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‘I have never been as worried as I am now’: Arkansas farmers gather to share concerns

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BROOKLAND, Ark. (KAIT) - Farmers from across the state are asking for help before it’s too late.

Hundreds of farmers gathered in Brookland to speak with representatives of Arkansas leaders to share with them their urgent plight: the difficulties they face in farming today.

Many farmers spoke out at the meeting.

Their message was straightforward: We need help, and we need it now.

“Mr. Trump, you looked at me and said, ‘I love you,’” Woodruff County farmer Chris King said. “Mr. Trump, I need to see the fruit of your love.”

“You are going to lose 25 to 30% of the farmers in this country if they don’t do something,” said Scott Brown, a farmer from Biggers, Arkansas. “It has to be done, and it’s not just here; it’s everywhere.”

Hundreds of farmers gather to share their concerns

The line to get into the meeting place, the Woods Chapel Baptist Church, went out the door. Countless farmers from across the state came to voice their concerns about the current state of farming.

Representatives from U.S. Congressman Rick Crawford, Sen. Tom Cotton, and Sen. John Boozman’s offices attended the gathering to hear concerns.

One of the farmers in attendance, Chris King, spoke about his harvest difficulties.

He told us this was his 39th harvest, and he has never seen it this bad before.

“I have never been as worried as I am now about whether or not my kids and grandkids will be able to carry on,” said Chris King.

Lack of profit, export difficulties, and high costs

Chris King said the main problem is that they can’t sell for profit.

“I just would like to see somebody help us get our markets back,” said Chris King. “We need our exports, and we just need to be paid for what we do, and that’s not happening, and we’re in real trouble.”

But this is not the only issue.

Chris King’s wife, Melissa King, and farmer Scott Brown said they are struggling to afford the bare minimum cost to maintain their farms.

“Prices that we are getting now are prices like they were when we were children, and what it costs for us to farm is astronomical now. The price of a combine when we were kids was in the 20,000s, and now it’s 100,000,” said Melissa King.

“I farm 800 acres by myself, I can’t afford any help, I farm with paid-for equipment, all my tractors are 50 years old, and I can’t hardly make this deal work,” said Brown. “How are the guys farming 5 and 10 thousand with 20 hands and million-dollar combines and million-dollar drills going to make it work?”

Tariffs are hurting farmers

Brown said one issue that rounds out all the problems farmers are facing: tariffs.

“I think the tariffs are the ice cream on the cake of a perfect storm,” said Brown. “When you try and sell a product, okay, U.S. soybeans leaving New Orleans without the tariff to China are cheaper than Brazilian soybeans, at the current market. But when you put the tariff on top of them, Brazilian beans are cheaper.”

What can be done to help farmers?

“In the short term, they have no choice but to mail us a check,” said Brown. “I don’t know a farmer that likes the check program. Nobody wants to take the taxpayer dollars, but nobody wants to go broke, nobody wants to lose everything. Long term, we have to have options, markets, and places to sell our product.”

The political representatives who attended said they will take these concerns to Washington to share with government leaders and find a way to solve this problem before it’s too late.

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HarlandCorbin
4 days ago
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Let's see... Who did Arkansas vote for president again? Methinks that farmers above all others should understand the phrase "You reap what you sow". FAFO, and you're in the find out stage.
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LeMadChef
4 days ago
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GFY farmers!
Denver, CO

A Reminder

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When Donald Trump came into office in 2017, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was in force, and working as expected/ hoped. It was a far better agreement than most of us wonks had expected or wished for. When its draft came out earlier, we were dancing in the streets. It was carefully done and extremely specific about limitations on Iran’s nuclear program.

And Iran was working to the plan. IAEA inspectors installed sensors that sent information on how enrichment was working to their computers. Numbers were being hit. Iran was working toward what the IAEA calls a “broader conclusion,” a certification that its nuclear program is peaceful. Collaborations were being forged between Iran and the nations that were involved in the negotiations. IIRC, China was working with Iran on reactor design to minimize plutonium production, for one example. There were other provisions to move toward more extensive agreements; the expectation was that interactions would continue.

But the JCPOA required regular certifications from the US president. And those regular signatures reminded Trump that it was Barack Obama who had negotiated this wildly successful agreement. That could not stand, and it didn’t. Trump withdrew. He had great faith in his negotiation skills combined with coercive measures that he loves.

The Biden administration tried to put things back together, but the loss of trust that Trump’s withdrawal produced was too much. And situations had changed, both in the US and in Iran.

Trump ordered his golfing buddy, Steve Witkoff, another great negotiator in his eyes, to put something like the JCPOA back in place. He didn’t use those words, of course, but that was what it amounted to. Reports from Witkoff’s negotiations seem to indicate they might have been converging on something a little less than the JCPOA.

The US JCPOA negotiating team consisted of something like 150 people, most of whom were experts in nuclear issues and sanctions. The national labs supplied experts. Witkoff showed up to meetings without even an interpreter, much less national lab experts.

This time around, Iran was more pressed to get an agreement, but even with that, the Great Negotiators failed. Throughout, Trump occasionally tweeted threats at Iran to encourage them to agree.

Bibi Netanyahu had other ideas, as we see. Like Putin, he sees Trump as a sucker. Like Putin, he has no interest in peace. As Trump sees his great triumph (and Nobel Prize) slipping away, he is panicking, as we see from his frequent postings over the last 24 hours. His earlier threats, along with his poor understanding of the situation and inability to think about anything but win-lose outcomes, put him in a bind Now he’s meeting with his crack foreign policy team.

The post A Reminder appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

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HarlandCorbin
84 days ago
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I think there's a typo.

Now he’s meeting with his crack foreign policy team.

Should be:
Now he’s meeting with his on crack foreign policy team.
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The Disability Follies, Part the Thousandth

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In one of those brave acts of revelation long after the fact to sell books, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson tell us that President Joe Biden’s aides were told by his doctor that Biden might need a wheelchair if he tood a bad fall.

Biden has spinal arthritis and neuralgia in his feet. That makes his gait uncertain. It’s not uncommon in people his age. A friend of mine has the same sort of neuralgia in her feet. I have to let her hold onto my arm at times, but she continues to compose operas and just had one performed in Santa Fe.

Physical disabilities do not imply mental disabilities.

Let me repeat that.

PHYSICAL DISABILITIES DO NOT IMPLY MENTAL DISABILITIES.

Nonetheless, CNN includes a sentence in the article to imply exactly that.

I remind you that one of our most influential presidents used a wheelchair.

Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been ignorant and bigoted and has abused his body for most of his life. It’s not just a feature of his old age, so I guess that’s okay.

Could we concentrate on that clear and present danger?

The post The Disability Follies, Part the Thousandth appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

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HarlandCorbin
119 days ago
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If the cheeto traitor took a bad fall, he'd likely need a hearse.
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Punched Out

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Everybody to the limit

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HarlandCorbin
131 days ago
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Bowling ball? Or Pintsize's old head?
JavaJim
131 days ago
that's got to be a head
gordol
131 days ago
My question too!
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US citizen detained by ICE questions his vote for Trump – NBC4 Washington

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A naturalized Hispanic man says he was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents who were looking for another person on a deportation order, and now the man is questioning his vote for President Donald Trump.

Jensy Machado said he is a U.S. citizen and provided News4 documentation of his legal status.

Machado said he was driving to work Wednesday with two other men when he was stopped by ICE agents on Lomond Drive in Manassas, a short distance from his home. He said he was confused by what was happening, why agents surrounded the pickup truck. 

“And they just got out of the car with the guns in their hands and say, turn off the car, give me the keys, open the window, you know,” Machado told Telemundo 44’s Rosbelis Quinoñez, who first reported his story. “Everything was really fast.”

He said the agents said the name of a man they were seeking for a deportation order, someone who had given Machado’s home address. Machado told them that wasn’t his name — he didn’t know anyone by that name — and offered to show them his real ID compliant Virginia driver’s license.

“They didn’t ask me for any ID,” Machado said. “I was telling the officer, if I can give him ID, but he said just keep my hands up, not moving. After that, he told me to get out of the car and put the handcuffs on me. And then he went to me and said how did I get into this country and if I was waiting for a court date or if I have any case. And I told him I was an American citizen, and he looked at his other partner like, you know, smiling, like saying, can you believe this guy? Because he asked the other guy, ‘Do you believe him?’”

Machado said he was uncuffed and immediately released after showing his driver’s license.

The two men with him were taken into custody. He does not know why.

Machado said the experience shook his faith in the immigration enforcement efforts of Trump, for whom he voted.

“Because, like I said, I was a Trump supporter,” he said. “I voted for Trump last election, but, because I thought it was going to be the things, you know, like, … just go against criminals, not every Hispanic looking, like, that they will assume that we are all illegals.”

“That’s what they’re doing, now,” Machado said. “They’re just following Hispanic people.”

Immigration lawyers advise residents and citizens to always keep ID with them.

News4 and Telemundo 44 have both contacted ICE for comment and are awaiting a response.

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HarlandCorbin
186 days ago
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"I can't believe they would eat my face" says man who voted for the leopards eating faces party.
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The odds of a city-killer asteroid impact in 2032 keep rising. Should we be worried?

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An asteroid discovered late last year is continuing to stir public interest as its odds of striking planet Earth less than eight years from now continue to increase.

Two weeks ago, when Ars first wrote about the asteroid, designated 2024 YR4, NASA's Center for Near Earth Object Studies estimated a 1.9 percent chance of an impact with Earth in 2032. NASA's most recent estimate has the likelihood of a strike increasing to 3.2 percent. Now that's not particularly high, but it's also not zero.

Naturally the prospect of a large ball of rock tens of meters across striking the planet is a little worrisome. This is large enough to cause localized devastation near its impact site, likely on the order of the Tunguska event of 1908, which leveled some 500 square miles (1,287 square kilometers) of forest in remote Siberia.

To understand why the odds from NASA are changing and whether we should be concerned about 2024 YR4, Ars connected with Robin George Andrews, author of the recently published book How to Kill an Asteroid. Good timing with the publication date, eh?

Ars: Why are the impact odds increasing?

Robin George Andrews: The asteroid’s orbit is not known to a great deal of precision right now, as we only have a limited number of telescopic observations of it. However, even as the rock zips farther away from Earth, certain telescopes are still managing to spy it and extend our knowledge of the asteroid’s orbital arc around the Sun. The odds have fluctuated in both directions over the last few weeks, but overall, they have risen; that’s because the amount of uncertainty astronomers have as to its true orbit has shrunk, but Earth has yet to completely fall out of that zone of uncertainty. As a proportion of the remaining uncertainty, Earth is taking up more space, so for now, its odds are rising.

Think of it like a beam of light coming out of the front of that asteroid. That beam of light shrinks as we get to know its orbit better, but if Earth is yet to fall out of that beam, it takes up proportionally more space. So, for a while, the asteroid’s impact odds rise. It’s very likely that, with sufficient observations, Earth will fall out of that shrinking beam of light eventually, and the impact odds will suddenly fall to zero. The alternative, of course, is that they'll rise close to 100 percent.

Ars: What are we learning about the asteroid's destructive potential?

Andrews: The damage it could cause would be localized to a roughly city-sized area, so if it hits the middle of the ocean or a vast desert, nothing would happen. But it could trash a city, or completely destroy much of one, with a direct hit.

The key factor here (if you had to pick one) is the asteroid’s mass. Each time the asteroid gets twice as long (presuming it’s roughly spherical), it brings with it 8 times more kinetic energy. So if the asteroid is on the smaller end of the estimated size range—40 meters—then it will be as if a small nuclear bomb exploded in the sky. At that size, unless it’s very iron-rich, it wouldn’t survive its atmospheric plunge, so it would explode in mid-air. There would be modest-to-severe structural damage right below the blast, and minor to moderate structural damage over tens of miles. A 90-meter asteroid would, whether it makes it to the ground or not, be more than 10x more energetic; a large nuclear weapon blast, then. A large city would be severely damaged, and the area below the blast would be annihilated.

Ars: Do we have any idea where the asteroid might strike on Earth?

Andrews: The "risk corridor" is currently spread over parts of the eastern Pacific Ocean, northern South America, the Atlantic Ocean, parts of Africa, the Arabian Sea and South Asia. Additional observations will ultimately narrow this down, if an impact remains possible.

Ars: What key observations are we still waiting for that might clarify the threat?

Andrews: Most telescopes will lose sight of this "small" asteroid in the coming weeks. But the James Webb Space Telescope will be able to track it until May. For the first time, it’s been authorized for planetary defense purposes, largely because its infrared eye allows it to track the asteroid further out than optical light telescopes. JWST will not only improve our understanding of its orbit, but also constrain its size. First observations should appear by the end of March.

JWST may rule out an impact in 2032. But there's a chance we may be stuck with a few-percentage impact probability until 2028, when the asteroid makes its next Earth flyby. Bit awkward, if so.

Ars: NASA's DART mission successfully shifted an asteroid's orbit in 2022. Could this technology be used?

Andrews: Not necessarily. DART—a type of spacecraft called a kinetic impactor—was a great success. But it still only changed Dimorphos' orbit by a small amount. Ideally, you want many years of advance notice to deflect an asteroid with something like DART to ensure the asteroid has moved out of Earth’s way. I've often been told that at least 10 years prior to impact is best if you want to be sure to deflect a city killing-size asteroid. That’s not to say deflection is impossible; it just becomes trickier to pull off. You can’t just hit it with a colossal spacecraft, because you may fragment it into several still-dangerously sized pieces. Hit it too softly, and it will still hit Earth, but somewhere that wasn’t originally going to be hit. You have to be super careful here.

Some rather clever scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (which has a superb planetary defense contingent) worked out that, for a 90-meter asteroid, you need 10 years to confidently deflect it with a kinetic impactor to prevent an Earth impact. So, to deflect 2024 YR4, if it’s 90 meters long and we have just a few years of time, we’d probably need a bigger impactor spacecraft (but don’t break it!)—or we’d need several kinetic impactors to deflect it (but each has to work perfectly).

Eight years until impact is a little tight. It’s not impossible that the choice would be made to use a nuclear weapon to deflect it; this could be very awkward geopolitically, but a nuke would impart a bigger deflection than an equivalent DART-like spacecraft. Or, maybe, they’d opt to try and vaporize the asteroid with something like a 1 megaton nuke, which LLNL says would work with an asteroid this size.

Ars: So it's kind of late in the game to be planning an impact mission?

Andrews: This isn’t an ideal situation. And humanity has never tried to stop an asteroid impact for real. I imagine that if 2024 YR4 does become an agreed-upon emergency, the DART team (JHUAPL + NASA, mostly) would join forces with SpaceX (and other space agencies, particularly ESA but probably others) to quickly build the right mass kinetic impactor (or impactors) and get ready for a deflection attempt close to 2028, when the asteroid makes its next Earth flyby. But yeah, eight years is not too much time.

A deflection could work! But it won’t be as simple as just hitting the asteroid really hard in 2028.

Ars: How important is NASA to planetary defense?

Andrews: Planetary defense is an international security concern. But right now, NASA (and America, by extension) is the vanguard. Its planetary defenders are the watchers on the wall, the people most responsible for not just finding these potentially hazardous asteroids before they find us, but also those most capable of developing and deploying tech to prevent any impacts. America is the only nation with (for now!) a well-funded near-Earth object hunting program, and is the only nation to have tested out a planetary defense technique. It’s a movie cliché that America is the only nation capable of saving the world from cosmic threats. But, for the time being—even with amazing planetary defense mission contributions from ESA and JAXA—that cliché remains absolutely true.

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HarlandCorbin
202 days ago
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I'm cheering it on. Hoping it speeds up, praying it has a certain crappy "mansion" in florida in its sights.
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