WorldNetDaily has long fretted about the state of white people, as its endorsement of resettling white South Africans to the U.S. shows. Bob Unruh shows that odd concern again in a May 19 article:
A congressional delegation, Reps. Tony Wied, Derrick Van Orden, Thomas Tiffany, Bryan Steil, Glenn Grothman and Scott Fitzgerald, all of Wisconsin, is urging the U.S. Department of Agriculture to end a program imposed under the Joe Biden administration that discriminates, unlawfully, against victims based on race and sex.
The case concerns Adam Faust, a dairy farmer from Chilton, Wisconsin.
“Mr. Faust has been subjected to protected class-based discrimination by USDA. Specifically, he is ineligible for certain USDA programs based on his race and sex,” the members explained in a letter to Brooke Rollins, President Donald Trump’s secretary of Agriculture.
The delegation points out that Trump, in fact, “has taken bold and decisive action to eliminate racially discriminatory policies within the executive branch.” And the letter said USDA should comply with orders to “eliminate racially discriminatory policies … .”
The problem, the letter explains, is that, “Mr. Faust is ineligible for loan guarantees and grants on equal terms with non-white farmers. Mr. Faust is also charged a fee for the Dairy Margin Coverage Program, while non-white farmers are not. He is one of the 2 million white male American farmers—representing more than 60% of all American farmers—who are still subject to lasting discriminatory policies instituted by the Biden administration.”
[…]According to the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, which has worked on the case, The Trump administration “has taken many commendable steps to root out race discrimination in many agencies; however, race-based policies and programs persist. USDA is the worst offender, running over two dozen race-based programs that unconstitutionally discriminate against farmers and ranchers every day.”
Unruh didn’t mention that such programs are intended to address past discrimination against black farmers by the USDA, which dates back decades. Since Unruh is a one-source wonder who simply rewrites press releases, he made no effort to contact the USDA for a response.