Opinion: Make healthy food key to farm bill
By Ken Cook and Kari Hamerschlag
If you believe the government ought to play an aggressive role in the nation’s economic life, admit it: You’re a liberal. But you’re probably not as liberal as the average Republican member of the House Agriculture Committee.
Thanks to their generosity with your tax dollars, the government has shelled out a quarter of a trillion dollars since 1995 in federal farm subsidies to grain and cotton farmers and landowners. (Go to farm.ewg.org for a list of every recipient and the amount each received.)
Right now, the farm subsidy lobby and its friends on Capitol Hill are on track to write a costly, ill-conceived new chapter to this unhappy history of bankrolling industrial commodity crops. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Instead, we can invest in healthier eating and a cleaner environment. In the bargain, we can help keep 20 million kids from going hungry, give a huge boost to California agriculture, save taxpayers money and support family farmers.
What would a “healthy food” bill look like?
It starts with a moral commitment that no children in this country should go to bed hungry because their families can’t afford to feed them. Today, more than 45 million Americans, half of them children, receive benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly “food stamps”), which accounts for more than 70 percent of farm bill spending. Are they deserving? If you’re in a household of three and make more than about $24,000 a year, you’re too prosperous to qualify.
Next, by redirecting some of the billions we now are spending on industrial crops such as corn and cotton, we could help make a reality of the government’s public health advice to cover half our mealtime plates with fruits and vegetables every day.
Ken Cook is president and Kari Hamerschlag is senior food and agriculture analyst at the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit research and advocacy organization.
Do go to the website suggested in the article. See where your tax dollars are being distributed.
WHY BEAT AROUND THE “Bush”!
Corn Subsidies**
1,641,611** $77,123,770,222
2 Wheat Subsidies**
1,375,746** $32,373,080,169
3 Cotton Subsidies**
264,947** $31,009,614,843
4 Conservation Reserve Program
879,641 $27,885,392,216
5 Soybean Subsidies**
1,044,933** $24,285,436,252
6 Disaster Payments
1,362,757 $20,462,782,856
7 Rice Subsidies**
70,033** $12,920,657,299
8 Sorghum Subsidies**
615,807** $6,135,328,053
9 Dairy Program Subsidies
158,719** $4,886,592,587
10 Env. Quality Incentive Program
272,196 $4,051,373,024
11 Livestock Subsidies
802,657** $3,697,720,573
12 Peanut Subsidies
91,568** $3,483,315,596
13 Barley Subsidies**
353,027** $2,546,484,394
14 Tobacco Subsidies
396,354** $1,138,558,705
15 Sunflower Subsidies**
61,701** $880,477,844
16 Wetlands Reserve Program
6,571 $532,963,630
17 Canola Subsidies**
20,468** $385,910,542
18 Oat Subsidies**
640,182** $267,267,067
19 Apple Subsidies
8,586** $261,540,987
20 Sugar Beet Subsidies
9,071** $242,064,005
Not only that, I do remember the white folks laughing about those crazy Native American building a huge casino out in the old corn fields,since then, lots this cash went right in the slot machines from those red necks thinking they can beat the House.
Now they drive cads instead pickups,drink good spirits from foreign countries,raise big buffalo for 2 pound burgers,don’t need to farm,smoke good stuff in peace pipe. They Happy,sing songs to sun god ,Washington,invest in their own natural minerals under their ground that drive big cities power plants.
One thing leads to another!Now everyone wants part this blood action to be proud tribe member with health insurance,take vacation to far away lands ,go see museums of our fore fathers scalps in their country that saved their hertage behind the glass.
Washington good to farmer John,farmer john good to the people.