Remember the movie that never made it to a theatre near you:OUTFOXED?Now it is playing back or shall we say PAYING BACK..but in a different story.Will the future reliable news come from bloggers?

I really want to share with you some news as they were told to us, how an official who works for USDA and has a say on many of  FARMERS  LIVES gets FIRED one day then gets HIRED the next day because of how we PAINT THEIR  PICTURE to the public ?It is said that "TRUTH WILL SET YOU FREE"..How about half truths or deceptions?Will they set us on the path to SLAVERY  ?

Here is how one video "short cut snap" was revealed to the American people and painted -or shall we say "TAINTED "?-an official who is a good government employee -( working while a woman and black) -resulting in her being FIRED?( or forced to resign,whichever applies to your mind) yesterday,then HIRED today BUT  aftter the FULL STORY/VIDEO was told /released to the public.Yesterday was FIRED,I qoute:"

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/07/19/clip-shows-usda-official-admitting-withheld-help-white-farmer/#content

Then she was offered a REHIRE as per the acj blogger, below mentioned , thay  reported the story in  a different WAY, the least to say-I qoute ajc:

In the curious case of Shirley Sherrod, let’s see the whole tape

7:31 am July 20, 2010, by Jay

A couple of folks in comments yesterday brought up the case of USDA official Shirley Sherrod, a black woman caught on tape at an NAACP meeting here in Georgia apparently bragging about being less than diligent in helping a white farmer. The folks at Big Government posted a portion of her speech as part of the running feud between the NAACP and the Tea Party over which organization is more racist.

By the end of the day Monday, Sherrod had been forced to resign her post, and NAACP President Ben Jealous had released a statement agreeing with the forced resignation:

“Racism is about the abuse of power. Sherrod had it in her position at USDA. According to her remarks, she mistreated a white farmer in need of assistance because of his race.

We are appalled by her actions, just as we are with abuses of power against farmers of color and female farmers.

Her actions were shameful. While she went on to explain in the story that she ultimately realized her mistake, as well as the common predicament of working people of all races, she gave no indication she had attempted to right the wrong she had done to this man.”

(UPDATE: The NAACP has now pulled that statement from its website.)

After watching the video Monday evening, I wrote in comments that “what Sherrod says in that video — and what she apparently did — are deeply troubling… She might very well have earned a firing. But I’d like to see that rest of that video as well, because at the point it abruptly ends, she appears to be saying that it’s wrong to think in terms of black and white, that she came to see things as more accurately divided between poor and rich than by race.”

As I also noted, the folks at Big Government seem to have the whole video, since they also posted another segment, and it would be useful to see the rest of it. "

Today :She is  offered to be REHIRED.I qoute ajc blogger for quick reference:"

http://blogs.ajc.com/2010/07/21/obama-administration-apologizes-offers-to-rehire-sherod/

Qoute:'

Obama administration apologizes, offers to rehire Sherrod

5:14 pm July 21, 2010, by Jay

In his just-concluded press conference, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has publicly apologized to Shirley Sherrod for acting much too hastily, and without full possession of the facts. He seems to have taken his mistakes to heart, and his regret seems sincere.

The department has also offered to rehire Sherrod, an offer that she is reportedly considering.

I think it’s fair to say that Vilsack and the administration overreacted, out of fear and ignorance, and were “snookered” by Andrew Breitbart and others, as the NAACP put it. The secretary has now apologized, as has the NAACP. The actual perpetrators of the fraud have not followed suit, and almost certainly will never do so.

Sherrod gets a chance to tell her side of the story in an AJC story by Marcus Garner:

“But Tuesday morning, Sherrod said what online viewers weren’t told in reports posted throughout the day Monday was that the tale she told at the banquet happened 24 years ago — before she got the USDA job — when she worked with the Georgia field office for the Federation of Southern Cooperative/Land Assistance Fund.

Sherrod said the short video clip excluded the breadth of the story about how she eventually worked with the man over a two-year period to help ward off foreclosure of his farm, and how she eventually became friends with the farmer and his wife.

“And I went on to work with many more white farmers,” she said. “The story helped me realize that race is not the issue, it’s about the people who have and the people who don’t. When I speak to groups, I try to speak about getting beyond the issue of race.”

So let’s see the rest of the tape, Big Government. Was Sherrod giggling among black folk about the time she put it to the white man, as the leaked excerpt suggests, or was the tape a deceptively edited excerpt of a longer story about getting beyond the issue of race, as she claims?

Let’s see the tape. The evidence apparently exists to settle the question. Cough it up." Unqoute.

Telling the truth is always the way for FREEDOM , half truths or deceptions are the way for SLAVERY.Do not underestimate the power of a blogger..in this case an "ajc" blogg!To focuss or not to focuss is the question!

Tony_1
07:35 PM EDT

Small Farmers:Expect new visitors named "Restaurant chefs"

It used to be that farmers are the last ones to know who is buying their produce.Not any more.

The NYT has just reported in an articler how the case is being reversed and how restaurant owners and chefs are now flocking to local farmers to order their produce via a hand shake not over the phone or fax.

Seeing vegetables in the field is beleiving .The need now is growing to find out WHERE the PRODUCE is coming from not HOW and WHAT the MENUs are!   Restaurants are now connecting DIRECT to local to the local farmer not the food chain distributor or the grocery store that are importing their produce from Mexico or God knows where!

Catering for LOOKS and TASTE!????UH UH UUUUH!EYWEEEEEH!I do not think so!

Check out today's NYT article (qouted below for quick reference):Qoute NYT:"

"Now, Chefs Court Farmers for the Best Ingredients

Marcus Yam/The New York Times

Ariane Daguin, owner of D’Artagnan, introduces Lucy Benno to a chick at Griggstown Quail Farm.

By GLENN COLLINS

MIDDLEBURGH, N.Y.

Richard Perry/The New York Times

Jacob Hooper of Barber Farms shows Lucy’s father, Jonathan Benno, right, chef of the new Lincoln Center restaurant, one of the farm’s conehead cabbages.

THE former commandant of the elysian kitchen of Per Se, Jonathan Benno, was bouncing in the muddy bed of a Chevy pickup as it navigated 180 acres of vegetables at Barber Farms. It lurched to a stop before a row of weird, pointy-headed cabbages.

“Now, this interests me,” he said.

Jacob Hooper, the farm’s manager, plucked one and handed it to Mr. Benno, who nibbled a leaf and said, “It’s like a hearty lettuce, very mild.” The name of the cabbage, Caraflex, was unfamiliar, but he registered its taste for some future menu item.

Minutes later, Mr. Hooper was explaining how he protects his raspberries from fall frost. “Well, you can sign me up for raspberries in November,” the chef said with some excitement, and perhaps a hint of skepticism.

Mr. Benno’s field trip was no pastoral ramble. It was a crucial stop in his yearlong quest to open a $20-million restaurant at Lincoln Center in September. Once, farmers begged top chefs to give their produce a whirl. But with carrots, corn and tomatoes being accorded the fanatical attention once reserved for foie gras and truffles, chefs now come knocking.

Logic might suggest that it is easier these days for serious kitchens to find excellence. “But it gets harder for us,” said Michael White, the chef and an owner of Marea, along with Alto and Convivio, all in Manhattan, “since now, so many chefs are in competition for the same high-end ingredients.”

Visits to specialty farms in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania have become as much a part of the run-up to a high-stakes opening as picking a restaurant’s china — or its name.

Speaking of which, after months of debate, the restaurant finally has one: Lincoln. (This is the third in a series of articles about Mr. Benno and the Lincoln Center restaurant; the second focused on the search for a name.)

“Lincoln is readily identifiable and recognizable,” said Reynold Levy, president of Lincoln Center, “and like our arts center, the name Lincoln will be a powerful brand.” It is not, however, Italian.

Zagat lists some 370 Italian restaurants in New York, and I didn’t want ours to become the 371st with an Italian name,” said Nick Valenti, chief executive of the Patina Restaurant Group, which will operate Lincoln. “You don’t need an Italian name to be Italian.”

But you do need vegetables. “It’s not enough now to pick up the phone and say to a distributor: ‘What have you got? O.K., give me a case.’ Now you want to see,” said Mr. Benno, 40. “You want to go there. They get to know us, and they see the possibilities for us. And for them.”

Top chefs can’t be lip-service locavores any longer. “Our customers travel to food and wine festivals,” Mr. White said, “and food devotees are more and more aware of the sourcing of products.” At the table, they can even surf the Web on their iPhones to check out the provenance of the steak, the chicken and the chicory.

The chef Daniel Boulud said that his relationship with some farmers goes back decades, and “they know our priorities and we know theirs,” he said. “We never argue about the price, and we support them in the hard times.”

To Mr. Benno, “This is not about currying favor, it is about developing a relationship. In this business, it’s about the handshake — looking them in the eye.” For there is an urgent new restaurant reality: “These days, carrots are in the ground Friday and on the plate Saturday night,” he said.

Locally, the farm-to-table revolution has seen an explosion of “varieties that have different color, flavor and cooking characteristics, instead of ordinary varieties chosen for their ease of shipping and stacking characteristics,” said John J. Mishanec, a specialist for the Cornell University Cooperative Extension program who has spent decades working to improve local farmers’ practices.

As Mr. White said, “You always want to be an innovator, and some farmers do, too.”

And so, he has scoured Italian Web sites to order spigarelli, arugula and radicchio seeds, and has asked farmers — including Rick Bishop of Mountain Sweet Berry Farm in Roscoe, N.Y. — to grow them. And Mr. Boulud has beaten the local bushes for sweet French radishes and cardoons.

Beyond this, given the explosion of farmers’ markets, ingredient-hungry chefs have to travel farther to get what they want, said Mr. Mishanec. It can be easier for small growers to sell in farmers’ markets for immediate cash — and often more per pound — than extending restaurants credit for 30 days, said Jim Barber, whose family has inhabited the Middleburgh farm for 153 years. " Unqoute.

Tony_1
07:12 PM EDT
 

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