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Mr Obama.....Turn On This Water!.....NOW!
A Time For Choosing ^ | SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2009 | Gary Jackson

Posted on 09/19/2009 4:39:21 PM PDT by curth

Turning the water off is not just bad politics, it’s an act of domestic terror.

Former Fresno, California Mayor Alan Autry

Forgive me if I am less than diplomatic here. I am not a fan at all of the radical environmental movement. I’m even less of a fan of radical, Big Government.

Let’s cut to the chase here. The rabid environmentalists have destroyed the economy in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Not only have they destroyed the economy, they have destroyed the lives of tens of thousands of farmers, as well.

According to the California Farm Water Coalition unemployment in parts of the San Joaquin Valley reached 41 percent in August. Over 400,000 acres of some of the richest farm land on earth are now dormant and unplanted. More than one million acres are in danger of destruction. .

These government stooges have created a modern day dust bowl. They have created something the government actually worked hard to educate people against doing again some 75 years ago!

Poor planting practices and a major drought caused much of the nation’s center to turn into one big dust bowl back in the 1930's. Nothing would grow. This stretched from the Plains of Texas to the Canadian Prairie Lands. Throw in the Great Depression and it was a disaster. People’s lives were destroyed. Farms that had been in families for generations just dried up and blew away, literally. Many family farms were lost to foreclosure. American families lost everything they had.

(Excerpt) Read more at thespeechatimeforchoosing.blogspot.com ...


TOPICS: Agriculture; Business/Economy; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhoenvironment; california; drought; obama; oppression; water
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To: Bhoy

“... and farms turned into factories.”

Sorry don’t mean “factories.” I mean corporate farms.

Should have previewed better.


41 posted on 09/19/2009 6:39:51 PM PDT by Bhoy
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To: bushwon
hehe, "delta smelt." That sounds funny. Anyway, water subsidies for farmer's (as well as other subsidies and kickbacks for farmer's via the tax-payer) are a common complaint among economists, I imagine just about every econ primer and intro to econ textbook touches on them, since they seem to exist in just about every country (see Japan). Here are some articles I found: http://www.freetrade.org/node/493 http://downsizing.cato.org/agriculture/subsidies#2 http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=2386 Good paragraph: "Irrigation districts use artificially low-priced electricity. The electricity is produced by federally funded dams to pump water. These water subsidies increase production of farm products and are quite substantial. It has been estimated that the capitalized value of water subsidies for a 160-acre California farm may exceed $100,000. Without some $2 billion in annual agricultural water subsidies, the huge impact of the West on the production of farm products would be greatly diminished—including the growing of cotton in the Arizona desert, according to a Cato Institute study (“Six Reasons to Kill Farm Subsidies and Trade Barriers,” February 1, 2006). The costs are borne by taxpayers, not consumers of farm products—and by other users of water, urban and recreational."
42 posted on 09/19/2009 7:26:37 PM PDT by LifeComesFirst (Until the unborn are free, nobody is free.)
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To: Bhoy

the land will be bought up by corporations and farms turned into factories.


LOL, Build factories in California?????????


43 posted on 09/19/2009 7:41:03 PM PDT by Joan Kerrey (bigger government = smaller people)
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To: Joan Kerrey

I know, I know. I fixed it next post. Be nice.


44 posted on 09/19/2009 7:44:18 PM PDT by Bhoy
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To: Plumres

My grandfather did this when he was alive. The first thing he taught me was that canned biscuits are “Democrat” biscuits. I can’t stand canned biscuits.


45 posted on 09/19/2009 7:55:43 PM PDT by TNdandelion (I'd rather have FedEx run my healthcare than USPS.)
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To: LifeComesFirst

Well thanks for the elaboration. From what I understand subsidies were established because of the complexity of the agricultural economy and its stragetic importance. If a farmer or farm goes under, it is not an immediate fix. If a farmer loses his crop due to weather or politics (neither of which he has much control over), not only the farmer, but the nation is in peril. Subsidies were established to ensure a more consistent food supply as a matter of national security—sort of like petroleum reserves, purchase of govt. cheese etc. Of course, given the way our governmment has behaved, I am sure we are not meeting the mission reaquirements any more. That said, I believe that the Cali farmers in the San Joaquin Valley are being victimized by the EPA over a 2” fish, the Delta Smelt.

From the articles I have and local Cali radio programs I have heard in addition to Sean Hannity, the EPA that has been putting the kaabosh on the livelihood of the farmers in the San Joaquin Valley. Sorry, but I tend to agree with Hannity & other posters’ assessment that water from the area was damned up. They had been promised irrigation. From Hannity’s most recent program and google research, it seems like perhaps that the salmon fisherman had an in with the EPA the some Pacific fisherman federation and got them to turn off the water. Since the EPA wants land to return to non-tillable status, they worked with the fisherman. Fisherman seem to want to return the land to delta status, so salmon can be more easily fished up north as their industry has been hurting—some say due to over fishing.

So it seems that this whole issue is ripe with politics—not just economics


46 posted on 09/19/2009 8:55:40 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 ("If you think healthcare is expensive now, just wait till it is free! "~ PJ O'Rourke)
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To: jessduntno

That’s a good one! Laughed my a#* off!


47 posted on 09/19/2009 10:02:49 PM PDT by jackieh
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To: bushwon

It is an economic issue through and through, and I’m not debating whether or not water was dammed or wasn’t dammed, or what motive the EPA had.

No offense, but it seems like you don’t fully understand the economics of the situation. Frankly, the issue is impossible to understand without a solid understanding of prices based on supply and demand and how they coordinate the entire economy. We have farmers growing crops on land that—were the actual cost of the irrigated water passed onto them and not the tax-payers—they wouldn’t use. Rather, resources would be put into farming elsewhere. Or, instead of growing those crops domestically, they’d be imported. In the absence of subsidies, farming would be done according to the dictates of market forces, which is to say, they’d be done efficiently.

No single person, and no committee, can say what the “right” amount of food production is or the “right” amount of food storage ought to be. Thanks to the market, we don’t have to worry about what would happen if for whatever reason American farming suddenly stopped—we’d just import what we need. Many nations have not produced enough food by themselves to feed themselves for decades if not centuries—they import. If this concerns you, it shouldn’t. Importing wheat from Argentina is no different from importing crops from California to whatever state you are in. The economic principles don’t change because of lines on a map. Greater scarcity of a good in one area leads to higher prices, which leads to greater importation to that area, which then results in a lowering of prices. Prices guide resources to where they are valued most.

Many famines have been *avoided* because the price system was allowed to work, that is, no direct price controls, tariffs, subsidies, etc. were in place to disrupt the natural workings of the market. By the same token, many crippling shortages of food were created because prices were not allowed to rise. Price freezes after disasters are a popular government policy, they are also catastrophic in the effects they can have. The Siege of Leningrad could have gone better for the Russians had they not frozen the prices of food. Cities under siege that allowed price to rise to stratospheric heights did not suffer massive food shortages.

Thomas Sowell’s Basic Economics is an excellent layman’s primer for econ, no jargon or graphs or nasty ol’ math.


48 posted on 09/19/2009 10:44:43 PM PDT by LifeComesFirst (Until the unborn are free, nobody is free.)
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To: LifeComesFirst

Eh, Sorry, I think I will just have to agree to disagree. Close family member has PhD in agronomy/plant genetics, so I do actually know a little about the agricultural economy and agriculture.

I note that you are not from Cali, but from Ohio, so I am going to take word and side of Hannity, local farmers, and my family agricultural expert say.


49 posted on 09/19/2009 11:23:48 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 ("If you think healthcare is expensive now, just wait till it is free! "~ PJ O'Rourke)
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To: bushwon

Enviromentalists — hard core enviros... I know this from a personal experience with having discussions with a bunch of people from the Backpackers.com site.. quite an eye-opener how they think...


50 posted on 09/20/2009 11:32:17 AM PDT by Arizona Carolyn
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To: bushwon

One of the sources I cited is an agricultural professor. And special interests of all kinds are notorious for seeing things only from their angle, and not how their preferred policies affect not only other people geographically, but also the future. But okay, I’ve made my case.


51 posted on 09/20/2009 1:01:17 PM PDT by LifeComesFirst (Until the unborn are free, nobody is free.)
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