Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) said a lot of wild things during his Sunday morning media blitz. But one of his comments has received far less attention than the others: Vance described a federal program that has distributed nearly $2 billion to mostly Black farmers who experienced discrimination as “disgraceful,” suggesting that it is racist against white people.

And now, the head of the largest group of Black farmers across the country is condemning Vance’s assertions.

“He owes us an apology,” John Boyd, Jr., founder and president of the National Black Farmers Association, told me. The remarks, Boyd added, were “disgraceful, deplorable, dumb, degrading, and disrespectful to the nation’s Black farmers, the oldest occupation in history for Black people.”

  • @DxK
    link
    English
    63 months ago

    Correct. JD Vance said a thing on Sunday. The founder of the National Black Farmers Association responded. Mother Jones then wrote an article about it on Friday. This is a fairly standard sequence of events for the news. Except, of course, in that old tv show, Early Edition, about the guy who’d get tomorrow’s newspaper today and then have to prevent some tragedy from happening in every episode.

    • Optional
      link
      -33 months ago

      Given that they were closer to the Sunday happening in roughly 3-7 hours from now than the Sunday in question, I think it’d have been handy to say “last Sunday”. Yes, that is the obvious conclusion, but when talking about the trump campaign it’s better to be clear because the most bizarre story or quote has a pretty good chance of being true.

      A “fairly standard sequence” would be to have written it last Monday, but apparently the head of the NBFA replied only . . . what, Friday the 16th? It doesn’t say. It says he “told me”, and that’s it.

      • @DxK
        link
        English
        7
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        If you don’t understand that an article written on Friday, which refers to an event on “Sunday” without any additional qualifiers, is always going to be referring to the most recent Sunday and not the future… Then I don’t know what to tell you, this isn’t rocket science.

        • Optional
          link
          03 months ago

          I thought they may have meant Friday. Or any of the other five days since. Y’know, a Sunday barnstorm of Meet the Twaddle is customary, but - what, do they tape it a day ahead? Why would they write an article so late about it?

          You just normally see an article about a Sunday press appearance earlier than Saturday. And for whatever reason, probably in large part because I make efforts to avoid that 1950’s excruciatingly overwrought political theatre brought to us by the makers of Parliament cigarettes, I didn’t see anything else about his predictably awful interviews.

          Sorry to bother you.

          • @DxK
            link
            English
            1
            edit-2
            3 months ago

            You just normally see an article about a Sunday press appearance earlier than Saturday.

            Holy shit dude. For the last time, the article is about the founder of the National Black Farmer Association’s comments regarding what JD Vance said. That’s why it was written on Friday. Vance’s comments were from Sunday. Then the NBFA’s founder spoke out about it days later. I literally cannot dumb this down for you any more than I already have.