• @derf82
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      139 months ago

      At times for some things. But tell me, is there a shortage right now of any major staple food/ingredient?

      The farmers are not the ones getting rich. It’s Nestle, Kraft, PepsiCo, General Mills, Kellogg’s and so on. As long as they remain the big market for what the farmer’s are selling, food prices won’t change. But the farmers could go under if their prices crash due to oversupply.

      • @afraid_of_zombies
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        -49 months ago

        Sorry why can’t you cosplay farmer simps keep your story straight? Half of you are arguing that farmers produce too much so the government is needed to make them produce less and the other half are arguing that farmers don’t produce enough and they need the government to make them produce more. Which is it?

        Just a fyi you can hold two ideas at once. There are asshole food distribution companies and there are asshole cosplay farmers getting subsidies to not grow. I know, my hometown was basically this. People pretending to be independent successful farmers when all they could grow was dirt and could only produce meth.

        • @[email protected]
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          89 months ago

          Seasonally and yearly there are different demands for crops. The government incentivizes and disincentivizes growing different crops at different times to promote a healthy market, and stable food supply.

          • @afraid_of_zombies
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            9 months ago

            Very well. Why isn’t there a subsidy in the north during oct/nov for milk? Cows production plummets during the switch to hay. Which is why milk prices get that bump during that time. Couldn’t be because the milk lobby is less effective compared to corn since it is much more scattered and hence doesn’t get nice solid voting blocks?

            Nah it must be for some deep metaphysical reason beyond our kin.

            • @derf82
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              69 months ago

              Maybe because you can’t manifest extra dairy cows out of the aether in the winter?

              The government does try to help by buying surplus dairy and turning into preservable cheese, but that has just led to bad jokes about “government cheese.”

              • @afraid_of_zombies
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                -49 months ago

                Maybe because you can’t manifest extra dairy cows out of the aether in the winter?

                No but what you can do is use dried milk fat to even out production, you can do is simply pay ranchers more for that month given that they are making less, you can do is freeze butter a month earlier and release it when milk gets more dear, what they can do is subsidize hay so it can be introduced slowly creating less of a shock.

                We don’t do any of those things. And why should we? Dairy lobby is no where near as powerful since it is spread out instead of concentrated. Which means less lobbying, less bribes, less government money.

                • @derf82
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                  49 months ago

                  We do have stuff like that. Ever hear of government cheese?

                  • @afraid_of_zombies
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                    -49 months ago

                    Yeah that program from the 1970s very relevant. I am talking now. 2024. In 2024 anyone milking a cow in an area that they need to have that cow on hay once in a while is not getting money for the winter shock. Which shows that it has nothing to do with dust bowls, preventing starvation, helping farmers, stabilizing prices, global warming or any other argument that wants to be dragged out to simp for jt. It is corruption, plain simple and ancient.

                    You can always tell when someone is lying by the number of bad explanations they give for something. Why did you go to the bathroom just now? Because you needed to. Why do you believe the government should throw money at farmers who can’t grow as a reward for failure? Here is fifty different arguments that can’t all be true.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              I know, my hometown was a small farming town.

              commenter explains the most basic farm economics

              Very well.

              You can hold two ideas at once you know. It’s called lying. Or making shit up about something you thought you knew about because you have the most base-line exposure possible. Or cognitive dissonance.

        • @derf82
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          79 months ago

          I don’t know what the hell a cosplay farmer is, but I am assuredly not one. I do my even have a god damn garden on my 0.10 acre city lot.

          Learn some history. Farmers have tried to overgrow to make more money, and it has led to collapse as the market forms a glut.

          The government does do something different with corn subsidies, causing over abundance of corn, but that has just lead to the overuse of corn syrup sugar, which is a major contributor to obesity.

          • @afraid_of_zombies
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            -89 months ago

            I see. So we are not going to mention the dust bowl and starvation argument anymore. Love how this arguments just keep wandering.

            Do you know what a moral ought from an is is?

            • @derf82
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              49 months ago

              On the subject of wandering arguments: you never answered my initial question: what staple food are we experiencing a major shortage of?

              We had shortages during the pandemic. They have largely resolved. But food companies have learned people still will buy food, so they kept prices high. What has truly hurt is consolidation. With so much food controlled by so few, competition isn’t working.

              Growing food isn’t without a massive carbon and environmental footprint. Trying to force a glut which will just result is spoiled food and bankrupt farmers is not the answer.

              • @afraid_of_zombies
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                -59 months ago

                what staple food are we experiencing a major shortage of?

                Me personally? Nothing. Parts of the world are pretty messed up now.

                We had shortages during the pandemic. They have largely resolved.

                Yes black swan events tend to create black swan effects. Not relevant when we are talking about 90 year old programs.

                But food companies have learned people still will buy food, so they kept prices high

                Already addressed this. Free money to people who want to cosplay as farmers is not me saying food distribution companies are morally perfect. I don’t have anything against cosplay but I don’t think you would like me to get your tax dollars to do it.

                With so much food controlled by so few, competition isn’t working.

                Wandering argument. Go demand an anti-trust suit.

                Growing food isn’t without a massive carbon and environmental footprint.

                Just throwing everything you can at this now?

                Trying to force a glut which will just result is spoiled food and bankrupt farmers is not the answer.

                Supply goes up, price goes down. And cosplay farmers should go bankrupt. Free them to do something useful with their life. I would be lying if I can list off a single one I grew up with who wasn’t a total failure at what they did. Go do something else! Be a welder, be an electrician, be an accountant do productive things and stop pretending you are good at what you aren’t.

                It makes as much sense to give fail farmers money as it does to pay my fat ass to play basketball