Cory Booker & Warren,Gillibrand to introduce Justice for Black Farmers bill

NO-BadAzz

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good.

edit: they still doing this shyt tho:





LOL. They can't help it.

That's every farmer who will say they are at a disadvantage due to Covid etc

Trick bag ass language

Take that shyt out, or just say disadvantage black farmer
 

get these nets

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UPDATE


$5 Billion of the Stimulus Bill Seeks to Undo Damage Done to Farmers of Color


March 10, 2021
AP10092019200.jpg

Virginia farmer John Boyd drives his tractor near the the Capitol in Washington in 2010.Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo




The US Department of Agriculture exists in part to help farmers “guard against uncertainties of weather and markets and to improve stability of the agricultural economy.” But for Black farmers, the department has been more a source of trauma than a haven against it. For decades, the agency systematically denied them access to the loans and other aid lavished on their white peers, contributing to foreclosures and land loss for thousands of farm families.

The trend has continued since. In 2020, the USDA’s Coronavirus Food Assistance Program delivered 97 percent of its $9.2 billion in agriculture aid to white farmers, while largely giving Black farmers the shaft.

Until now, Congress had “done a lot more to protect the bald eagle than it had to protect us,” said John Boyd, founder of the National Black Farmers Association.
But the $1.9 trillion COVID-relief package known as the American Rescue Plan Act, on the verge of passage through Congress, would push the USDA down quite a new path. Included in the bill is $10.4 billion in support for agriculture—and this time, the aid won’t be allowed to bypass farmers of color. Nearly half of it will be targeted at what the USDA calls “socially disadvantaged” farmers, or those who have been “subjected to racial or ethnic prejudices because of their identity as a member of a group without regard to their individual qualities.” The group includes Black Americans, Native Americans, Alaskan natives, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Pacific Islanders.

The bill devotes $4 billion to debt relief for farmers of color with outstanding USDA loans. For comparison’s sake, the last time Black farmers won support from the federal government at anywhere near that scale, they required a class-action lawsuit. The 1999 Pigford vs. Glickman case, which documented years of systemic racism against the USDA, ultimately resulted in a pair of settlements worth about $2 billion for Black farmers—a fraction of the value of land lost over decades of discrimination.

Based on the amount Congress allocated to Black farmers, the current COVID-relief bill amounts to the “most significant legislation for Black people since the Voting Rights Act,” said Virginia farmer John Boyd, founder of the National Black Farmers Association. It will help a remnant generation of Black farmers who are “fighting to hold on.” Before the bill, Congress had “done a lot more to protect the bald eagle than it had to protect us,” he added.

Another $1 billion in support would go towards other forms of aid, including grants to help families sort out tangled ownership issues triggered by farmers dying without a will. That situation was commonplace in the Jim Crow-era south, when Black people had scant access to legal services. And it lingers today—the “heirs’ property” problem, as it’s known, has left many Black farmers in financial limbo.





Bernice Atchison, an 83-year old Alabama farmer and activist, applauded the $5 billion in aid, but said it was too little, too late for Black farmers of her generation who lived under the unrelenting stress of USDA discrimination. “Most of the people who would have benefited from that debt relief have died,” she said. “And that’s a shame.”

The new bill’s provisions have their roots in the Justice for Black Farmers Act, the landmark bill sponsored by Sen. Cory Booker last November. That bill’s headline proposal featured $80 billion in spending over 10 years to buy land and grant it to new and existing Black farmers, in repayment for the USDA’s long history of discrimination. It also included debt relief and other support, which Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), along with Booker and others, broke out into a narrower bill, Emergency Relief for Farmers of Color Act, introduced in early February. The COVID-relief legislation now about to hit President Joe Biden’s desk drew on Warnock’s proposal for its $5 billion in support for farmers of color.

That support survived the Congressional process despite multiple attempts by Republicans to kill it with amendments. “We should never discriminate… and that goes both ways,” Rep. Trent Kelly (R.-Miss.) told the trade magazine Successful Farming last month. “Why should the color of your skin be the measure or whether you should get a USDA payback plan?” he added, apparently unaware of—or unconcerned by—the department’s long and well-documented history of intervening on behalf of white farmers at the expense of others.

While support in the COVID-relief bill will help keep some current farmers color afloat, “much more work needs to be done to address the long-standing discrimination” that has helped trigger millions of acres of land loss, Boyd said. Righting that injustice, and “getting a new generation of Black farmers tilling the ground,” will require the land-reform provisions embedded in the Justice for Black Farmers Act, he said. He hopes to see that bill-reintroduced by Booker and Warnock this year
 

get these nets

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You'd think people would've been killed that noise about the whole "your vote doesn't matter" steeze after the GA primaries and how that cac De Santais flipped the bill on allowing inmates to vote in Florida

but gotta get them daps/likes/retweets.
Guys who were saying that here pretty much know that they were conned/manipulated. Pride won't let them admit that they were exploited.

But it's common knowledge at this point that it was a Rep. campaign strategy to limit the voter turnout. They gave some coins to influencers from different communities to promote that to disillusioned voters.
 

Wiseborn

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UPDATE


$5 Billion of the Stimulus Bill Seeks to Undo Damage Done to Farmers of Color


March 10, 2021
AP10092019200.jpg

Virginia farmer John Boyd drives his tractor near the the Capitol in Washington in 2010.Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo




The US Department of Agriculture exists in part to help farmers “guard against uncertainties of weather and markets and to improve stability of the agricultural economy.” But for Black farmers, the department has been more a source of trauma than a haven against it. For decades, the agency systematically denied them access to the loans and other aid lavished on their white peers, contributing to foreclosures and land loss for thousands of farm families.

The trend has continued since. In 2020, the USDA’s Coronavirus Food Assistance Program delivered 97 percent of its $9.2 billion in agriculture aid to white farmers, while largely giving Black farmers the shaft.

Until now, Congress had “done a lot more to protect the bald eagle than it had to protect us,” said John Boyd, founder of the National Black Farmers Association.
But the $1.9 trillion COVID-relief package known as the American Rescue Plan Act, on the verge of passage through Congress, would push the USDA down quite a new path. Included in the bill is $10.4 billion in support for agriculture—and this time, the aid won’t be allowed to bypass farmers of color. Nearly half of it will be targeted at what the USDA calls “socially disadvantaged” farmers, or those who have been “subjected to racial or ethnic prejudices because of their identity as a member of a group without regard to their individual qualities.” The group includes Black Americans, Native Americans, Alaskan natives, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Pacific Islanders.

The bill devotes $4 billion to debt relief for farmers of color with outstanding USDA loans. For comparison’s sake, the last time Black farmers won support from the federal government at anywhere near that scale, they required a class-action lawsuit. The 1999 Pigford vs. Glickman case, which documented years of systemic racism against the USDA, ultimately resulted in a pair of settlements worth about $2 billion for Black farmers—a fraction of the value of land lost over decades of discrimination.

Based on the amount Congress allocated to Black farmers, the current COVID-relief bill amounts to the “most significant legislation for Black people since the Voting Rights Act,” said Virginia farmer John Boyd, founder of the National Black Farmers Association. It will help a remnant generation of Black farmers who are “fighting to hold on.” Before the bill, Congress had “done a lot more to protect the bald eagle than it had to protect us,” he added.

Another $1 billion in support would go towards other forms of aid, including grants to help families sort out tangled ownership issues triggered by farmers dying without a will. That situation was commonplace in the Jim Crow-era south, when Black people had scant access to legal services. And it lingers today—the “heirs’ property” problem, as it’s known, has left many Black farmers in financial limbo.





Bernice Atchison, an 83-year old Alabama farmer and activist, applauded the $5 billion in aid, but said it was too little, too late for Black farmers of her generation who lived under the unrelenting stress of USDA discrimination. “Most of the people who would have benefited from that debt relief have died,” she said. “And that’s a shame.”

The new bill’s provisions have their roots in the Justice for Black Farmers Act, the landmark bill sponsored by Sen. Cory Booker last November. That bill’s headline proposal featured $80 billion in spending over 10 years to buy land and grant it to new and existing Black farmers, in repayment for the USDA’s long history of discrimination. It also included debt relief and other support, which Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), along with Booker and others, broke out into a narrower bill, Emergency Relief for Farmers of Color Act, introduced in early February. The COVID-relief legislation now about to hit President Joe Biden’s desk drew on Warnock’s proposal for its $5 billion in support for farmers of color.

That support survived the Congressional process despite multiple attempts by Republicans to kill it with amendments. “We should never discriminate… and that goes both ways,” Rep. Trent Kelly (R.-Miss.) told the trade magazine Successful Farming last month. “Why should the color of your skin be the measure or whether you should get a USDA payback plan?” he added, apparently unaware of—or unconcerned by—the department’s long and well-documented history of intervening on behalf of white farmers at the expense of others.

While support in the COVID-relief bill will help keep some current farmers color afloat, “much more work needs to be done to address the long-standing discrimination” that has helped trigger millions of acres of land loss, Boyd said. Righting that injustice, and “getting a new generation of Black farmers tilling the ground,” will require the land-reform provisions embedded in the Justice for Black Farmers Act, he said. He hopes to see that bill-reintroduced by Booker and Warnock this year
looks pretty tangible to me
 

get these nets

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Booker Appointed to Senate Agriculture Committee

February 02, 2021

Washington, DC -- US Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) has been appointed to the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, one of the oldest Senate committees whose jurisdiction focuses on agriculture, nutrition, food, and hunger.


In addition to Booker, Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) was also appointed to the committee, marking the first time in history two African-Americans will serve simultaneously on the panel. The pair are only the second and third African-Americans to ever serve on the Senate Agriculture Committee in its history.

========================
Full list of the Ag. Committee is here

Committee Membership | The United States Senate Committee On Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry




and Rep. David Scott was elected chair of the House Agriculture Committee.

400363-200px.jpeg
 
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