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Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production
Jul 23, 2021 16:41:46   #
Oldsailor65 Loc: Iowa
 
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production

Pop quiz, hotshot: Your biggest geopolitical adversary is buying up your country’s farmland. It’s buying up so much, in fact, that this feasibly could become a national security issue in a crisis or war. Do you stop it from buying more?

That’s apparently a trick question for Democrats. After all, what if treating your enemy like your enemy “would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e”?

That’s what could end up dooming an effort to stop buyers with connections to the Chinese C*******t Party from snapping up more of our farmland, according to Successful Farming. While the measure has bipartisan appeal, New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng is objecting to it on the grounds it could stoke hatred.

Last month, the House Appropriations Committee approved language that would stop Chinese-linked individuals or concerns from purchasing more land and bar the land already purchased from farm subsidies as part of a $197 billion spending bill for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

“The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly,” said GOP Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse, who proposed the amendment.

“There are currently no federal safeguards against the creation of this monopoly,” he said.

Chinese investors controlled roughly 192,000 agricultural acres in the U.S. at the beginning of 2020, worth $1.9 billion, according to Politico. That’s less than Canada and other European nations own and a fraction of a fraction of U.S. farmland.

However, China’s investments in foreign agriculture increased tenfold between 2009 and 2018, the USDA reported, and agricultural investment has been part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, purportedly to secure the country’s food chain. If the situation presented itself, of course, it could also be used to stoke insecurity in a geopolitical rival as well — particularly if that rival is America.

This has produced, for the most part, a rare moment of bipartisan comity.

Should America ban Chinese ownership of American farmland?
Yes: 99% (552 V**es)
No: 1% (7 V**es)
The amendment was introduced by a Republican in Newhouse — a more liberal one, to be sure, but a Republican nonetheless — and yet it made it out of a Democrat-controlled committee.

As Politico noted, voices as diverse as former Vice President Mike Pence and Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Elizabeth Warren have called for tightened restrictions.

Enter Meng, first vice chairwoman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who thinks the language might lead to more h**e crimes.

“It would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e,” she warned at the bill’s markup, according to Successful Farming.

“Can we honestly say that this amendment, which singles out one country, won’t have repercussions on Asian-Americans across our country?” Meng said. “Let’s include all of our adversaries.”

Newhouse responded that the language was “about c*******t China,” adding, “This is not about calling attention in any negative way to any group of people in this country.”

That just touches the surface of how strikingly ignorant Meng’s comments were, though.

First, I’m curious what kind of people would be curious enough about the world to pay attention to language about foreign ownership of farmland coming out of the agriculture appropriations subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, yet still incurious enough that it fanned the flames of anti-Asian hatred within their hearts.

This seems like an infinitesimal subset of individuals Meng wants to avoid provoking — if, indeed, it exists at all.

Yes, Meng’s counterproposal seems to be to sanction buyers from other nations, especially “all of our adversaries.” However, there’s only one adversary with the resources and the ill intent to be a destabilizing force on the U.S. food chain: China.

If Russia, Iran or North Korea gets around to having designs on American agricultural land buys, rest assured Republicans and Democrats can hold hands again and sanction those individual countries.

Besides the complexities of a blanket ban on foreign ownership of American farmland by our adversaries, however — including just what an adversary entails — there’s the fact such a ban remains a ban on China and only China in everything but language.

That means our hypothetical agricultural appropriations subcommittee-watching anti-Asian bigot will be no less inflamed as he watches that one pass on C-SPAN 3 as he would if it were solely a proscription on Beijing-linked ownership.

For now, it’s unclear how much weight Meng’s objection will carry.

Politico reported Monday that “Meng, Newhouse and committee leaders indicated they would find a solution as the legislation winds through Congress. The measure is expected to reach the House floor before the end of July, as part of a broader appropriations package, although the Senate has not yet drafted its own version of the spending bill.”

“We are new in this process,” said Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, agriculture appropriations subcommittee chairman. “I would suggest that we sit down and we work through it so we can accomplish our objective, but do it in a way that is sensitive to all those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.”

Note Bishop’s language: “those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.” Not “those who might be threatened by the approach,” just “offended.” This is about the professionally offended, not about any sort of tangible threat to the Asian-American community.

Perhaps there’s a way to appease both sides without watering down the amendment. If its efficacy is diluted, however, Meng and the Democrats are solely responsible for however much that jeopardizes America’s food supply.


https://www.westernjournal.com/democrat-lawmaker-oblivious-china-buys-us-farmland-sets-stage-foreign-monopoly-food-production/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859

Reply
Jul 23, 2021 17:17:34   #
Michael Rich Loc: Lapine Oregon
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production

Pop quiz, hotshot: Your biggest geopolitical adversary is buying up your country’s farmland. It’s buying up so much, in fact, that this feasibly could become a national security issue in a crisis or war. Do you stop it from buying more?

That’s apparently a trick question for Democrats. After all, what if treating your enemy like your enemy “would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e”?

That’s what could end up dooming an effort to stop buyers with connections to the Chinese C*******t Party from snapping up more of our farmland, according to Successful Farming. While the measure has bipartisan appeal, New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng is objecting to it on the grounds it could stoke hatred.

Last month, the House Appropriations Committee approved language that would stop Chinese-linked individuals or concerns from purchasing more land and bar the land already purchased from farm subsidies as part of a $197 billion spending bill for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

“The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly,” said GOP Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse, who proposed the amendment.

“There are currently no federal safeguards against the creation of this monopoly,” he said.

Chinese investors controlled roughly 192,000 agricultural acres in the U.S. at the beginning of 2020, worth $1.9 billion, according to Politico. That’s less than Canada and other European nations own and a fraction of a fraction of U.S. farmland.

However, China’s investments in foreign agriculture increased tenfold between 2009 and 2018, the USDA reported, and agricultural investment has been part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, purportedly to secure the country’s food chain. If the situation presented itself, of course, it could also be used to stoke insecurity in a geopolitical rival as well — particularly if that rival is America.

This has produced, for the most part, a rare moment of bipartisan comity.

Should America ban Chinese ownership of American farmland?
Yes: 99% (552 V**es)
No: 1% (7 V**es)
The amendment was introduced by a Republican in Newhouse — a more liberal one, to be sure, but a Republican nonetheless — and yet it made it out of a Democrat-controlled committee.

As Politico noted, voices as diverse as former Vice President Mike Pence and Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Elizabeth Warren have called for tightened restrictions.

Enter Meng, first vice chairwoman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who thinks the language might lead to more h**e crimes.

“It would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e,” she warned at the bill’s markup, according to Successful Farming.

“Can we honestly say that this amendment, which singles out one country, won’t have repercussions on Asian-Americans across our country?” Meng said. “Let’s include all of our adversaries.”

Newhouse responded that the language was “about c*******t China,” adding, “This is not about calling attention in any negative way to any group of people in this country.”

That just touches the surface of how strikingly ignorant Meng’s comments were, though.

First, I’m curious what kind of people would be curious enough about the world to pay attention to language about foreign ownership of farmland coming out of the agriculture appropriations subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, yet still incurious enough that it fanned the flames of anti-Asian hatred within their hearts.

This seems like an infinitesimal subset of individuals Meng wants to avoid provoking — if, indeed, it exists at all.

Yes, Meng’s counterproposal seems to be to sanction buyers from other nations, especially “all of our adversaries.” However, there’s only one adversary with the resources and the ill intent to be a destabilizing force on the U.S. food chain: China.

If Russia, Iran or North Korea gets around to having designs on American agricultural land buys, rest assured Republicans and Democrats can hold hands again and sanction those individual countries.

Besides the complexities of a blanket ban on foreign ownership of American farmland by our adversaries, however — including just what an adversary entails — there’s the fact such a ban remains a ban on China and only China in everything but language.

That means our hypothetical agricultural appropriations subcommittee-watching anti-Asian bigot will be no less inflamed as he watches that one pass on C-SPAN 3 as he would if it were solely a proscription on Beijing-linked ownership.

For now, it’s unclear how much weight Meng’s objection will carry.

Politico reported Monday that “Meng, Newhouse and committee leaders indicated they would find a solution as the legislation winds through Congress. The measure is expected to reach the House floor before the end of July, as part of a broader appropriations package, although the Senate has not yet drafted its own version of the spending bill.”

“We are new in this process,” said Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, agriculture appropriations subcommittee chairman. “I would suggest that we sit down and we work through it so we can accomplish our objective, but do it in a way that is sensitive to all those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.”

Note Bishop’s language: “those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.” Not “those who might be threatened by the approach,” just “offended.” This is about the professionally offended, not about any sort of tangible threat to the Asian-American community.

Perhaps there’s a way to appease both sides without watering down the amendment. If its efficacy is diluted, however, Meng and the Democrats are solely responsible for however much that jeopardizes America’s food supply.


https://www.westernjournal.com/democrat-lawmaker-oblivious-china-buys-us-farmland-sets-stage-foreign-monopoly-food-production/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Fa... (show quote)



I believe that allowing our obvious enemy to purchase our farm lands is by greedy people, and is close to treason.

I would rather our government to subsidize the land and let it set fallow.

Reply
Jul 23, 2021 17:24:53   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
Michael Rich wrote:
I believe that allowing our obvious enemy to purchase our farm lands is by greedy people, and is close to treason.

I would rather our government to subsidize the land and let it set fallow.


They are not the enemy.
Is your house also on the land ?

What will you do ?
When they pin the eviction notice on your door ?
Move out deadbeat , China is moving in.

But, please feel free to badmouth every dem on this planet for trying in vain to save your dumbasses.
Blame Biden first. It’s his fault China has warehouses filled with greenbacks.
And you don’t.

Reply
 
 
Jul 23, 2021 17:30:29   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production

Pop quiz, hotshot: Your biggest geopolitical adversary is buying up your country’s farmland. It’s buying up so much, in fact, that this feasibly could become a national security issue in a crisis or war. Do you stop it from buying more?

That’s apparently a trick question for Democrats. After all, what if treating your enemy like your enemy “would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e”?

That’s what could end up dooming an effort to stop buyers with connections to the Chinese C*******t Party from snapping up more of our farmland, according to Successful Farming. While the measure has bipartisan appeal, New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng is objecting to it on the grounds it could stoke hatred.

Last month, the House Appropriations Committee approved language that would stop Chinese-linked individuals or concerns from purchasing more land and bar the land already purchased from farm subsidies as part of a $197 billion spending bill for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

“The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly,” said GOP Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse, who proposed the amendment.

“There are currently no federal safeguards against the creation of this monopoly,” he said.

Chinese investors controlled roughly 192,000 agricultural acres in the U.S. at the beginning of 2020, worth $1.9 billion, according to Politico. That’s less than Canada and other European nations own and a fraction of a fraction of U.S. farmland.

However, China’s investments in foreign agriculture increased tenfold between 2009 and 2018, the USDA reported, and agricultural investment has been part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, purportedly to secure the country’s food chain. If the situation presented itself, of course, it could also be used to stoke insecurity in a geopolitical rival as well — particularly if that rival is America.

This has produced, for the most part, a rare moment of bipartisan comity.

Should America ban Chinese ownership of American farmland?
Yes: 99% (552 V**es)
No: 1% (7 V**es)
The amendment was introduced by a Republican in Newhouse — a more liberal one, to be sure, but a Republican nonetheless — and yet it made it out of a Democrat-controlled committee.

As Politico noted, voices as diverse as former Vice President Mike Pence and Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Elizabeth Warren have called for tightened restrictions.

Enter Meng, first vice chairwoman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who thinks the language might lead to more h**e crimes.

“It would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e,” she warned at the bill’s markup, according to Successful Farming.

“Can we honestly say that this amendment, which singles out one country, won’t have repercussions on Asian-Americans across our country?” Meng said. “Let’s include all of our adversaries.”

Newhouse responded that the language was “about c*******t China,” adding, “This is not about calling attention in any negative way to any group of people in this country.”

That just touches the surface of how strikingly ignorant Meng’s comments were, though.

First, I’m curious what kind of people would be curious enough about the world to pay attention to language about foreign ownership of farmland coming out of the agriculture appropriations subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, yet still incurious enough that it fanned the flames of anti-Asian hatred within their hearts.

This seems like an infinitesimal subset of individuals Meng wants to avoid provoking — if, indeed, it exists at all.

Yes, Meng’s counterproposal seems to be to sanction buyers from other nations, especially “all of our adversaries.” However, there’s only one adversary with the resources and the ill intent to be a destabilizing force on the U.S. food chain: China.

If Russia, Iran or North Korea gets around to having designs on American agricultural land buys, rest assured Republicans and Democrats can hold hands again and sanction those individual countries.

Besides the complexities of a blanket ban on foreign ownership of American farmland by our adversaries, however — including just what an adversary entails — there’s the fact such a ban remains a ban on China and only China in everything but language.

That means our hypothetical agricultural appropriations subcommittee-watching anti-Asian bigot will be no less inflamed as he watches that one pass on C-SPAN 3 as he would if it were solely a proscription on Beijing-linked ownership.

For now, it’s unclear how much weight Meng’s objection will carry.

Politico reported Monday that “Meng, Newhouse and committee leaders indicated they would find a solution as the legislation winds through Congress. The measure is expected to reach the House floor before the end of July, as part of a broader appropriations package, although the Senate has not yet drafted its own version of the spending bill.”

“We are new in this process,” said Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, agriculture appropriations subcommittee chairman. “I would suggest that we sit down and we work through it so we can accomplish our objective, but do it in a way that is sensitive to all those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.”

Note Bishop’s language: “those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.” Not “those who might be threatened by the approach,” just “offended.” This is about the professionally offended, not about any sort of tangible threat to the Asian-American community.

Perhaps there’s a way to appease both sides without watering down the amendment. If its efficacy is diluted, however, Meng and the Democrats are solely responsible for however much that jeopardizes America’s food supply.


https://www.westernjournal.com/democrat-lawmaker-oblivious-china-buys-us-farmland-sets-stage-foreign-monopoly-food-production/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Fa... (show quote)


It doesn’t matter who lives there, as long as they pay corporate what they owe.
It isn’t the Dems that purchased every piece of Chinese junk ever made. It isn’t the Dems fault republicans have been raping this country for 40 years. Playing middleman between you and China.
China makes everything you need.
Except a job.
Anything trickled down yet?
I mean except the tears.
Because you just realized you’ve been sold down the river.

Reply
Jul 23, 2021 17:40:03   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
Michael Rich wrote:
I believe that allowing our obvious enemy to purchase our farm lands is by greedy people, and is close to treason.

I would rather our government to subsidize the land and let it set fallow.


This would deny China’s Wealth of greenbacks.
If they want to spend it here buying up your country who will you blame.?
You can’t tell them they can’t spend it here, can you.
They acted in good faith providing you goods and services, now they want to spend what they’ve earned.
VooDoo Economics.
Ronald Reagan, the Koch Brothers.
Leaving land fallow has been done every year since corporate took over Big Ag. They collect a ton of money never growing anything. Your tax dollars at work.

Reply
Jul 23, 2021 17:54:42   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production

Pop quiz, hotshot: Your biggest geopolitical adversary is buying up your country’s farmland. It’s buying up so much, in fact, that this feasibly could become a national security issue in a crisis or war. Do you stop it from buying more?

That’s apparently a trick question for Democrats. After all, what if treating your enemy like your enemy “would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e”?

That’s what could end up dooming an effort to stop buyers with connections to the Chinese C*******t Party from snapping up more of our farmland, according to Successful Farming. While the measure has bipartisan appeal, New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng is objecting to it on the grounds it could stoke hatred.

Last month, the House Appropriations Committee approved language that would stop Chinese-linked individuals or concerns from purchasing more land and bar the land already purchased from farm subsidies as part of a $197 billion spending bill for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

“The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly,” said GOP Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse, who proposed the amendment.

“There are currently no federal safeguards against the creation of this monopoly,” he said.

Chinese investors controlled roughly 192,000 agricultural acres in the U.S. at the beginning of 2020, worth $1.9 billion, according to Politico. That’s less than Canada and other European nations own and a fraction of a fraction of U.S. farmland.

However, China’s investments in foreign agriculture increased tenfold between 2009 and 2018, the USDA reported, and agricultural investment has been part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, purportedly to secure the country’s food chain. If the situation presented itself, of course, it could also be used to stoke insecurity in a geopolitical rival as well — particularly if that rival is America.

This has produced, for the most part, a rare moment of bipartisan comity.

Should America ban Chinese ownership of American farmland?
Yes: 99% (552 V**es)
No: 1% (7 V**es)
The amendment was introduced by a Republican in Newhouse — a more liberal one, to be sure, but a Republican nonetheless — and yet it made it out of a Democrat-controlled committee.

As Politico noted, voices as diverse as former Vice President Mike Pence and Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Elizabeth Warren have called for tightened restrictions.

Enter Meng, first vice chairwoman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who thinks the language might lead to more h**e crimes.

“It would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e,” she warned at the bill’s markup, according to Successful Farming.

“Can we honestly say that this amendment, which singles out one country, won’t have repercussions on Asian-Americans across our country?” Meng said. “Let’s include all of our adversaries.”

Newhouse responded that the language was “about c*******t China,” adding, “This is not about calling attention in any negative way to any group of people in this country.”

That just touches the surface of how strikingly ignorant Meng’s comments were, though.

First, I’m curious what kind of people would be curious enough about the world to pay attention to language about foreign ownership of farmland coming out of the agriculture appropriations subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, yet still incurious enough that it fanned the flames of anti-Asian hatred within their hearts.

This seems like an infinitesimal subset of individuals Meng wants to avoid provoking — if, indeed, it exists at all.

Yes, Meng’s counterproposal seems to be to sanction buyers from other nations, especially “all of our adversaries.” However, there’s only one adversary with the resources and the ill intent to be a destabilizing force on the U.S. food chain: China.

If Russia, Iran or North Korea gets around to having designs on American agricultural land buys, rest assured Republicans and Democrats can hold hands again and sanction those individual countries.

Besides the complexities of a blanket ban on foreign ownership of American farmland by our adversaries, however — including just what an adversary entails — there’s the fact such a ban remains a ban on China and only China in everything but language.

That means our hypothetical agricultural appropriations subcommittee-watching anti-Asian bigot will be no less inflamed as he watches that one pass on C-SPAN 3 as he would if it were solely a proscription on Beijing-linked ownership.

For now, it’s unclear how much weight Meng’s objection will carry.

Politico reported Monday that “Meng, Newhouse and committee leaders indicated they would find a solution as the legislation winds through Congress. The measure is expected to reach the House floor before the end of July, as part of a broader appropriations package, although the Senate has not yet drafted its own version of the spending bill.”

“We are new in this process,” said Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, agriculture appropriations subcommittee chairman. “I would suggest that we sit down and we work through it so we can accomplish our objective, but do it in a way that is sensitive to all those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.”

Note Bishop’s language: “those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.” Not “those who might be threatened by the approach,” just “offended.” This is about the professionally offended, not about any sort of tangible threat to the Asian-American community.

Perhaps there’s a way to appease both sides without watering down the amendment. If its efficacy is diluted, however, Meng and the Democrats are solely responsible for however much that jeopardizes America’s food supply.


https://www.westernjournal.com/democrat-lawmaker-oblivious-china-buys-us-farmland-sets-stage-foreign-monopoly-food-production/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Fa... (show quote)


Goes right along with something I've been following. China's in for a fooooood CRISIS. They plan war and they've been put in a classic position by the even more "invisible enemy". Huge reliance on dams, d**es and levees. Massive water projects. S**tty work. Crazy weather. Flooding up the wazoo. Some people got caught in a subway after a dam breached! 12 died in the cars. Polluted flood water in a humongous percentage of their best cropland. No end in sight. Even if the rains stopped now it takes a season or two to get flood-ruined land arable again.

Reply
Jul 25, 2021 13:22:28   #
DamnYANKEE
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Farmland, Sets Stage for Foreign Monopoly on Our Own Food Production

Pop quiz, hotshot: Your biggest geopolitical adversary is buying up your country’s farmland. It’s buying up so much, in fact, that this feasibly could become a national security issue in a crisis or war. Do you stop it from buying more?

That’s apparently a trick question for Democrats. After all, what if treating your enemy like your enemy “would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e”?

That’s what could end up dooming an effort to stop buyers with connections to the Chinese C*******t Party from snapping up more of our farmland, according to Successful Farming. While the measure has bipartisan appeal, New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng is objecting to it on the grounds it could stoke hatred.

Last month, the House Appropriations Committee approved language that would stop Chinese-linked individuals or concerns from purchasing more land and bar the land already purchased from farm subsidies as part of a $197 billion spending bill for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

“The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly,” said GOP Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse, who proposed the amendment.

“There are currently no federal safeguards against the creation of this monopoly,” he said.

Chinese investors controlled roughly 192,000 agricultural acres in the U.S. at the beginning of 2020, worth $1.9 billion, according to Politico. That’s less than Canada and other European nations own and a fraction of a fraction of U.S. farmland.

However, China’s investments in foreign agriculture increased tenfold between 2009 and 2018, the USDA reported, and agricultural investment has been part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, purportedly to secure the country’s food chain. If the situation presented itself, of course, it could also be used to stoke insecurity in a geopolitical rival as well — particularly if that rival is America.

This has produced, for the most part, a rare moment of bipartisan comity.

Should America ban Chinese ownership of American farmland?
Yes: 99% (552 V**es)
No: 1% (7 V**es)
The amendment was introduced by a Republican in Newhouse — a more liberal one, to be sure, but a Republican nonetheless — and yet it made it out of a Democrat-controlled committee.

As Politico noted, voices as diverse as former Vice President Mike Pence and Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Elizabeth Warren have called for tightened restrictions.

Enter Meng, first vice chairwoman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who thinks the language might lead to more h**e crimes.

“It would perpetuate already rising anti-Asian h**e,” she warned at the bill’s markup, according to Successful Farming.

“Can we honestly say that this amendment, which singles out one country, won’t have repercussions on Asian-Americans across our country?” Meng said. “Let’s include all of our adversaries.”

Newhouse responded that the language was “about c*******t China,” adding, “This is not about calling attention in any negative way to any group of people in this country.”

That just touches the surface of how strikingly ignorant Meng’s comments were, though.

First, I’m curious what kind of people would be curious enough about the world to pay attention to language about foreign ownership of farmland coming out of the agriculture appropriations subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, yet still incurious enough that it fanned the flames of anti-Asian hatred within their hearts.

This seems like an infinitesimal subset of individuals Meng wants to avoid provoking — if, indeed, it exists at all.

Yes, Meng’s counterproposal seems to be to sanction buyers from other nations, especially “all of our adversaries.” However, there’s only one adversary with the resources and the ill intent to be a destabilizing force on the U.S. food chain: China.

If Russia, Iran or North Korea gets around to having designs on American agricultural land buys, rest assured Republicans and Democrats can hold hands again and sanction those individual countries.

Besides the complexities of a blanket ban on foreign ownership of American farmland by our adversaries, however — including just what an adversary entails — there’s the fact such a ban remains a ban on China and only China in everything but language.

That means our hypothetical agricultural appropriations subcommittee-watching anti-Asian bigot will be no less inflamed as he watches that one pass on C-SPAN 3 as he would if it were solely a proscription on Beijing-linked ownership.

For now, it’s unclear how much weight Meng’s objection will carry.

Politico reported Monday that “Meng, Newhouse and committee leaders indicated they would find a solution as the legislation winds through Congress. The measure is expected to reach the House floor before the end of July, as part of a broader appropriations package, although the Senate has not yet drafted its own version of the spending bill.”

“We are new in this process,” said Democrat Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, agriculture appropriations subcommittee chairman. “I would suggest that we sit down and we work through it so we can accomplish our objective, but do it in a way that is sensitive to all those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.”

Note Bishop’s language: “those who might be somewhat offended by the approach.” Not “those who might be threatened by the approach,” just “offended.” This is about the professionally offended, not about any sort of tangible threat to the Asian-American community.

Perhaps there’s a way to appease both sides without watering down the amendment. If its efficacy is diluted, however, Meng and the Democrats are solely responsible for however much that jeopardizes America’s food supply.


https://www.westernjournal.com/democrat-lawmaker-oblivious-china-buys-us-farmland-sets-stage-foreign-monopoly-food-production/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859
Democrat Lawmaker Oblivious as China Buys Up US Fa... (show quote)

And THAT should be completely ILLEGAL . Just like buying up our Businesses here too. this is pure 100% BULLSCHIFF

Reply
 
 
Jul 25, 2021 14:37:11   #
Michael Rich Loc: Lapine Oregon
 
Milosia2 wrote:
They are not the enemy.
Is your house also on the land ?

What will you do ?
When they pin the eviction notice on your door ?
Move out deadbeat , China is moving in.

But, please feel free to badmouth every dem on this planet for trying in vain to save your dumbasses.
Blame Biden first. It’s his fault China has warehouses filled with greenbacks.
And you don’t.



You don't make sense very often, do you?

Reply
Jul 25, 2021 15:39:49   #
Oldsailor65 Loc: Iowa
 
DamnYANKEE wrote:
And THAT should be completely ILLEGAL . Just like buying up our Businesses here too. this is pure 100% BULLSCHIFF


I agree

Reply
Jul 25, 2021 15:43:19   #
Oldsailor65 Loc: Iowa
 
Michael Rich wrote:
You don't make sense very often, do you?


That's fer dammed sure...

Reply
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