What are you talking about? What is this hyperbole you speak of? I dont recall ever claiming something was out of context. Maybe I dont remember claiming it, but it is not something I usually do. Since we have established that my memory is much better than yours, I highly doubt you have a concrete example.
Perhaps you should start first with learning what hyperbole actually means. It isn't something taken out of context. I know, post more gifs. That always shows people that you know what you're talking about.
They heard ya Jared https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-michigan-president.html Biden’s narrow win in Michigan was the product of extremely high turnout in Detroit, where an underwhelming performance with Black voters in 2016 helped doom Hillary Clinton.
The purpose of farm subsidies is to keep production high and prices low. But you being a democrat, I know you like it when people are hungry and starving because not enough food means the poor people will vote for socialism.
What is so great about people with no knowledge is that it takes 30 seconds on google to destroy an argument. Read below.... subsidies pick and choose which crops the government wants to support and deincentivizes the rest. Sounds like communism to me. Tell me again how the subsidies are feeding America????? Subsidies keep prices down because it encourages farmers to grow corn and soy at huge levels. They are basically feed crops and export products. All the fruits and vegetables you should be eating barely get subsidies..... Put yourself in the farmer’s shoes: When your subsidy check is calculated in terms of acres of corn or soy planted, it’s hard to rationalize planting anything else. About 90 million acres of each are planted annually in America, accounting for more than half of all cropland. Of the corn, 90 percent of the crop will either be fed to livestock, converted to ethanol fuel or exported. Most of the corn that does make its way into the gaping American maw isn’t on the cob, or even in the form of corn chips, but pours in as high-fructose corn syrup and other corn-derived products found in processed foods. Meanwhile, fruits, nuts and vegetables — known as “specialty crops” in industry jargon — account for only 10 million acres, or about three percent of cropland. We all know they’re supposed to account for more than that on our plates. Yet, specialty crops aren’t eligible for Farm Bill subsidies.