The Online Information Resource for Iowa's Progressive Community

Search

BFIA Writer's Guidelines

We welcome Submissions

Read Them On The Web

How To Post
A Comment On
BLOG FOR IOWA

Login

Username:
Password:
Remember me 
 

Subscribe to Democracyforiowa

Powered by groups.yahoo.com

Sunlight Seeker

Look up national or state donors or check where your Congresspeople are getting their money.

Daily Archive

February 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28

By Year

Recent Visitors

Connie Wilson - Sat 23 Aug 2008 06:31 PM CDT 
altheakims - Tue 19 Aug 2008 04:28 AM CDT 
Richard - Sun 17 Aug 2008 06:57 PM CDT 
sspl05 - Sat 02 Aug 2008 07:21 AM CDT 
ihatehogconfinements - Mon 21 Jul 2008 06:45 PM CDT 
Powered by BlogHarbor
Powered by BlogHarbor
View Article  Budget Good For Corporate, Not Rural America
 Budget Good For Corporate, Not Rural America


The latest edition of the Agribusiness Examiner featured this commentary from George Naylor, President of the National Family Farm Coalition:



COMMENTARY: BUSH BUDGET BENEFITS CORPORATE AMERICA  --- NOT RURAL AMERICA

The proposed Bush budget cuts for FY 2006 will hurt family farmers, but give little relief to taxpayers while delivering low priced farm commodities to the corporate livestock industry --- Tyson, Smithfield and Cargill.

 Because the 2002 farm bill doesn’t do what a farm bill is supposed to do—support market prices and avoid wasteful overproduction --- farmers have become dependent on government subsidy payments which are getting the ax in this 2006 budget.  As it is, most farmers are barely surviving at current subsidy levels.

 The new budget proposals and the legislation that would accompany them actually re-open the 2002 farm bill, and the authors of that bill --- corporate agribusiness --- remain the winners at the expense of family farmers and taxpayers.  Secretary Johanns’ calculations show that increased spending from FY 2004 to FY 2005 --- over $10 billion for commodity program payments --- are a direct result of farm prices dropping once again below marketing loan rates.

 If farm programs supported farm prices at levels that farmers received in FY 2004 due to crop shortfalls, taxpayer savings would be at least that $10 billion rather than the relatively small savings of $587 million attributed to the 2006 payment reforms.

 Secretary Johann’s projected 2006 savings of $5 billion is "in part due to projected commodity price recovery" which no one can predict. The opposite could also happen since there is no floor under farm prices and crop expansion is common in many countries of the world.

 The proposal to limit government payments to $250,000 per year may affect some large cotton and rice producers, but will have little effect on who produces other commodities.  If cotton and rice producers shift production to corn, soybeans, or wheat, this will increase overproduction of those crops and further depress the farm price.

 The 2006 budget provides no new funding for farm ownership loans in effect barring a new generation of farmers. It also dismantles important rural development programs, slashing their funding and moving the programs to the Department of Commerce; which will add confusion to both the program delivery and the mission of these programs.

 Free trade agreements --- especially the WTO --- are the source of payment reforms that will most likely hurt farm income.  The goal to decouple payments by limiting marketing loan benefits to historical production (on 85% of historical acreage) follows WTO edicts.  The five percent cut in direct payments and countercyclical payments may seem small but in fact account for $3.6 billion of the projected savings. These are real cuts on top of record low commodity prices.

 For U.S. farm and trade policy to address the low prices received by farmers in developing nations, our farm bill would need to seek international cooperation in setting  price supports (actually raising prices) and shared responsibility of the major exporting nations for food security reserves and supply management.

 Instead, these budget reforms only exacerbate the failed current policy that dooms farmers around the world to poverty because many of them won’t get any government payments. The agribusiness giants will continue to dump cheap commodities to replace local food systems with its corporate manufactured food system.

 To get to the heart of the farm problem and budget deficits, the National Family Farm Coalition proposes a new farm bill solution: the Food from Family Farms Act (FFFA). FFFA establishes a price floor that would force multinational grain traders and processors to pay farmers at least the cost of production for their crops.

 Our policy proposal also includes grain reserves to increase food security, and increased incentives for bioenergy crops and environmentally sustainable production. Since these new budget proposals re-open the 2002 farm bill, it’s high time we seize the opportunity and strengthen our food and farm policy to support a family farm system rather than expanding a corporate farm system at taxpayers’ expense.



While I'm posting on the "farming" theme, I want to respond to an earlier comment on this post discussing a report condemning U.S. Meatpackers for Human Rights violations.  Jerry wrote:

I would be interested in how this story plays in the Iowa press, in case anyone cares to report that in a future post.

Well, after waiting a few weeks the followup answer is "it didn't play at all".

The report from Human Rights Watch is still available for your (or any media outlet that wants a story that 'writes itself') here.

View Article  Action Alert: Terminate the Terminator Gene
  Action Alert:  Terminate the Terminator Gene

Organic Consumers Association

Contributed by Douglas Narveson


Consumer, farmer, and environmental organizations across the globe are mobilizing to stop the legalization and commercialization of the controversial Terminator Gene Technology, whereby seeds are genetically engineered to become sterile or commit suicide after one growing season.

The Monsanto corporation and the biotech industry support the Terminator Technology, because it will force many of the 1.4 billion farmers around the world to stop saving their seeds and instead to purchase patented seed varieties from the Gene Giants.

In addition, scientists are concerned that genetic pollution from Terminator crops will lead to killing off a wide range of crops and plants, as Terminator pollen and seeds are spread by the wind, insect pollinators, and commercial seed co-mingling and transportation.

After a massive international campaign in 1998, Monsanto Corporation announced they were shelving plans to commercialize the Terminator, while the United Nations (UN) called for a global ban. But on 2/11/2005 renewed efforts to overturn the worldwide ban were launched at a UN conference in Bangkok.

Learn more and sign OCA's petition to the UN to terminate the
Terminator Gene.

Secratariat of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity
413 St-Jacques Street, 8th floor, Office 800
Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H2Y 1N9
Tel: +1-514-288-2220 Fax: +1-514-288-6588
To send an e-mail click here 

  Sign up for action alerts.  Join the Iowa Rapid Response team.
DFIA Events Calendar

Add Your Event Here

Iowa Sites

ABC Free

AFSCME Iowa

Algona Wind Farm

Child & Family Policy Center - Iowa

Cyclones for Choice

Environment Iowa

Eyechanner Foundation

Genetic Engineering Action Network

Iowa Bicycle Coalition

Iowa Citizen Action Network - ICAN

Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement

Iowa Civil Liberties Union

Iowa Democratic Party

Iowa Energy Center

Iowa Environmental Council

Iowa Farmers Union

Iowa Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO

Iowa Fiscal Central

Iowans for Better Local TV

Iowa for Health Care

Iowa Freecycle

Iowa Global Warming

Iowa House Democrats

Iowa Opinion

Iowa Peace

Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility

Iowa PIRG

Iowa Policy Project

Iowa Policy Research

Iowa Pride Network

Iowa Public Interest Research Group

IOWATER

Iowa Underground

Iowans for Voting Integrity

Left Coast of Iowa

Midwest Environmental Justice Advocates

Progressive Action for the Common Good

Progressive Coalition of Central Iowa

QCAD (Quad-Citians Affirming Diversity - GLBT)

Rapid Response - Iowa

SEIU Local 199

Sierra Club - Iowa Chapter

Soypower - West Central Soy

Voter-owned Iowa

Iowa Blogs

Bleeding Heartland

BlogNetNews Iowa

The Caucus Cooler

Century of the Common Iowan

The Deprogrammer (Quad Cities)

Diary of a Political Madman

Empire Falls Blog

Essential Estrogen

From Right to Left

Gavin's Journal

Green Tea Blog

Iowa Ennui

Iowa House Democrats

Iowa Independent

Iowa Liberal

Iowa Progress

Iowa Rapid Response

Iowa True Blue (Gordon Fischer's Blog)

Iowa Underground

Iowa Voters for Open and Transparent Elections

Jedi Tony

John Deeth's Blog

Krusty Konservative

Left Coast of Iowa Blog

Leftist Logic

Marshall County Democrats

Nick Johnson's Blog

Nussle and Flow

Political Fallout

Mike Palecek

Political Forecast

Politics in Iowa

Kay Henderson and Radio Iowa

The Rural Populist

Small Town Fun

Smoky Hollow

Southwest Iowa Guy

State 29

Steve King Watch

Straight Out of the Cornfield

Fight
Media Bias

Iowa

Rapid Response Network - Iowa

First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


Air America

*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


The Counterpoint

*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


National

FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media