Georgealbert Posted Tuesday at 08:04 PM Posted Tuesday at 08:04 PM A World Food Program's flag flutters on the roof of WFP's headquaters after the WFP won the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize, in Rome, Italy October 9, 2020. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo The United States has lifted its pause on food donations to the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP), allowing the resumption of crucial aid deliveries that had been left in limbo for weeks. The suspension had halted the shipment of 500,000 metric tons of food, leaving millions of dollars’ worth of assistance stranded at sea or in storage. The WFP confirmed the reversal in a statement on social media, saying: “We can confirm that the recent pause concerning in-kind food assistance to WFP, purchased from U.S. farmers with Title II funds, has been rescinded. This allows for the resumption of food purchases and deliveries under existing USAID agreements.” The suspension stemmed from U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to pause all foreign aid for 90 days while reviewing its alignment with his administration’s “America First” foreign policy. Despite a waiver issued by Secretary of State Marco Rubio to allow emergency food assistance to continue, the U.S. government still instructed the WFP to stop work on dozens of American-funded grants. The move disrupted the Food for Peace Title II programme, a $2 billion initiative that forms the backbone of U.S. international food aid, jointly managed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The sudden halt in funding affected food aid operations in several of the world’s most vulnerable regions, including Yemen, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Haiti, and Mali. Humanitarian organisations criticised the suspension, warning that the uncertainty put $489 million worth of food assistance at risk. Many aid groups were left scrambling to decide whether to continue their programmes without any financial guarantees from Washington. A U.S. State Department spokesperson declined to comment on the situation. Aid officials have voiced frustration at what they describe as a lack of clarity surrounding the Trump administration’s foreign aid review. Many organisations were left uncertain whether their programmes fell under the waiver or whether they risked financial losses by continuing operations. Despite the resumption of food donations, experts warn that the pause has already disrupted supply chains and delayed deliveries, potentially worsening food insecurity in conflict zones and impoverished nations. While the immediate crisis may have been averted, the long-term future of U.S. foreign aid remains uncertain as the administration continues its review of international assistance policies. Based on a article from Reuters 11.02.2025. -- 2025-02-12
Popular Post Tug Posted Tuesday at 09:06 PM Popular Post Posted Tuesday at 09:06 PM Well there’s a bit of good news glad to hear it 1 7
Popular Post Eric Loh Posted Wednesday at 12:44 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 12:44 AM Reckless wrecking ball approach with no plan and made adjustments along the way when problems become evident. This is a disastrous freewheeling administration that is a recipe for disaster. Already 3 weeks of numbing chaos. 2 1 4
Popular Post scottiejohn Posted Wednesday at 01:06 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 01:06 AM Typical Trump! Order, counter order, disorder! Again and again! 3 1 1 3
Popular Post Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 01:24 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 01:24 AM Somebody explained to Trump that blocking US food donations to the WFP would cut the pipe of federal funds to U.S. farmers, in predominantly Republican voting States. 3 1 2 1
Popular Post Tug Posted Wednesday at 02:26 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 02:26 AM 1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said: Somebody explained to Trump that blocking US food donations to the WFP would cut the pipe of federal funds to U.S. farmers, in predominantly Republican voting States. I’m inclined to agree with you I don’t think trump cares one wit about starving people in foreign lands 1 1 2
KhunLA Posted Wednesday at 03:49 AM Posted Wednesday at 03:49 AM 1 hour ago, Tug said: I’m inclined to agree with you I don’t think trump cares one wit about starving people in foreign lands When you can't take care of your own citizens, does it make sense to borrow money and give it away to non citizens of the USA. USA citizens elect politicians in hopes that they have the USA in their best interest. Let other countries do the same, take care of their own first. Many problems can be solved, without the USA going further into debt, and inability to take care of it's own. Here's food for thought ... 1 1
Popular Post Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 03:57 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 03:57 AM 4 minutes ago, KhunLA said: When you can't take care of your own citizens, does it make sense to borrow money and give it away to non citizens of the USA. USA citizens elect politicians in hopes that they have the USA in their best interest. Let other countries do the same, take care of their own first. Many problems can be solved, without the USA going further into debt, and inability to take care of it's own. Here's food for thought ... The U.S. failure to take care of its own citizens is a political choice. Tax breaks for the already rich, crumbs for the rest and distract them by telling them they being robbed to pay for foreign aid. 1 2 3 1 2
hotsun Posted Wednesday at 03:59 AM Posted Wednesday at 03:59 AM 1 minute ago, Chomper Higgot said: The U.S. failure to take care of its own citizens is a political choice. Tax breaks for the already rich, crumbs for the rest and distract them by telling them they being robbed to pay for foreign aid. Not just foreign aid. We were funding terrorists 1 1 2
JonnyF Posted Wednesday at 04:07 AM Posted Wednesday at 04:07 AM 8 hours ago, Georgealbert said: The sudden halt in funding affected food aid operations in several of the world’s most vulnerable regions, including Yemen, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Haiti, and Mali. Actually it affected the corrupt leaders of those countries buying the latest S series. 1
KhunLA Posted Wednesday at 04:20 AM Posted Wednesday at 04:20 AM 25 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said: The U.S. failure to take care of its own citizens is a political choice. Tax breaks for the already rich, crumbs for the rest and distract them by telling them they being robbed to pay for foreign aid. Yet the higher income folks, as posted many times, ignored obviously, pay more than most people in the USA. Never let facts get in the way a your spin source: https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/federal/latest-federal-income-tax-data-2024/ 1
Popular Post Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 05:13 AM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 05:13 AM 50 minutes ago, KhunLA said: Yet the higher income folks, as posted many times, ignored obviously, pay more than most people in the USA. Never let facts get in the way a your spin source: https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/federal/latest-federal-income-tax-data-2024/ Well yes, that’s how progressive taxation works. And back in the heyday of America’s growing middle class and growing prosperity of ordinary working Americans taxes on the rich and corporations were higher. Then along came neoliberalism and trickle down economics, stripped the wealth of the middle classes and passed it up to the rich. Try figure out which side of that equation you’re on, 2 4
KhunLA Posted Wednesday at 06:22 AM Posted Wednesday at 06:22 AM 1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said: Then along came neoliberalism and trickle down economics, stripped the wealth of the middle classes and passed it up to the rich. Try figure out which side of that equation you’re on, Translated to, making a bit closer, but not even close, to a fairer tax. A fair tax, would be everyone paying the same %. Anything else, and you're just spinning. Why should people be punished / taxed more, for simply being more productive with the finances. How is that fair ? I know what sides of the equation I've been on, and both, top 5% and bottom 50%. Top 5% is much better, even though I paid more taxes, in one year, than 88% of households earned in a year. So don't tell me how fair the US tax code is. It is anything but. The only argument people have is ... ... "But you earned more" ... "That is correct, EARNED, and they took more" Must be a new definition of 'fair' that I missed Why I left, 25 yrs ago, and don't produce any more. I don't need it, and you ain't taking any more.
Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 08:23 AM Posted Wednesday at 08:23 AM 1 hour ago, KhunLA said: Translated to, making a bit closer, but not even close, to a fairer tax. A fair tax, would be everyone paying the same %. Anything else, and you're just spinning. Why should people be punished / taxed more, for simply being more productive with the finances. How is that fair ? I know what sides of the equation I've been on, and both, top 5% and bottom 50%. Top 5% is much better, even though I paid more taxes, in one year, than 88% of households earned in a year. So don't tell me how fair the US tax code is. It is anything but. The only argument people have is ... ... "But you earned more" ... "That is correct, EARNED, and they took more" Must be a new definition of 'fair' that I missed Why I left, 25 yrs ago, and don't produce any more. I don't need it, and you ain't taking any more. “ The only argument people have is ... ... "But you earned more" ... "That is correct, EARNED, and they took more" Must be a new definition of 'fair' that I missed ” It seems you missed the definition of Strawman. 1 2 1
candide Posted Wednesday at 08:59 AM Posted Wednesday at 08:59 AM 7 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said: Somebody explained to Trump that blocking US food donations to the WFP would cut the pipe of federal funds to U.S. farmers, in predominantly Republican voting States. Of course. USAID has always been an indirect way to discreetly subsidize the U.S. agricultural sector. https://www.phantomecology.com/post/usaid-purchases-billions-from-american-farmers-how-subsidies-shape-agriculture-and-leave-appalachia#:~:text=The U.S. Agency for International,economies and shaping agricultural markets. Here are the main recipients. I doubt food deliveries will be really stopped. Minnesota Key Crops: Peas, wheat, sorghum. 2024 Sales: $70 million via contracts with Cargill, CHS Inc., and Sinamco 4. Impact: Minnesota’s pea industry—critical for protein processing—relies on USAID for 10–20% of its export market. Iowa Key Crops: Corn, soybeans. Role: While not a top direct recipient, Iowa’s corn and soybeans feed into USDA-USAID joint initiatives like the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust (4). Texas Key Crops: Sorghum, cotton. 2024 Sales: $1.1 billion in sorghum exports to Africa, partially funded by USAID’s Food for Peace program. Kansas Key Crops: Wheat, sorghum. 2024 Sales: Kansas sorghum farmers supply over 20% of USAID’s African food aid shipments. Nebraska Key Crops: Corn, soybeans. Role: A hub for USDA-USAID ethanol-linked corn purchases, bolstered by biofuel incentives. 2
Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 10:50 AM Posted Wednesday at 10:50 AM 1 hour ago, candide said: Of course. USAID has always been an indirect way to discreetly subsidize the U.S. agricultural sector. https://www.phantomecology.com/post/usaid-purchases-billions-from-american-farmers-how-subsidies-shape-agriculture-and-leave-appalachia#:~:text=The U.S. Agency for International,economies and shaping agricultural markets. Here are the main recipients. I doubt food deliveries will be really stopped. Minnesota Key Crops: Peas, wheat, sorghum. 2024 Sales: $70 million via contracts with Cargill, CHS Inc., and Sinamco 4. Impact: Minnesota’s pea industry—critical for protein processing—relies on USAID for 10–20% of its export market. Iowa Key Crops: Corn, soybeans. Role: While not a top direct recipient, Iowa’s corn and soybeans feed into USDA-USAID joint initiatives like the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust (4). Texas Key Crops: Sorghum, cotton. 2024 Sales: $1.1 billion in sorghum exports to Africa, partially funded by USAID’s Food for Peace program. Kansas Key Crops: Wheat, sorghum. 2024 Sales: Kansas sorghum farmers supply over 20% of USAID’s African food aid shipments. Nebraska Key Crops: Corn, soybeans. Role: A hub for USDA-USAID ethanol-linked corn purchases, bolstered by biofuel incentives. Precisely. Handouts of Federal dollars to good old GOP voting States. And they all scream ‘no socialism’. 1
Tug Posted Wednesday at 12:51 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:51 PM 8 hours ago, KhunLA said: When you can't take care of your own citizens, does it make sense to borrow money and give it away to non citizens of the USA. USA citizens elect politicians in hopes that they have the USA in their best interest. Let other countries do the same, take care of their own first. Many problems can be solved, without the USA going further into debt, and inability to take care of it's own. Here's food for thought ... The problem is in my view the folks that need the help need to be able/desire to improve their plight .that takes WORK and TIME they also need to be strong enough to resist the debt instant gratification trap that’s pushed so heavily here in the states.our government (had) many programs addressing this issue.the wealthiest man on the planet is killing all the programs that exist here.DEI is one such popular bogie man,folks that have been excluded for racial reasons but have done the WORK to qualify for certain positions have had that assistance in leveling the playing field yanked out from underneath them.we were/are a wealthy country we should be helping the less fortunate abroad if it’s money that has you concerned about it then tax those wealthy folks they have enough money allready.to put it simply,you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink. 1
KhunLA Posted Wednesday at 12:57 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:57 PM 3 minutes ago, Tug said: The problem is in my view the folks that need the help need to be able/desire to improve their plight .that takes WORK and TIME they also need to be strong enough to resist the debt instant gratification trap that’s pushed so heavily here in the states.our government (had) many programs addressing this issue.the wealthiest man on the planet is killing all the programs that exist here.DEI is one such popular bogie man,folks that have been excluded for racial reasons but have done the WORK to qualify for certain positions have had that assistance in leveling the playing field yanked out from underneath them.we were/are a wealthy country we should be helping the less fortunate abroad if it’s money that has you concerned about it then tax those wealthy folks they have enough money allready.to put it simply,you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink. So Musk has only been at it for a few weeks, and has already wrecked everything Trump 2 will surely destroy the USA like Trump 1 ... ... oh wait, things were better during Trump 1 The 'blinding hate' is simply amazing. 1
Popular Post Tug Posted Wednesday at 01:41 PM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 01:41 PM 40 minutes ago, KhunLA said: So Musk has only been at it for a few weeks, and has already wrecked everything Trump 2 will surely destroy the USA like Trump 1 ... ... oh wait, things were better during Trump 1 The 'blinding hate' is simply amazing. I’m a bit confused,I bring up the fact that many of the folks that need help have to be willing to help themselves and do the WORK and the staggering hypocrisy of the wealthiest man on the planet doing the cutting your response is hate?bizzare……. 1 2
Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 03:05 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:05 PM 2 hours ago, KhunLA said: So Musk has only been at it for a few weeks, and has already wrecked everything Trump 2 will surely destroy the USA like Trump 1 ... ... oh wait, things were better during Trump 1 The 'blinding hate' is simply amazing. Things were not better during Trump#1. The news of shutting down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has arrived coincidentally with Musk launching a non bank bitcoin ‘enterprise’. Serendipity is a thing or at least so we must believe. 1
Yellowtail Posted Wednesday at 03:30 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:30 PM 11 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said: The U.S. failure to take care of its own citizens is a political choice. Tax breaks for the already rich, crumbs for the rest and distract them by telling them they being robbed to pay for foreign aid. And Biden did nothing for four years 1
Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 03:33 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:33 PM 1 minute ago, Yellowtail said: And Biden did nothing for four years He didn’t remove the protections for small investors against financial fraud, that’s for sure. 1
Yellowtail Posted Wednesday at 03:34 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:34 PM Just now, Chomper Higgot said: He didn’t remove the protections for small investors against financial fraud, that’s for sure. What happen to that lying POC Biden promising to raise taxes on the rich?
Tug Posted Wednesday at 05:23 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:23 PM 1 hour ago, Yellowtail said: And Biden did nothing for four years Ahh infrastructure,domestic manufacturing of computer chips,lowering drug prices for seniors,protecting democracy,standing with labor,disaster relief across all political divides,revitalizing nato,supporting Ukraine in their struggle against the invader(a guy who does empty his prisons and asylums arms the inmates sends them to their neighbors to rape plunder and kill FOR REAL) compleatly humiliating the Russian military for less than 5% of our defense budget without spilling American blood (most of the work and resources to replace the aid stays here) generating manufacturing and jobs…….theres lots and lots more.now let’s just see what Donald actually does in this next 4 years.so far in less than a month inflation rising gas up 30cents a gallon absolutely derailed the hostage releases started an unessary trade war shivved our closest allies…… 1
Chomper Higgot Posted Wednesday at 11:14 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:14 PM 7 hours ago, Yellowtail said: What happen to that lying POC Biden promising to raise taxes on the rich? Are trying to deflect from the topic of discussion? Tug’s given you a list of just some of the good stuff Biden did. 2
Yellowtail Posted yesterday at 03:06 AM Posted yesterday at 03:06 AM 3 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said: Are trying to deflect from the topic of discussion? Tug’s given you a list of just some of the good stuff Biden did. You brought up tax cuts, not me. I was only asking you what happen to that lying POC Biden promising to raise taxes on the rich and never doing so.
Purdey Posted yesterday at 03:30 AM Posted yesterday at 03:30 AM I can't understand why the price of eggs hasn't gone down. Probably Biden's fault. 1
placeholder Posted yesterday at 03:45 AM Posted yesterday at 03:45 AM 36 minutes ago, Yellowtail said: You brought up tax cuts, not me. I was only asking you what happen to that lying POC Biden promising to raise taxes on the rich and never doing so. As usual, it's you who's doing the lying and not the person you accuse. The Inflation Reduction Act Primarily Impacts Top 1 Percent of Taxpayers In a new analysis, the Tax Policy Center finds the tax provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) are highly progressive. Taxes would rise by $6,060 (0.3 percent of after-tax income) in 2023 for households in the top 1 percent—with incomes greater than about $1 million. Households in the top 0.1 percent (those with over $4.4 million of income) would bear an additional burden of $41,580 (0.4 percent of after-tax income), TPC estimates. https://taxpolicycenter.org/taxvox/inflation-reduction-act-primarily-impacts-top-1-percent-taxpayers 1
Yellowtail Posted yesterday at 03:51 AM Posted yesterday at 03:51 AM 4 minutes ago, placeholder said: As usual, it's you who's doing the lying and not the person you accuse. The Inflation Reduction Act Primarily Impacts Top 1 Percent of Taxpayers In a new analysis, the Tax Policy Center finds the tax provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) are highly progressive. Taxes would rise by $6,060 (0.3 percent of after-tax income) in 2023 for households in the top 1 percent—with incomes greater than about $1 million. Households in the top 0.1 percent (those with over $4.4 million of income) would bear an additional burden of $41,580 (0.4 percent of after-tax income), TPC estimates. https://taxpolicycenter.org/taxvox/inflation-reduction-act-primarily-impacts-top-1-percent-taxpayers Wow, a 0.3% of after-tax income. "Do you hear yourself Martha?"
Nick Carter icp Posted yesterday at 03:52 AM Posted yesterday at 03:52 AM 20 minutes ago, Purdey said: I can't understand why the price of eggs hasn't gone down. Probably Biden's fault. Not everythings is about Trump or Biden . There has been a bird flue outbreak in the USA and 23 million chickens needed to be killed , so eggs become a rarity and the price increases , so nothing do do with either POTUS
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