Thanks for posting this thread, Katana. People usually go into serious doze mode at the first mention of "farming" or "subsidies" (which inattention is partially to blame for the current state of affairs). Understand that the USDA agricultural subsidies regime is a textbook example of what happens when interests of politicians and a narrow special group overlap exactly. The 2004 Presidential Election voting behavior in two side by side states helps illustrate.
You're welcome. Always nice to know one's rants are appreciated.
Upshot? We get screwed and farmers get paid massive subsidies to either not farm or to produce way more of what they were going to produce anyway. Laugh about that the next time you're eating a peanut butter sandwich that cost 4 times what it should and wash it down with milk that costs 5 times what it should. Food availability and price stability have absolutely nothing to do with it, other than making for some really tear jerking fancy rhetoric for the sentimental saps who are easily frightened by such Sh!tofbull.
Oh, I'm not laughing (I know that you were kidding). I'm really disturbed by this practice. Good grief. Wouldn't we all love to be in a business with this amount of sentimentally-, politically-, lobbyist-motivated protectionism. I share the concerns of those who point out its deleterious effects on developing nations. Look at how it has affected talks at the WTO.
However, those who express concerns about the potential for being dependent on other countries for something as vital as food have a point, too. I think that the recent pet food recall speaks to a real vulnerability.
Then again, how good a job is the FDA doing at monitoring the safety of our domestic food supply? Of course, when a goverrnment chooses to underfund its regulatory bodies while sending billions each week to Iraq and providing hundreds of millions to bail out business as we see in this spending bill, well, I can only say that it gets what it pays for.