area. The place has NFL football, major and minor league baseball, and plenty of museums only slightly inferior to the Smithsonian that Washingtonians only visit when relatives are in town anyway.

We all know Washington, D.C. has grown into a world-class city in the past few decades, driven by a massive infusion of federal dollars (particularly during the Obama administration, when the D.C.-Northern Virginia region became one of the most expensive metropolitan areas in America). It’s almost always unpleasant to be told that to keep your job you have to move, but one can see that it might be particularly unpleasant for those used to such neighborhood amenities.

But if they really knew what was good for them, they’d jump at the chance. Yes, the General Schedule pay scale in Kansas City is about 10 percent lower than in D.C., but the cost of living is about 25 percent less, and according to Zillow, housing prices are 75 percent lower than the national average. Given the run-up in D.C. housing prices since 2012, many of these people would be able to buy new homes in cash. (Then again, maybe having the invading overlords live in the best houses in town may just feed the resentment. Whether that’s a feature or a bug depends on your point of view.)

In fact, the proposed relocation of federal agencies to the Western and Midwestern United States is one of the most innovative things to come out of the Trump Administration. They hope that bureaucracies, if they must exist, will do a better job if they are located among the people they regulate, rather than within the Beltway bubble.

In the case of the ERS and NIFA, they’ll be moving to within a couple hundred miles of six major land-grant universities that graduate plenty of students well-qualified for these positions. Surprisingly, many of them would rather stay in the Midwest than move to the nation’s capital.

In the run-up to Perdue’s announcement last week, congressional Democrats orchestrated some hearings, bringing in farmers and researchers who claimed that the move would make things more difficult rather than easier. They argued, inter alia, that travel would be more difficult from Indiana to Kansas City than to D.C., and that the move would make it hard to coordinate with other government agencies working on related subjects.

Both of those are beside the point. It’s not necessarily how easy it is for a farmer to get to D.C. that matters; very few will make that trip. It’s how easy it is for the bureaucrats to get to the farmers, and in Kansas City, they’ll be only a few minutes’ drive from the fruited plain itself. In this case, going native isn’t an unpleasant byproduct, it’s the point. In those interagency meetings, maybe one of those agencies will see itself as representing the farmers and ranchers whose lives the government is trying to run.

Despite all the claims of loss of efficiency and having to move to a place with decent barbecue and jazz, it’s hard to escape the belief that what they’re really afraid of is a loss of status, which is Washington’s real currency. I lived in the Beltway region for 25 years, and the best movie to understand the place is a 1996 French offering, “Ridicule,” about Versailles.

Instead, they’ll be moving to a place where people don’t open conversations with GS-level butt-sniffing.

If all this sounds condescending to D.C. bureaucrats, they should try to imagine how far-away bureaucrats sound to the rest of us.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat
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To: unixfox

They want to oversee farmers from a distance. Not actually live out here in flyover country with the knuckle dragged, bible thumping, uneducated rednecks.

hypocrites


21 posted on 06/18/2019 6:10:11 AM PDT by Pollard (If you don't understand what I typed, you haven't read the classics.)
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To: simpson96

They will have to interact with real Americans, not stuff, overpaid, underworked government drones.

Welcome to culture shock.


22 posted on 06/18/2019 6:11:33 AM PDT by cyclotic
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To: Da Coyote

It is raw unadulterated fear.

That they might be made to work too.


23 posted on 06/18/2019 6:13:44 AM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: simpson96
First, all of those involved should be fired and have their pensions frozen.

The USG needs to do more of this, especially in non-military or law enforcement agencies. To many of these secluded, entitled jerks located in DC and do not work with real people.

24 posted on 06/18/2019 6:15:02 AM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: simpson96

Winning.


25 posted on 06/18/2019 6:15:21 AM PDT by jdsteel (Americans are Dreamers too!!!)
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To: Redleg Duke

So many of them are desperately, desperately needed.

Why would FEMA even have a presence in Washington anyway? The entire department needs to be in Puerto Rico and in New Orleans.


26 posted on 06/18/2019 6:16:22 AM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: DoodleDawg

I’m 25 minutes west of KCK in the wilds of Leavenworth, and KC (K/M) is one of the better cities I’ve lived near.


27 posted on 06/18/2019 6:16:50 AM PDT by MortMan (Americans are a people increasingly separated by our connectivity.)
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To: simpson96

Fire each and every one of them for insubordination. Promptly.

I once fired a program director in my business (radio station), when he refused to follow a proper order from the general manager. Lost a couple of clients. A few other staffers quit. He filed an unemployment claim, which I fought and lost. The end result: he was still fired. Fine with me.


28 posted on 06/18/2019 6:17:31 AM PDT by Tudorfly (All things are possible within the will of God.)
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To: gcparent

As far as I know the USDA offices are in Mo. KCK can be from suburbia to the worst of the hood. A lot of KCK is don’t go into unarmed, but for me that it pretty much my only way to go.


29 posted on 06/18/2019 6:18:51 AM PDT by allwrong57
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To: KC_Conspirator

What is this non-military nonsense.
Fix the military too, and either end the Pentagon promotion track or restrict it severely.

Don’t leave the military swamp outside of the drainage program.


30 posted on 06/18/2019 6:20:34 AM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: simpson96

Fire their collective a**es.
Then tell them to “Learn to code”.


31 posted on 06/18/2019 6:21:07 AM PDT by mkleesma (`Call to me, and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.')
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To: allwrong57

That sounds like the perfect working environment for Government bureaucrats.


32 posted on 06/18/2019 6:21:52 AM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: simpson96

Clearly, the USDA has been violating child labor laws by hiring toddlers.


Not just the USDA...………………………..


33 posted on 06/18/2019 6:25:01 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: DoodleDawg

Thanks. My bad typing. Of course I meant Kansas city Mo is the nice one and
City of fountains.


34 posted on 06/18/2019 6:25:08 AM PDT by gcparent (Justice Brett Kavanaugh)
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To: MrEdd

I agree, I do know what would happen if it were a private company and they said they didn’t want to move! No problem, we’ll find someone else!


35 posted on 06/18/2019 6:25:41 AM PDT by allwrong57
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To: kosciusko51
"...same with BLM and other Interior departments..."

Now there's a great idea. Those agencies should absolutely be spread out to the states they affect.

36 posted on 06/18/2019 6:25:54 AM PDT by budj (combat vet, 2nd of 3 generations)
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To: DoodleDawg

I know New Yorkers who retired to Kansas city, Mo.


37 posted on 06/18/2019 6:26:16 AM PDT by gcparent (Justice Brett Kavanaugh)
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To: simpson96

Let’s all remember that President Trump is a real estate mogul and a businessman. I wonder how much the government will be saving in rent each month? Also, if the building is newer, we will also save a bunch in utilities and maintenance.

Having the bureaucraps move to the heartland, which saves salary and moves them among people who are more conservative is cream on the cake, and having some of these arrogant, spoiled people will quit, to be replaced with people lower on the pay scale, is a nice cherry on top.


38 posted on 06/18/2019 6:29:15 AM PDT by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." A. E. van Vogt, The Weapons Shops of Isher)
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To: simpson96

Boldly turned their backs? Looked like little children pouting when dad told them they had to clean their room.

All their lives they have been told how special and smart they are.


39 posted on 06/18/2019 6:35:48 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: simpson96

The plan is working like a charm. The whole idea was to move a chunk of the Federal bureaucracy out of the National Capital Region knowing that the Deep Swamp dwellers would not follow. That’s the only way to get rid of these Democrat partisans who have burrowed into Civil Service. This is the first step. Lots of very nice cities in the Heartland to choose from.


40 posted on 06/18/2019 6:44:00 AM PDT by centurion316
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