Video Shows USDA Official Saying She Didn't Give 'Full Force' of Help to White Farmer

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

youtube link of video

Days after the NAACP clashed with Tea Party members over allegations of racism, a video has surfaced showing an Agriculture Department official regaling an NAACP audience with a story about how she withheld help to a white farmer facing bankruptcy – video that now has forced the official to resign.

Shirley Sherrod, the department’s Georgia director of Rural Development, is shown in the clip describing “the first time I was faced with having to help a white farmer save his farm.” Sherrod, who is black, claimed the farmer took a long time trying to show he was “superior” to her. The audience laughed as she described how she determined his fate.

“He had to come to me for help. What he didn’t know while he was taking all that time trying to show me he was superior to me was I was trying to decide just how much help I was going to give him,” she said. “I was struggling with the fact that so many black people have lost their farmland and here I was faced with having to help a white person save their land – so I didn’t give him the full force of what I could do. I did enough.”

The Agriculture Department announced Monday, shortly after FoxNews.com published its initial report on the video, that Sherrod had resigned.

“There is zero tolerance for discrimination at USDA, and I strongly condemn any act of discrimination against any person,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a written statement. "We have been working hard through the past 18 months to reverse the checkered civil rights history at the department and take the issue of fairness and equality very seriously.

Sherrod explained in the video that, at the time, she assumed the state or national Department of Agriculture had referred the white farmer to her. In order to ensure that the farmer could report back that she was indeed helpful, she said she took him to see “one of his own” – a white lawyer.

“I figured that if I take him to one of them, that his own kind would take care of him,” she said.

The point of the story wasn’t entirely clear; only an excerpt of the speech is included in the video clip.

“It was revealed to me that it’s about poor versus those who have,” she said, suggesting she had learned that race is less important.

The video clip was first posted by BigGovernment.com. The clip is dated March 27 from an NAACP Freedom Fund banquet.

The clip adds to the firestorm of debate over the NAACP’s decision to approve a resolution at its convention last week accusing some Tea Party activists of racism – a charge Tea Party leaders deny. FoxNews.com was unable to get a response to this story from the NAACP.

In a second clip from the same event posted online, Sherrod appeared to urge black job seekers to find work at the Department of Agriculture because the federal government won’t lay people off.

“There are jobs at USDA and many times there are no people of color to fill those jobs because we shy away from agriculture. We hear the word agriculture and think, why are we working in the fields?” she said. “You’ve heard of a lot of layoffs. Have you heard of anybody in the federal government losing their job? That’s all I need to say.”

I hope that lawyer she introduced him to sues the crap out of her.

It’s always about race to the left, regardless of what race they are. Nothing is more important in their eyes.

I should be surprised, but I’m not…:rolleyes:

Is this the very same NAACP that branded the Tea Party as “racist”?

Shocking…:rolleyes:

I can already hear their excuses.

It’s the logical end of a society built on double standards. People with a fouled up world view…the world view that people of X color shouldn’t bother those who are not of their “kind” with problems…make it into positions of authority and responsibility and then use the power of their office to inflict their diseased world view on others.

People are entitled to their opinion, but when it colors the discharge of their duties it becomes a problem.

…but in our society we’ve accepted that some people can be racists and it’s no big deal as long as you have the right skin color and your oppression is aimed at the right people. White power types who show up at a polling place with weapons to intimidate voters would be national news and every race hustler in our country would be elbowing each other to try and be the first one in front of the camera to condemn America’s racism and argue that they should be given more money and power.

If Black Panthers who spend their off hours telling people to kill “crackers” as well as the children of “crackers” shows up at a polling place with weapons to intimidate voters, on the other hand, it’s not a big deal.

By allowing the double standard to exist we encourage the sort of behavior seen at the USDA. I heard someone say it’s not a big deal because it clearly isn’t a USDA-wide conspiracy…but that entirely misses the point. One does not need a massive conspiracy across an agency when there are enough individual actors allowed to work their reprobate world view into action because of their official positions. As government intrudes itself more and more into the daily lives of Americans, the existence of this double standard and the potential for injustice when coupled with official power should send a chill up the spine of anyone with a better than room temperature IQ.

I would really like to know if the guy she talked about lost his farm or not. Im sure there there will be plenty of people that she was supposedly helping that ended up losing everything.

JW777, I agree - the reason we fear government as a nation is exactly this kind of abuse. Time end it, not mend it.

These are the same people that have made “RACIST” into an accusation that can end careers and lives. At least when it’s leveled at white people. THEY can’t BE racist, of course.

Fuck you, I’m a racist, I guess. Do you have anything else to add?

Hypocrisy at its finest.

http://www.ruraldevelopment.org/shirleydirector.html

Minority Farm Settlement

Justice Achieved - Congratulations to Shirley and Charles Sherrod!

We have wonderful news regarding the case of New Communities, Inc., the land trust that Shirley and Charles Sherrod established, with other black farm families in the 1960’s. At the time, with holdings of almost 6,000 acres, this was the largest tract of black-owned land in the country. Now with a cash award of historic proportions, the group will be able to begin again.

In 1969, New Communities received a planning grant from OEO and was encouraged to expect substantial funding for implementation, but Governor Maddox would not permit further funds for the group to come into the state.

Nevertheless, New Communities built up farming operations to help retain the land. They had highway frontage where they had a farmers market to sell their crops. They raised hogs and sold the processed meat in a smokehouse they built on the highway. Their sugar cane mill on the highway also attracted customers. New Communities was ahead of the times in raising eight acres of Muscatine grapes, which are now widely grown in the area. They also farmed 1,500 acres of row crops, including corn, peanuts and soybeans.

Over the years, USDA refused to provide loans for farming or irrigation and would not allow New Communities to restructure its loans. Gradually, the group had to fight just to hold on to the land and finally had to wind down operations.

In 1985, as the land was being lost, Shirley entered the RDLN program. Previously, she had worked behind the scenes, but as she participated in RDLN, she began to realize her capacity as an up-front leader. She invited the Federation of Southern Cooperatives to sponsor her in the RDLN program, earned her master’s degree with a thesis that continues to provide a blueprint for her ongoing work with black farmers and others, helped orient all succeeding groups of RDLN Leaders, and became vice chair of RDLN’s Board of Directors. As you all know, Shirley is Georgia Lead for both the Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund and the Southern Rural Black Women’s Initiative. She has also chaired the board of the Farmers Legal Action Group, which has been active in the minority farmers law suit, along with the Federation and other groups. FSC and SRBWI hosted RDLN’s National Network Assembly in 2006, during which Network members had a chance to immerse themselves in Civil Rights history, with the guidance of Shirley and Charles (the first field director of SNCC), Albany singers and others, and to visit the economic development projects that have grown out of that Civil Rights history.

The cash award acknowledges racial discrimination on the part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture for the years 1981-85. (President Reagan abolished the USDA Office of Civil Rights when he became President in 1981.) New Communities is due to receive approximately $13 million ($8,247,560 for loss of land and $4,241,602 for loss of income; plus $150,000 each to Shirley and Charles for pain and suffering). There may also be an unspecified amount in forgiveness of debt. This is the largest award so far in the minority farmers law suit (Pigford vs Vilsack).

The attorney for New Communities has been Rose Sanders of Chestnut Sanders and Sanders, sister of National Rural Fellows graduate Harold Gaines and Advisor for RDLN Leaders Lillie Fields and Rose Hill.

No one can compensate those involved with New Communities for the difficult history they experienced. The award covers only a few of the years in question. Nevertheless, with these funds, New Communities will be able to start work again – forty years later – to realize the promise of their original dream, reconnect with the legacy of the Civil Rights movement, and meet the challenge of the needs and opportunities of the current historical moment.

Purely an oversight which I’m sure will be corrected, but they appear to have forgotten to award the mule.

I wonder how long it will take for her to get a job at ACORN.

Only if the NAACP doesn’t land her first. That audience certainly seemed to like her.

Lt. Col. (Retired) Allen West wrote about the NAACP and their racists views yeterday: http://allenwestforcongress.com/blog/2010-07-19/washingtoons-one-nation-under-god-indivisible-liberty-and-justice-all

Also if you have a chance watch the video about rights vs entitlements.

I’m sure he’s not real popular with the NAACP or it’s followers right now but it needs to be said.

LTC West is the real deal. I’d love to see him run for POTUS.
Very well written- succinct and thought provoking.

That dude better have good security - the NAACP will probably Malcolm X him if he’s not careful. And they’ll hire a couple of skinheads to do it.

I would LOVE to see him run for President!

It looks like Shirley Sherrod resigned last night: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38321920/ns/us_news-life/

Or Mugabe…

Nah, she probably took lessons from him, remember he has been running white farmers off for decades.

her response ?

“They were not interested in hearing the truth. No one wanted to hear the truth,” she said in a television interview Tuesday morning.