-Caveat Lector-

Dear Friends,

Pat's speech on farm rights and his 10 point plan below.

GO PAT GO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Linda

As always feel free to forward across the USA!

---------------------------------------

The Principle Group -- Des Moines, Iowa
August 9, 1999

A FAMILY FARM BILL OF RIGHTS
Patrick J. Buchanan

For many Americans, these are the best of times.  Unemployment and interest
rates
are low, prices are stable, and on Wall Street the bulls have been running
wild.  But
not everyone is marching in the great parade of American prosperity.

Look past those brimming silos and fields of corn, and you'll see a harvest
of
heartache in the heartland of America.  Those silos store last year's crop
that was
packed in because prices were too low to turn a profit.  As for those full
fields, some of
that crop may rot on the ground because farmers can't afford to harvest it.

This year, the price of cotton is down 46%; wheat prices are off 61%.  Corn
has
reached the lowest price in two decades, and soybeans that sold for $8 a
bushel three
years ago bring just $3.50.

The specter of depression haunts the farmlands of America.  But this crisis
is different.
 It has struck Iowa when the growing conditions are good and farmers
anticipate a
record soybean harvest and the third greatest corn crop ever.  The problem is
price.

The Asian economic disaster that spread to Russia and Latin America sent
foreign
demand for U.S. farm products crashing 40%.  Desperate to offload their own
subsidized oversupply, countries began dumping into the U.S. market.
Invoking the
Global Economy, Mr. Clinton refused to take action.  America's farmers are
paying the
price, as are implement companies and hardware stores, coffee shops and car
dealerships across the great American breadbasket.

Washington and Wall Street may believe it inevitable that the family farm
must pass
away.   But, as a conservative, I believe that family farms and rural towns
must be
conserved.  So, today, I offer this ten-point pact, a Bill of Rights for the
Family Farm:
First, I will, as President, abolish all inheritance and capital gains taxes
on family
farms.  Americans over the age of 55 own half of our farmland.  But
inheritance taxes
prevent these farmers from bequeathing a birthright to their children.

When I was here in Iowa in 1995, I visited a farm in Ida County where the
Paulsrud
family had lived nearly a century.  Like many of their neighbors, their
grandparents had
started with a small plot, farmed it, added buildings, and bought nearby
land.  Their
son did the same, building up and adding on.  By 1995, the Paulsrud family
had 2,000
acres worth about $1,500 an acre.  When I spoke to that elderly farmer, he
told me he
dreamed of passing the farm on to his son.  But his son couldn't buy it
because of the
capital gains taxes.  And if he died, his son would have to pay a federal
inheritance tax
of 55% -- a million dollars.  Where would an Iowa farmer get that kind of
money?  Only
by selling that family farm that had been cobbled together over a century.
It shouldn't
work this way in America.

Second, we must repeal NAFTA.  Since NAFTA passed, U.S. agriculture imports
from
Canada and Mexico have increased 57%, and our agriculture trade surplus with
the
two countries has shrunk by two-thirds.  Stand on our northern border and
you'll see
four times as many head of imported cattle heading south as you did a decade
ago.
2000% more spring wheat.  Seven times as many hogs.

Move to the southern border and you'll see Mexican trucks hauling the
tomatoes that
have cost Florida farmers $1 billion in lost revenue, or the strawberries
that infected
270 Americans with Hepatitis A in 1997.  This is the fruit of a NAFTA trade
deal that
failed to consider the possibility that our neighbors would cheapen their
currencies to
take unfair advantage of American farmers.

Now, make no mistake: I am not against trade.  I believe we must take
aggressive
action to open overseas markets to U.S. farm products.  But we must stop
unilaterally
throwing open our markets to Japan, China, the Pacific Rim and the EU, when
they
deny us free and fair access to their markets.  Over the past decade, we've
courted the
Chinese with trade privileges and unrestricted imports at the cost of a $60
billion
annual trade deficit.  Meanwhile, Beijing has slashed U.S. farm imports by
$100
million, and slapped 40% tariffs on U.S. agricultural products.

Why do not Republicans stand up to the Beijing regime, and stand up for the
American farmer?  Those Republicans, like Mr. Bush and Mr. Forbes, who have
embraced the Clinton-Gore policy of appeasing China with Most Favored Nation
trade
privileges bear equal responsibility for the Iowa farms that today hover on
the brink of
bankruptcy.

Mr. Bush, Mr. Forbes and Mrs. Dole now say we must open foreign markets.
But
when you have unilaterally given up total access to your own market, what
leverage do
you have left to pry open the protected markets of Europe, Asia and Latin
America?

Mrs. Dole says the road to prosperity for American farmers lies in giving
"fast track"
authority to Bill Clinton.  But fast track is the surrender by Congress of
all rights to
amend trade treaties.  Why should a Republican Congress sign a blank check to
a
Clinton-Gore trade team that this year will amass a $325 billion merchandise
trade
deficit-equal to 4% of our Gross Domestic Product?

The Clinton-Gore team is the most incompetent collection of trade negotiators
this
continent has seen since the Indians sold Manhattan for twenty-four dollars
worth of
baubles and beads.

Critics call me a protectionist.  But if our trade laws are not there to
protect Americans
who are they written for?  Today, the price of virtually every farm commodity
we
produce-hogs, corn, beans, cattle, wheat, apples, milk, cotton --  has fallen
below their
cost of production.   When that happens, imports kill farms.

If prices remain at these levels for any extended period of time, every
family farm in
this country will face bankruptcy and ruin  Therefore, as President, I would
impose
this policy: Whenever the price of a commodity falls below the cost of
production, we
stop importing that commodity into the United States, to save our family
farms.  It is
time Republicans and Democrats both put the American economy before the
Global
Economy and America's farmers ahead of the claims of any and all foreign
regimes.

Third, I will abolish the IMF and end these taxpayer bailouts of foreign
competitors of
U.S. farmers.

Twenty years ago, we produced 70% of the world's soybeans, Brazil 5%.  Today,
our
share has fallen to 47%, Brazil's has risen to 20%.  And Brazil has lately
cleared 150
million new acres for soybean production.   Yet, in 1998, the U.S. led a $41
IMF
bailout of Brazil, which then devalued its currency by 40%, giving Brazilian
farms a
new 40% price advantage over Iowa farmers.   Thus, via the IMF, are U.S.
citizens
forced to subsidize the destruction of Iowa farms.
Last year, the World Bank lent $10 billion to Asian countries, with promotion
of
agriculture the bank's highest priority.  These loans are guaranteed by U.S.
taxpayers.
 Thus, via the World Bank, are Americans citizens subsidizing the destruction
of Iowa
farms.  It is time to privatize the World Bank and abolish the IMF.

Fourth, I will stop using food as a weapon, and review all existing embargoes
and
sanctions of foreign countries.  The denial of food does not hurt dictators;
it hurts their
subject peoples and American farmers, while our faithless allies rush in to
fill the
orders.

Fifth, I will enforce existing anti-trust laws to prevent the mega-mergers
that are forcing
vertical integration of American agriculture.  In 1921, the Packers and
Stockyards Act
was passed in response to near 50% consolidation of the U.S. meatpacking
industry
by five packers.  Today, five corporations control 89% of all beef
processing.  But
rather than blocking the consolidation of these giant conglomerates, the
federal
government continues to approve mergers like the Cargill-Continental deal
that
concentrates 42% of U.S. corn exports, one-third of soybeans, and 20% of U.S.
wheat
exports in the hands of a single transnational corporation.

Family farms cannot compete against transnationals that fix prices by closed
contracts, leverage trade deals, secure tax benefits that are unavailable to
independent
producers, and operate branches of their empires at a loss until small
competitors
collapse.

Witness what industrialization has done to poultry: In 1940, 85% of farms
raised
chickens.  Today, ten companies control two-thirds of the industry, with
Tyson
roosting on top with a 22% share of the market.  From egg to chicken, total
control of
the production process belongs to corporations with no stake in local
communities.

A June USDA report states that, "The poultry industry models the type of
business
organization that may characterize U.S. farming in the future."  Farms turned
into
factories controlled by far away investors-with farmers as assembly-line
workers-is this
what the first American farmers envisioned?

Sixth, just as resisting consolidation will encourage fairer competition, so,
too, will
requiring price disclosure.  Last year, when pork producers were getting
eight cents a
pound -- $20 for a hog that cost $75 to raise, IBP, the country's second
largest pork
processor, reported quadrupled earnings in the fourth quarter, and Hormel
Foods
enjoyed the most profitable year in its 107-year history.
While bankrupt family farmers were shooting hogs or giving them away, giant
hog
confinements were cashing in on contracts with packers willing to pay premium
prices
for large shipments.  By law, processors only have to reveal the prices they
pay on the
open market; contract prices are private.  So the family farmer with his
perishable
commodity and single community buyer is not only being muscled out by the
mega-
producer.  He must also contend with an anti-competitive producer-packer
partnership
that makes basic pricing privileged information.

Seventh, just as I support the independence of the family farm, I support a
policy of
U.S. energy independence that includes a strong stand for ethanol.  This
industry
creates 40,000 jobs, adds $12 billion in net farm income each year, and
decreases the
demand for foreign OPEC oil.  Here in Iowa, with the move on to ban MTBE,
ethanol's
chief competitor, the expanded market for ethanol could add 50 cents a bushel
to the
price of corn.

Eighth, saving the family farm will require a rewrite of the Endangered
Species Act so
that Congress is forced to vote on every species that is listed as
endangered.  Let me
tell you about the Domenigoni family in Winchester, California.  They've
lived on the
same land for over a century, but recently the endangered Stephens kangaroo
rat took
up residence on their ranch.  The feds found the rats, and forced the family
to idle 800
acres at a cost of $400,000.

The Domenigonis were not compensated, and after they were forbidden to use
farm
equipment to build firebreaks, 25,000 acres were scorched by wildfires.  The
rats
perished, but not before they took that family's livelihood with them.

Ninth, we should exempt family farms from OSHA and begin a regulatory
revolution to
restore sanity to federal regulation.  I will impose a moratorium on new
regulation,
require a sunset provision of five years on all regulation, and institute a
defined annual
cutback in paperwork for family farms.

Tenth, we must restore farmers' property rights under the Fifth Amendment and
end
the regulatory theft of property rights without just compensation.  In Forest
City, here
in Iowa, when the Johnson family tried to install drainage on 36 acres of
their farm, a
federal judge declared it a protected "wetland."  The Johnsons were
threatened with jail
time and fines of $25,000 a day, unless they spent their own money to turn
the
farmland into an eco-preserve.
Enough is enough: Private holdings are not public habitats, and unelected
bureaucrats
must not be allowed to force citizens to cede their property without due
process and
just payment.

I want to close with a story.  It started 120 years ago when Terry Naas'
great-
grandfather staked out a homestead in Nelson County, North Dakota, and sank
deep
roots into this soil.  He didn't have much to bequeath to his son, but by the
time
Terry's father took over, the Naas family farm had grown to 3,000 acres.

This year, Terry planted wheat, barley, and sunflowers, but the land farmed
by his
father and uncles won't provide enough for his wife Karen and their two young
children.
Last year, they moved 55 miles away so Karen could work at the Post Office.
As he
commutes back to his family's farm each day, Terry struggles with the same
dilemma
facing many American farmers.  "You can't afford to keep going, but you can't
afford to
quit," he says.  "After 120 years in the family, you hate to be the one to
end it,
especially when it's all I've thought about for the last 30 years.  It's all
I ever wanted to
do, but am I the one to end it?"

In 1785, Jefferson wrote to John Jay that America's farmers were our "most
vigorous,
most independent, most virtuous" citizens, who are "tied to their country and
wedded
to its liberty and interests with the most lasting bands."

We must keep faith with these Americans, by ensuring that their dreams are
not
buried beneath dumped imports, or plowed under by transnational corporations
with no
allegiance to anything but their own bottom line.  Family farmers are not
begging for
federal handouts.  Proud, hearty stock, they have, for love of the land,
weathered
droughts, overcome disease, and outlasted depression.  They simply want their
labor
to be valued, their products to be competitive, and their own government to
take their
side in the global marketplace.  America's farmers are asking nothing more.
They
deserve nothing less.

--------------------------------------

BUCHANAN FAMILY FARM BILL OF RIGHTS

1. Eliminate all inheritance and capital gains taxes.

2. Insist that all countries that trade with the U.S. give American farmers
open access
to their markets absent tariffs and quotas.

3. Abolish the IMF and end American taxpayer bailouts of foreign competitors
of U.S.
farmers.

4. Review all embargoes and sanctions of foreign countries that use food
exports as a
weapon.

5. Enforce existing anti-trust laws to prevent mega-mergers from forcing the
vertical
integration of American agriculture.

6. Require price disclosure.

7. Support ethanol production as integral to a policy of national energy
independence.

8. Rewrite the Endangered Species Act to require a vote of Congress on every
species
listed as endangered.

9. Launch a regulatory revolution by exempting family farms from OSHA,
imposing a
moratorium on all new regulation, requiring a sunset provision of five years
on all
regulation, and instituting a defined annual cutback in regulatory paperwork.


10.Restore farmers' Fifth Amendment property rights and end the regulatory
theft of
property without just compensation.

--------------------  end  --------------------------


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