Posted on 08/15/2013 11:25:47 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Five years after running for vice president on the Republican ticket with U.S. Sen. John McCain, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin showed she still has a following as she heaped praise on the people of the Upper Midwest at the ninth annual Ag PhD Field Day at the Hefty farms near Baltic.
With more than 5,000 people listening to her talks at two different locations on the farm July 25, Palin got the biggest applause when she said, I would argue what farmers need most is for politicians to butt out and just leave them alone.
Palin, who is said to be considering a run for the U.S. Senate in Alaska next year, said the farm bill is a good example as its loaded with 1930s-era relics and would churn out more regulations for farmers.
The problem is a big, arrogant government, she said, when government is in every aspect of your life and in your business and collecting so much data on you.
Its a bloated, out-of-control government, and its not just a Republican or Democrat thing, but big, stupid government making our life harder, not easier.
She talked about an Illinois farmer who told President Obama that he preferred starting his day in a tractor or combine cab rather than filling out forms or applications for permits.
She said Brian and Darren Hefty talk about the weed of the week in their television and radio programming, and she suggested that Washington, D.C., should employ a reformer who would find a government program or bureaucrat that isnt needed and call it the weed of the week.
She also got a big laugh and applause when she said she rather would be governed by the South Dakota Farm Bureau than the bunch we have in Washington, D.C., right now.
Palin, who was accompanied by her daughter, Piper, to the event, said farming has been called the profession of hope.
Thats what I see when I visit. I see optimistic, good, hard-working and patriotic Americans who believe the tomorrows are better than today.
I think thats what our farmers give us. Its the real hope, not this hopey-changey thing we hear from Washington.
Palin said the elitists on both coasts call this area flyover country. However, she said, she thinks of it instead as the heartland and the salt of the Earth.
Using food metaphors, she likened this regions people to the beef patties inside a Big Mac or the good, creamy filling in the middle of an Oreo cookie. Youre the meat and the sweet stuff.
She said she hasnt been at many ag appreciation events over the years. In fact, the last time was at the Alaska State Fair when her cell phone rang with a number she didnt recognize after her visit to the ag tent.
She went to a nearby tent at the fair, and it was McCain asking her whether she wanted to be his running mate.
With her husband working far away at Prudhoe Bay, her Down syndrome son Trigg only 15 weeks old, a son overseas in the military and a daughter who had just told her she was pregnant, Palin said, Yeah, I have nothing else going on. Sure, why not?
Well, it didnt turn out the way we wanted it to, Palin said about the election. But I guess things turn out the way they are supposed to be.
She spends most of her time in Alaska now, and she said that although fisheries, gas, oil and minerals are the main industries, Alaska has a vibrant agriculture industry.
She mentioned in particular the cold-weather vegetables that grow to huge sizes in the land of the midnight sun during the summer months.
She said Alaska holds the world record cabbage at 127 pounds. She also mentioned that state residents have grown a 96-pound kohlrabi, 82-pound rutabaga, 42-pound beet, 39-pound turnip, 35-pound broccoli and 18.9-pound carrot.
Thats the size of a salmon, she said of the carrot.
We grow em big, but of course its nothing like you all produce for the U.S. and the rest of the world.
Although farming is changing with all of the technology, she said what hasnt changed is the American farmer.
You not only feed America, but you are what has helped make America so special, so exceptional. You helped build America.
In all, an estimated 6,500 people from 30 states, including a busload from Pennsylvania, attended the field day, the largest such event in the U.S. and the largest for the Hefty family since it started the event.
Darren Hefty said that Palins appearance wasnt meant to be political, but with less than 1 percent of the U.S. population involved in farming, it was a chance to talk about ag issues with an influential person.
Retired Gen. Wesley Clark, a Democrat, was the main speaker last year.
She was certainly a draw, Hefty said. We wanted her to speak to farmers about how their voices could be heard more effectively in Washington. I thought she delivered a good message about the importance of agriculture to our country and how farmers are viewed in a positive light by the general population.
It was just an encouraging message that what we are doing is being seen by most people and we just need to unify our voice and speak to our legislators.
RE :”Well, there you go”
I go??
If my facts are wrong, “refudiate” them.
One other thing. It seems that your Post in some way insinuates that I am a big McCain fan because I am not convinced that Sarah Palin put him over the top in beating Hayworth. Either way, Hayworth was a weak Candidate with some issues and the McCain Campaign beat him over the head with them. That being said, I have no doubt that Hayworth would have been a big plus for us in the Senate. McCain only disappoints at every opportunity. In other words, see my Tagline..
Yes, there you go.
Just validating your Post. Everyone is entitled to their “opinion”, including me.
No you are not.
Only I am entitled to my opinion LOL
Well, there you go. hahaha
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