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« New GI Bill Not Enough | Main | Dropping like Flies »


A Connection: World Hunger and U.S. Public Policy

By Larry James
May 19, 2008


Many poor countries, instead of developing their own agriculture, turned to the world market to buy cheap rice and wheat. In 1986, Agriculture Secretary John Block called the idea of developing countries feeding themselves “an anachronism from a bygone era,” saying they should just buy American.
We debate the role of public policy in the creation or elimination of human misery. Usually, on this page, the context is urban and domestic.

Recently, while making a presentation to a local church group on what ordinary people can do to "seek justice and do compassion," an audience member erupted with the one-word expletive, "Bull!" As a matter of fact, the gentleman shouted his disgust twice...

He had been offended by my example of how American farm policy contributes to the growth of poverty, hunger and pain among West African cotton farmers.

I was attempting to make a couple of points.

First, our world is more interconnected than ever before in its history.

Second, ordinary citizens can change and help shape public policy in ways that can make a real difference in the lives of other ordinary citizens of other nations half-way around the world.

Sunday morning, I read the front page article in The New York Times concerning the mounting world food shortage brought about in part by the abandonment of agricultural research and development assistance on the part of the world's developed nations, including the United States.

Read the article: World’s Poor Pay Price as Crop Research Is Cut. Tell me what you think.

Applying moral principles to public policy formation is more important today than ever before, both here at home and around the planet.


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This page contains only one entry posted to Everyday Citizen on May 19, 2008 10:38 AM.

The blog post previous to it is titled "New GI Bill Not Enough"

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