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It was supposed to be a triumph of modern engineering. The Olmsted Locks and Damâsituated on the Ohio River, an artery of American commerceâwas designed to fix the aging infrastructure of Locks 52 and 53. These two rusting, Depression-era relics were falling apart, threatening to grind shipping traffic to a halt on one of the busiest waterways in the country. The Olmsted project would replace them with something better, bigger, and undeniably impressive.
How impressive? For starters, Olmsted is one of the largest and most complex inland water navigation projects in the world. Think of it as the Amazon Prime of river systemsâefficient, high-tech, and responsible for keeping everything moving. The system of locks and dams on the Ohio River controls water levels for barge traffic, ensuring that goodsâgrain, coal, steel, and moreâcan move efficiently from the Midwest to the rest of the globe.
And move they did. Until the farmers got in the way.
Or rather, until the government got in their way. You see, when youâre holding back that much water, you better know where itâs going to end up. Spoiler alertâthey didnât. Instead, 70,000 acres of farmlandâsome of the most productive in the countryâdisappeared under water. Livelihoods were destroyed, 454 farmers lost their land, and the folks who feed you were left holding the bag for one of the most expensive infrastructure projects in U.S. history.
The farmers didnât ask for this. They didnât sign up for their fields to become an unintentional reservoir for one of the worldâs largest locks and lakes. Yet here they are, mired in bureaucratic limbo, waiting for justice from a government that would rather stonewall than admit, âOops, we broke your life.â
Why? Because the numbers are big. Really big. If the government acknowledges its colossal mistake, itâll cost them more than just moneyâitâll cost them credibility. And letâs be real: credibility is the one thing Washington pretends to still have. So instead of stepping up, they punted the problem to the Department of Justice. You know, the same DOJ thatâs great at prosecuting random nobodies but apparently breaks into a sweat when it comes to helping the actual victims of government incompetence.
Hereâs the thing: government isnât inherently evil. Most of the time, itâs just wrongâwrong in its priorities, wrong in its assumptions, wrong in its execution. But when it refuses to fix what itâs broken? Thatâs when wrong turns into evil. Thatâs what these farmers are up against: a system that knows itâs failed but doesnât have the guts to make it right.
Speaking of guts, where are the voices standing up for these farmers? This is the region J.D. Vance wrote about in Hillbilly Elegy. The Ohio Valley, stretching from Ohio into Kentucky, is the very heartland he claimed to champion. These are his peopleâthe folks who feel the brunt of government neglect. Theyâre the backbone of this country, and their suffering is the story he used to launch his political career.
And now heâs in the position to finally help these farmers that have been forgotten for years.
And letâs not forget Vice President Kamala Harris, who likes to point out her own roots in this region. She grew up in Ohio, and her family has connections to Kentucky. The plight of these farmers is a direct link to the very places our leaders hail from. Yet the silence on their behalf is deafening.
Speaking of fiscal responsibility, have you checked the national debt lately? Weâre $30 trillion in the hole, and adding another trillion every couple of weeks, give or take. And yet, somehow, we always find money to send abroad. Billions to Ukraine, where farmers are understandably fighting to rebuild their lives and fields. Thatâs fineâgreat, even. But what about the people here? The ones who feed our country? What is the premise of âAmerica Firstâ if the farmers who feed Europe flourish, while the ones who feed America drown? Literally.
The Olmsted project is an awesome display of what America can do when it sets its mind to something massive. Weâre talking about a feat of engineering so advanced itâs like the Apple iPhone of locks and dams. But the same ingenuity that built the thing disappears the second thereâs a human cost. And make no mistake: there is a human cost.
America loves its farmers in speeches. Politicians love to pose in front of tractors and slap farmers on the back at county fairs. But when the floodwaters riseâliterallyâtheyâre left to fend for themselves. The government could fix this. It could settle, compensate these people, and move on. But instead, itâs choosing to fight, because itâs easier to bury a few farmers in legal red tape than to admit, âYeah, we wrecked your life.â
This isnât just a Midwest problem. This is a national disgrace. These farmers didnât just lose their landâthey lost their futures. Theyâre the reason you have food on your table. And yet, instead of helping them, the government has left them in the lurch.
If you want to know where Americaâs priorities lie, just follow the money. Weâre sending billions overseas while ignoring the people who are literally keeping us fed. A bailout for Wall Street, silence for the people who grow your wheat. This isnât about being anti-aid or anti-governmentâitâs about being pro-accountability. If we can find the funds to rebuild other nations, surely we can scrape together the decency to help the people who feed our own.
The Olmsted Dam is a marvel of human achievement, but the story of the farmers it ruined is a marvel of human failure. And until the government steps up to make it right, every time you bite into a slice of bread or a burger bun, remember this: someone paid a hell of a price for it, and it wasnât the DOJ.
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https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/12/when-government-flooded-americas-breadbasket-walked-away/
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I object!
From the old adage: âGovernment is a necessary evilâ. Takeaway is that it IS evil, always has been, always will be. Thus, the Constitutional limits on it power. Cue astronaut meme.
What years did this happen?
I think its 1 trillion dollars added to the debt every 100 days, not every couple of weeks. Still a lot.
Dam projects, their is no way, that the retards in this project did not know what they were doing. Not a chance. These projects are looked at with hundreds of eyes and departments. THEIR IS NO WAY THEY DID NOT KNOW WHAT WAS GOING TO HAPPEN. destroying this farmland was intentionally done.
"Government is not reason, it is not eloquence â it is force! Like fire it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master"
(Attributed to George Washington but no documentation exists)