My catastrophe is important....... yours is not.
Yet another example of folks that typically support the "close the government down; close it all down" crowd and how the people they send to congress don't like to vote "yes' when it comes to providing relief to others in other parts of the country (remember Sandy). Now that they've shut the govt. down, it seems like that old shoe is on their foot.
Blizzard ravages South Dakota's livestock industry - latimes.com
Yet another example of folks that typically support the "close the government down; close it all down" crowd and how the people they send to congress don't like to vote "yes' when it comes to providing relief to others in other parts of the country (remember Sandy). Now that they've shut the govt. down, it seems like that old shoe is on their foot.
Blizzard ravages South Dakota's livestock industry
These days, Reder passes a federal Farm Services Administration office whose doors are closed. Like most American ranchers, the 47-year-old is a resilient small businessman used to tending to his own problems, with help from neighbors whose families settled this land generations ago.
Still, he's frustrated and feels that federal lawmakers have turned their backs on the nation's heartland in a time of need.
"We're just a bunch of ranchers from South Dakota — it's hard for our voices to be heard," he said, sitting at the kitchen table at dawn Friday, drinking coffee, fielding calls from fellow cattlemen. "You see crises across the country, the hurricanes and tornadoes, and officials are right on top of it. But something of this magnitude, that has just about leveled this part of the country, and there's nothing."
Many residents in this conservative region had supported the government shutdown as a way to make Washington more fiscally responsible. "But one appropriate role for these guys is to lend a hand after disasters like this," Christen said, "and they're not here."
These days, Reder passes a federal Farm Services Administration office whose doors are closed. Like most American ranchers, the 47-year-old is a resilient small businessman used to tending to his own problems, with help from neighbors whose families settled this land generations ago.
Still, he's frustrated and feels that federal lawmakers have turned their backs on the nation's heartland in a time of need.
"We're just a bunch of ranchers from South Dakota — it's hard for our voices to be heard," he said, sitting at the kitchen table at dawn Friday, drinking coffee, fielding calls from fellow cattlemen. "You see crises across the country, the hurricanes and tornadoes, and officials are right on top of it. But something of this magnitude, that has just about leveled this part of the country, and there's nothing."
Many residents in this conservative region had supported the government shutdown as a way to make Washington more fiscally responsible. "But one appropriate role for these guys is to lend a hand after disasters like this," Christen said, "and they're not here."
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