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LMD Dec 24

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Riding Herd Saying things that need to be said. December 15, 2024 • www.aaalivestock.com

Volume 66 • No. 12

Tariff Time C

by LEE PITTS

The War On Food

LEE PITTS

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iberals and progressives are drowning in their own tears as a result of the 2024 election. The libs are coming apart at the seams over Trump’s promise to usher in a “manufacturing renaissance” by luring American companies back home to where they began by proposing to lower the corporate tax rate from 21 to 15 percent for corporations that make their products here. As this story was going to press, Trump was also promising a new 10 percent on ALL imports, a 25 percent tariff on all imports from Mexico and Canada and as much as a 60 percent on imports from China. Trump says, “We’ll lead an American manufacturing boom. When they have to pay tariffs to come in, but they have incentive to build here, they’re going to come roaring back.” So Orange Man has morphed into Tariff Man and his critics say that will only lead to more inflation and higher interest rates. The left-wingers are still hanging on to the religion of globalism even as American

jobs and our money are shipped overseas. If you’re wondering where middle class America went it was shipped overseas lock, stock and barrel. Now Tariff Man wants to bring those jobs back home and one of the biggest tools in his toolbox will be tariffs. While that may invigorate manufacturing companies it may also

to globalization and all the glorious things it was supposed to accomplish for citizens of rich and poor countries alike but didn’t. I remember reading a best-selling book back in 2005 called ‘The World Is Flat’ written by the Godfather of Globalization, Thomas Friedman. In the book, Friedman, a journalist for The New York Times, argued that technological innovation had so “flattened” the world that it had become a level playing field to include more input and contributions from nations outside the industrialized West. Friedman urged America to offshore our manufacturing jobs to countries with cheaper labor. At the same time America would become a “service econo-

Forgive your enemies. It messes up their heads. hurt some of the very people who helped Trump get elected.

News Flash: The World Isn’t Flat After All Tariffs are a direct response

D.C. Circuit Throws Out Over 40 Years of NEPA Regulation BY MOLLY A. LAWRENCE, JONATHAN D. SIMON, MICHAEL R. PINCUS , RACHAEL L. LIPINSKI OF VAN NESS FELDMAN LLP – HYDRO NEWSLETTER / NATIONAL LAW REVIEW

NEWSPAPER PRIORITY HANDLING

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n November 12, 2024, in Marin Audubon Society v. Federal Aviation Administration, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that the Council on Environmental Quality (“CEQ”) lacks authority to issue government-wide National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) regulations. Although none of the parties raised the issue in their briefs, in an opinion issued by a split 2-1 panel, the court found CEQ’s regulations—which have been in force for over 40 years—to be invalid. The case is likely to have far-reaching implications.

■■ Despite many uncertainties regarding

the decision’s potential impacts, a few things are not in doubt:

■■ The NEPA statute remains in effect.

■■ CEQ NEPA guidance (as distinct from regulation) is unaffected.

Confusion about the decision poses a risk of delays in ongoing and upcoming NEPA reviews until the dust settles, which could take several years.

The Court’s Opinion Petitioners, including the Marin Audubon Society, challenged the Federal Aviation Adcontinued on page 4

my” where the middle class supposedly would earn its living by waiting on each other. I remember thinking at the time that if we followed Friedman’s advice that one day there’d be a heavy price to pay. That day of reckoning has finally arrived. Bill Bullard, CEO of R CALF, explains, “Over three decades ago economists suggested the United States would be better off if we opened our markets to the world and the world opened its markets to us. So inviting was this suggestion that policy makers set out to achieve this ideal by reducing or eliminating tariffs on imported goods. But expectations that the world would reciprocate were never fully met,” says Bullard. He continues, “When the prospects of accessing the most affluent consumer market in the world while paying low or no tariffs became a reality, many manufacturers moved offshore

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Change The Debate and Take Back Liberty Locally BY TOM DEWEESE / AMERICAN POLICY CENTER

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ost Americans tend to think of private property simply as a home – the place where the family resides, stores their belongings, and finds shelter and safety from the elements. It’s where you live. It’s yours because you pay the mortgage and the taxes. Most people don’t give property ownership much more thought than that. There was a time when property ownership was considered to be much more. Property, and the ability to own and control it, was life itself. John Adams said, “The moment the idea is admitted into society that property is not as sacred as the law of God, and that there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence.” The great economist John Locke, whose writings and ideas had a major influence on the nation’s founders, believed that “life and liberty are secure only so long as the right of property is secure.” Locke warned that human civilization would be reduced to the level of a pack of wolves and cease to exist because lack of control over your own actions caused fear and insecurity. Private property ownership, Locke argued, brought stability and wealth to individuals, leading to a prosperous society of man. That’s because legal ownership of property is the key to productive development. Private property ownership is the reason the United States became the wealthiest nation on continued on page 3

aren Cowan, owner and publisher of the New Mexico Stockman, always offers up a lot of food for thought in her monthly column. Speaking of food, Caren’s latest missive makes you wonder if supposedly smart people have any idea where their food comes from. For example, according to Caren, “Big banks are being urged to defund the farming industry to limit meat and dairy consumption.” Caren also ran a story written by Frank Bergman from slaynews.com that claimed, “A collective of over 100 climate groups, led by Friends of the Earth, is pressuring JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup and other private banks to stop financing global meat and dairy companies.” According to Martin Bowman of Feedback Global, “Industrial livestock companies are incompatible with a safe future for our planet, so it’s time for banks and investors to turn off the taps and stop providing financing that is enabling them to grow.” He specifically called on banks to quit lending money to food companies like Tyson, JBS and he called out Bank of America for holding over half of the 134 billion in loans to meat and dairy operators across the country. It sounds like the green weenies want farmers to plow under all their banking customers in order to control the food that people ingest. While not a fan of the Big Four packers, I think that if the big banks do buckle under the pressure from the climate fanatics, people will starve to death around the world. Which is probably what the Friends of the Earth want in the first place. They seem to think this world would be a lot better off without any people. A disturbing report done for Great Britain by Oxford University and the Imperial College of London not only urged everyone to give up meat and dairy products, they also demanded that airports everywhere be closed and the general public banned from using airplanes. Anyone caught doing so would be jailed for violating the Climate Change Act. Of course, the university professors didn’t call for government employees, greenies, rock stars, Climate Czar

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