but here's the kicker, hypocrisy, and greed......
The Trump administration created the market facilitation program (MFP) to offset the effects of the trade war, directing about $24 billion to American farmers. About 99.5% of the initial payments went to white farmers.
In 2020, the USDA established the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP) to provide billions in financial aid to farmers impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. The Environmental Working Group (EWG) found that as of October 2020, nearly 97% of the $9.2 billion in CFAP aid that had been distributed went to white farmers. Furthermore, white farmers received on average eight times more in aid ($3,398) than the average Black farmer ($422).
now these mufuckas wanna sue, cuz black farmers are being given $4 billion in subsidies??? FOH!!
A group of American farmers, all of them white, is suing the government for race-based discrimination, alleging that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s loan forgiveness program for Black farmers is a violation under the Constitution.
www.yahoo.com
White farmers sue U.S. government over stimulus for 'socially disadvantaged farmers'
A group of American farmers, all of them white, is
suing the government for race-based discrimination, alleging that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s
loan forgiveness program for farmers of color is a violation under the Constitution.
“All of my clients just want to be treated equally,” Daniel Lennington, deputy counsel and lead attorney for the lawsuit, told Yahoo Finance. “They’re not looking for any special treatment. If there is a loan forgiveness program, they want it to be open to everyone, regardless of race. And if the USDA would like to formulate the loan forgiveness program to help farmers who have a particular need, my clients would be all in favor of that.”
The program, which allocated roughly $4 billion for "socially disadvantaged farmers, ranchers, or forest landowners," is part of a larger
stimulus bill signed into law amid the coronavirus pandemic.
"Socially disadvantaged" in this case is
defined as relating to groups "subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice because of their identity as members of a group without regard to their individual qualities."
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack previously
stated that Biden administration policies aim to "root out whatever systemic racism and barriers may exist at the Department of Agriculture directed to Black farmers, socially disadvantaged farmers, and people who live in persistently poor areas of rural America."
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack holds a press briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC. on May 5, 2021. (Photo by Nicholas Kamm / AFP)
Eligible farmers would see up to 120% of their outstanding debts paid off as a result of the
American Rescue Plan, with the extra 20% going toward taxes associated with the outstanding debt. An additional $1.01 billion in the bill will be provided for outreach, training, education, technical assistance, grants and loans, and funding for improving land access.
Lennington asserted that the plaintiffs are "all for USDA fixing its past racism with programs that are targeted to the victims of that racism. We would love for USDA to go out and find those farmers it discriminated against, and even their children, and make it up to them. But this law is specifically not targeted to the victims of race discrimination.”
The lawsuit argues that the Constitution “forbids discrimination by the federal government against any citizen because of his race.” Therefore, according to the plaintiffs, any race-based classifications “must be subjected to the most rigid scrutiny.”
John Boyd, president of the National Black Farmers Association, told Yahoo Finance that the lawsuit “shows the troubling pattern, and it looks like we’re going back in time in history where they just don’t want Blacks to have anything and be willing to be treated with dignity and respect. That’s it."
Farmer John W. Boyd Jr. criticized the lawsuit. (Photo by Scott J. Ferrell/Congressional Quarterly/Getty Images)
'Eight out of 10 Blacks in the state of Texas who applied for federal aid were denied'
Boyd stressed that Black farmers were
facing problems related to discrimination and lack of government support long before the pandemic.
“I’ve been trying to get debt relief for Blacks and other farmers of color for over 30 years,” he said. “This wasn’t a new request at all. When I first heard about the [new lawsuit], I immediately thought about history where Blacks were enslaved, Native Americans lost all their land at the great of many white men.”
There were nearly 1 million Black farmers in 1920, the most ever. As of April 2019, there are roughly 45,500 Black farmers, which account for 1.3% of the population,
the Guardian reported. Those farmers own just 0.52% of farmland in the country, while making less than $40,000 a year (compared to white farmers who make over $190,000 annually).
The agriculture commissioner for the state of Texas, Sid Miller,
also filed a lawsuit against the stimulus program for farmers of color, calling it unconstitutional.
Asked about Miller's lawsuit, Boyd noted that "eight out of 10 Blacks in the state of Texas who applied for federal aid were denied. So instead of filing a suit to complain for white farmers, why isn’t he doing something to help Black farmers in his very own state obtain access to credit that USDA and other state agencies where he could be more helpful to farmers of color there?”