by mbailey1234 » Sat Feb 15, 2014 4:31 pm
I kind of struggle a bit with this envy of the successful thing. Some days I really regret not jumping into the farming thing. I would have been starting in the mid 90's and when I look at this now it would have been a wise move. The farmer I worked for all through high school and a couple of years after is living large now. It's easy to look at what they have accumulated with a lot of envy which I would rather not be doing. There is one thing I just can't get past though. Since 1995 his operation has received over $2.4 million in subsidy, disaster and other handout payments. I'm not sure I have the stomach for that if that's what it takes to be successful. His mindset is if he doesn't take it, someone else will. It's not like the government is not going to spend it. I guess I agree with that but I still don't like that a handful of law makers can just pass out everyone else's money. Just last year he got a $53,000 grant to put in a grain leg. The total project was about $120,000. They get money to build terraces and bury drainage tile. All of this can be written off as an expense on their taxes. How did we end up in this situation?????
We operate a BBQ business. If someone said we have a program that will guarantee you $2000 per day whether you sell that much or not, and the premium doesn't cost much, hell yes I would take it. I wouldn't have to check the forecast anymore to see if I thought we will be having a good day. Just fix it and if it sells, great! If not, well I guess you guys (taxpayers) will just have to pick up the tab. Next thing you know, everybody will have a BBQ business. Then the price of trailers, grills, refrigerators, etc, will go through the roof since all of a sudden there is a shortage. Look at the inflation we have seen in farm related items such as land, machinery, etc. If they pulled the safety net it would collapse over night.
I realize that food is a weapon and there are several ways to look at this situation but when I'm at a buddies house last summer and he shows me a check for $42,000 that he had no idea what it was for but later finds out it was a disaster payment adjustment from 08 and 09 I think something is terribly wrong with the system. He only farmed about 800 acres back then so take that to the scale of 90 million acres and it's nothing short of astonishing. Then he has the nerve to complain about having to pay taxes on that money!