Posted on 01/13/2002 10:47:37 AM PST by RepRivFarm
PAWNEE CITY, Neb. - Boyd de Koning is proud of his newest tractor. He starts it up and listens to it purr. It is a 1962, 1963 or 1964 Oliver 1800. They quit making Olivers more than 25 years ago.
"You can get a lot of work out of one of these," said de Koning, 46, climbing down from the green cab on a mild winter day to walk around the place where three generations of his family have made a living since 1923.
Neat and orderly, the 283-acre Pawnee County farm a mile from the Kansas border has everything needed to grow and harvest corn, oats and milo, to raise chickens, to raise hogs from birth to slaughter, to graze 30 cows and to keep a family warm and fed in the winter.
What the de Koning farm does not have is farm subsidies. Boyd and Karen de Koning don't believe in them. Neither did his father and grandfather before him. De Koning said people are wrong to say farmers need subsidies. "I'm living proof that it isn't true," he said.
Rest of storyHERE
Boyd's father, the late Neal de Koning, saying that government ought to be regarded
as a watchdog to be fed, not as a cow to be milked.
Speaking of Socialism, it never ceases to amaze me the excuses for subsidies you see posted by their defenders on FR (and they are legion.) They always sound as nonsensical and illogical as Stalinist Soviet Propaganda.
The best one is always "subsidies, because of low prices farmers get for farm products, are needed to make sure we have enough to eat."
HELLO! Free market, anyone? If we ever have food shortages in the US, the prices farmers get for their product will go up enough to keep enough of them in business so we don't have food shortages.
After two years, they were allowed to leave the country and spent another 18 months in a refugee camp awaiting permission to enter the U.S. When they finally got here, they were given welfare, food stamps, and government housing.
The were so ashamed to take government money that the mother and father both took 2 or 3 jobs to get their family out of public housing in ONE month.
Those are some of the most honorable people I know.
I think we would all be surprised at the number of folks around who feel this way. The USA may be very very sick, but it's not quite dead yet!
Alas, honor is no longer considered a virtue worth having.
According to the NE Dept. of Health and Human Services - at http://www.hhs.state.ne.us/profiles/pawnee/demo.htm - the U.S. Census Bureau estimated the total population of Pawnee County in 1997 at 3,201 individuals, all but 37 were white.
Then I went to:
Farm subsidies from 1996 to 2000
Going first to NE, then to Pawnee County, I found that 976 residents of Pawnee County (approximately one out of every three residents) received $36,464,101 from 1996 to 2000.
BTW, I did find three de Konings on the subsidy list. Relatives???
That goes for Social Security, Medicade/care.
There is no right to retirement.
You work until you are either dead, too sick to work, or have accumulated enough wealth to live off of.
Lessons of Capitalizm If crop prices will not support the farmers we have, then we have too many farmers.
Let the flames begin.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.