IS BIDEN AFTER YOUR FARM LAND? | The 30/30 Executive Order and Biden Tax Laws

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
listening to some people these days you hear a lot of people talking about conspiracies to shut down the american farmer the small farmer and then you also hear about you know attacks on our food supply this is all about shutting down our food supply and while some of that is very fabricated and untrue some of it has some truth to it so i wanted to do a video just kind of talking about the current um state of of farming what's going on and um help you kind of understand where where some of this is coming from because if you understand where it's coming from um it may help you out a little bit is there a food war going on there's absolutely a food war going on right now we have um an entire industry evolving of synthetic foods fake foods fake meats and they are trying to gain as much market share as they can when you talk about agriculture you're talking about a hundred billion dollar industry they're only at 750 million right now so they have a long way to go to even compete with meat but they want to compete with meat and the ceos of these companies have made it extremely clear that in 10 years they'd like everybody to be eating their products and not meat products so to say that that doesn't exist is incorrect because it does exist these ceos of these companies these tech companies or food tech they're trying to create a product and they're trying to force it on society because they want society to only accept their product it's a different form of competition than what we've seen in past years and they've kind of radicalized advocates they've taken people who would normally you know choose not to meet out of some sort of moral standing and they've radicalized their opinions to help enforce their product on society they've even gone as far as financing lawsuits against farmers farmer nuisance lawsuits and so there is you know if you feel like there's some sort of food war going on there's definitely a food war there but it's all about money it has nothing to do with environment it has nothing to do with humanely treating animals it has everything to do with just funds so that's one side of this i think that going into this year we're seeing some other interesting developments in agriculture and one of these developments is something i've talked a lot on on this channel we've seen grain prices going up substantially they're they're really starting to ride up there now and what happened is we had prevent plant acres in 2019 we've had prevent plant acres in 2020 we've also seen our yields decreasing over the past couple years so there's a lot less grains on the market now than there were and then you have issues with growth in south america you have issues with crop growth in china these are issues that have been happening all around the world and so a lot of this has been spun into climate change and while the climate is constantly changing the the types of changes that we're seeing and the impacts on the crops are very similar to what we've seen in past climate cycles so it shouldn't be anything new to people this isn't something that is man-made but it is definitely you know having its impact on the way that we're able to grow crops the other factor in here is that china is buying up an astronomical amount of grains they're all over the world including the u.s we've seen some of the highest grain purchases the unprecedented amount of grains from the u.s since mid-last year until present times so obviously you've got a an increase in demand and a decrease in supply and i don't see that the supply is going to get any better we've we've been in the cycle of prevent plant acres for the last two years i think that last year we could have had a little bit of a better season except for the the prevent plant from 2019 created a late harvest in 2019 which kind of fed into the prevent plant acres in 2020 this year you know we're already seeing a lot of cold weather kind of impact a lot of us across the united states if this continues which it could continue when you look at the way that you know the polar vortex and and the history of science and in that regard goes the the way that we have those massive air breakups that cause kind of cooler spring weather stormier spring weather that could continue on the current pattern into the spring which could lead to another scenario similar to 2019. we also are seeing a lot more precipitation and you know they they've released a lot of studies in in recent years talking about you know the cosmic ray impacts on cloud seeding and how that increases cloud cover i know that a lot of people get mad at me when i don't talk about the government creating you know cloud seeding and things like that but the the truth is is that there's a much larger force at work here we've got um we've been in a period of minimal solar activity for quite some time when that happens you do have an influx of cosmic ray activity which causes a lot of these things to happen so none of this is unusual though it's stuff that we've seen throughout the history of our planet it's things that mankind has had to deal with time and time again so with grain prices going up what happens is that feed prices go up and because of the coronavirus pandemic we actually have a lot of producers who are overstocked with live animals because they haven't been able to get them processed processors are working around the clock because meat demand went up 15 percent last year so you've got this huge demand for meat and you have a lot of producers with a lot of livestock on their properties that they're having to feed waiting in line to get their animals processed now you've got an increase in the feed costs and i know for farmers like us for example i hate our fields but we had some issues with with fencing which i'll get to that in another video but we had some issues with fencing so i had to put our cows up well they went through a lot of our winter hay before we even went into the wintertime so now i've had to bring in more hay for them i've had to supplement them with feed and you know hopefully if we i'm hoping we have an early spring because then i could get them back out onto our pastures as the grass starts growing again but realistically the soil needs to get up above 60 degrees and stay there for quite some time with a lot of sunshine before my fescue kicks in so there are definitely an in there's an increase in feed costs on the animal livestock industry and i think that that's going to start to really play out over the next year in 2021 especially if grain prices continue to rise so you have a benefit there to some farmers you have grain prices rising they're actually able to make a profit and then you've got the animal industry kind of hanging on barely with the cost of feed prices going up in the amount of livestock on the on the backflow of all this coronavirus and not being able to process meat last year so there are definitely some challenges at bay there but to add kind of insult to entry to kind of open that wound up a little more we have a current administration that's not very supportive of agriculture and i you know i tread carefully on these type of subjects because i wasn't a fan of sonny perdue you guys know that from watching our channel i wasn't a fan of sonny perdue and you know trump wasn't my favorite person in the world but would i have voted for biden probably not in my personal opinion i don't think that he is fit for office i feel as though he is an armchair president essentially and it's nothing you know personal against him but as a voter in seeing and listening to him talk i just don't think that he is capable of fulfilling the task at hand and so i think that what ends up happening in that type of situation is that you have other players that step into a particular role to advise and and give direction and i think that's something that we're starting to see happen one of those things i don't know if you guys remember this i know some of you are probably too young to remember this president this is youtube people start watching when they're 12 years old right 10 8 that's why our last video got censored according to youtube if you are if you remember a president by the name of barack obama um and this is a pattern that i honestly i think is is fairly interesting any time that we we start to see a catastrophe happen either you know in the financial industry or with the coronavirus some sort of an emergency situation that shuts down our economy you generally see a democrat take office and the reason for that is is because democrats tend to spend more government funds and so corporations really push for their election because they need the government to spend money because the consumer base isn't doing it for them barack obama came into office right after the financial crisis that we had back in 2007 and 2008 and one of the things that barack obama did and i think this is fairly interesting but one of the things that he did was he wanted to completely change the way that our financial services industry worked and operated so he got together with a couple senators and they created a bill called the dodd-frank bill and the dodd-frank bill was designed to protect the taxpayers from this type of thing ever happening again it changed the way in which banks could lend their money it changed the way that banks could take risks it changed our entire banking industry all together it really kind of wiped out a lot of the small banks before 2007 and 2008 you did have a lot of small lenders out there i was in commercial real estate and a lot of times to get a loan on a property we would go to a small or a local bank to get that loan and then they would underwrite the loan and oftentimes they would sell the loan sometimes they would hold on to the loan some of the smaller banks held on to the loans it was a banking relationship that you had between yourself and the bank after the frank dodd bill that was no longer the case you didn't really have that option anymore and with the larger banks their risk didn't allow a lot of the people who were able to borrow before continue borrowing now in the commercial real estate industry and i'm sure with a lot of businesses what happened in that situation is you have a 15-year 20-year amortization on a note but you have to refinance it every seven years every five to seven years depending on the the terms of your your contract with the bank or the lender and so you had a lot of these people that were coming up on their five seven year term between 2008 and 2015 who were unable to finance under the current environment because of legislation and so what ended up happening was a lot of these private property owners had to either fire sale their properties very cheaply to get out from underneath them before they were foreclosed on and taken by you know the bank for not refinancing their note on time or they filed bankruptcy protection to try and figure out another way to refinance their bank notes and a lot of private lending didn't start coming back into the industry until about 2016-2017 so during that period of time between 2008 and 2015 what you saw was a dramatic decrease in private ownership of commercial properties and a substantial increase in institutional ownership because who would buy these commercial properties well the institutions and when i when i talk about institutions and private owners a lot of these are all corporations so a private corporation or a private owner may be a small llc with a couple shareholders whereas an institutional owner is is a larger shareholder corporation with a lot of funds they're getting their money from insurance companies things like that and so these big institutional corporations were able to come in and buy you know a lot of these properties up for pennies on the dollar it essentially was in my opinion one of the largest institutional property grabs ever experienced in the history of the united states and it was all due to the dodd-frank bill i'm bringing this up to you now because there are some things that i see happening that i think are going to be very similar to that in the agricultural sector so we have biden taking office now and it's interesting because the dodd-frank bill was supposed to fix our financial services industry but right before the coronavirus hit if you guys were paying attention we started seeing default swaps run into a lot of problems around the world in fact the federal reserve was stepping in by billions of dollars every single night to save our banks from going under again there was a financial crisis on the brink right before the crisis the coveted crisis kind of solved that issue momentarily and then now we've got biden back in office biden's going to start spending money and he his the policies of the administration will somewhat benefit some of those large institutional owners while not benefiting necessarily some of the smaller businesses but that's you know matter of opinion i'm just explaining to you the policies that i see going forward now the policy that i see coming forward that's going to have the same impact of the dodd-frank bill are biden's tax policies so when we talk about taxes you know biden promise not to raise taxes on people who earn less than four hundred thousand dollars a year four hundred thousand dollars a year is a lot of money i don't make four hundred thousand dollars a year i doubt many of you farmers make four hundred thousand dollars a year but in these tax implications there are things that do impact you and they will impact you to the point of selling your farm so number one is the step up in basis tax rule the step up and basis tax rule is a tax rule that says if you inherit a property or an asset even if it's stocks at the time of inheritance your cost basis becomes whatever the value the market value of that asset is so if you inherited land that's been in your family for generations and your grandfather paid a hundred acre dollars an acre for it and i think i was reading earlier today that farmland is going for anywhere between twelve and seventeen thousand dollars an acre i was reading an article on that and honestly i read an article a couple weeks back where bill gates of all people paid over twelve thousand dollars an acre in a two hundred million dollar deal so when you're looking at the cost basis of farmland going from a hundred or a thousand dollars an acre up to twelve thousand dollars an acre that's a substantial increase so when you inherit that property the step up in basis rule me says that the day that you and inherited it it was worth twelve thousand dollars if you sell it you know five years down the road and it's worth fifteen thousand dollars you pay the taxes on on 12 000 to 15 but you don't pay the taxes on 15 all the way down to 100 bucks because that would be a substantial amount of money the step up in tax basis though isn't necessarily that that big of a deal because if you do end up selling at least you've got cash and an actual basis to go off of to pay the taxes you're going to lose a lot of money but you know it is what it is right to kind of open that wound a little bit more we're also talking about a death tax basically at the time of death whoever is leaving you the land had had inherited the land uh from their grandfather the land's original basis was one hundred dollars is now worth twelve thousand dollars at the time of death that value of that property has appreciated from a hundred to twelve thousand dollars and the estate of the deceased must pay a tax on that increase in value well the estate is technically not you the who inherited it but that's what you're picking up and so essentially what you're picking up is a bunch of land with a very large tax bill on it this is not an estate tax the estate tax currently has a 23 million dollar tax break on it and i'm gonna get to this in a minute they're talking about reducing that to three and a half million dollars and i still think that's going to affect a lot of medium-sized farmers and that's where i'm going to circle back in in just a second but to kind of conclude on this if you inherit that land not an estate tax this is a capital gains tax on unrealized gains of the deceased that you would have to pay to take on that asset now if you can't take pay it if you don't have the cash you'd have to sell parts of the property if not all the property to be able to pay the tax bill and collect the rest of the inheritance now if that inheritance is north of three and a half million dollars you have an estate tax an estate tax could be about 20 percent of course they've been you know really discussing putting the estate tax and the capital gains tax more in lines with an income tax level closer to 30 percent so you could in if you're over three and a half million dollars on that inheritance you could get a double tax on that inheritance and the problem that i see with both of these the first one the death tax is that a lot of farmers they don't make a lot of money but their assets could be worth a substantial amount of money and it's not just the assets themselves but the cash flow of the farm on a capitalization rate to value the business for the shareholders of that llc because most farms are owned at an llc so let's start with the land obviously we can see how land can appreciate very quickly in value but then on top of just the land and the house now uh a hundred acres around here will cost you north of a half a million dollars just to give you kind of an idea 100 acres is about the average size farm in america once you add cattle to that you've got um you know if somebody has a hundred acres they've got maybe you know 50 60 head of cattle and each one of those cows is worth a couple thousand dollars while all those cows are being inherited by whoever's taking that out so now you've got a couple hundred thousand dollars there then you've got a tractor tractors could be you know anywhere from 50 some of them are a couple hundred thousand dollars a lot of farming equipment is valued very high i bought a used hay baler it's a round baler for about seven thousand dollars two years ago used and it was from the 90s but that's how much farm equipment actually costs a lot of people will buy the farm equipment farmers will buy it and they'll pay it off over the years now i guess on equipment you don't have that appreciation factor but on cows you do right because meat has gone up over the years that you know what somebody paid for cows 20 years ago is has appreciated over time and i'm and i'm giving you that example because when we talk about cost basis what's the cost basis of a herd your grandfather started a herd of you know five or six cows 50 years ago now you've got a herd of 200 cows because of your breeding and and growing that herd over the years so your cost basis is actually relatively small and your asset is very big and now you've got to pay taxes on the appreciation of that asset of that business now when we get into cap rates you know when we when we value a business because they're going to tax you on shares that you own so if you're taking over a farm llc and that farm llc it's got to be a shareholder basis of some sort whether it's member bases or shareholder bases you're inheriting that company that company is going to have a value based on a capitalization rate you know so with commercial property we see capitalization rates as low as five percent on a farm you're probably going to see capitalization rates anywhere between 20 10 and 20 percent depending on you know how lucrative the farm business businesses and the risk associated with it so you take you know the cash flow the income from that business after expenses and you divide it by 10.1 for 10 or 0.2 for uh for two percent so let's say you have um a hundred thousand dollars a year uh ten percent capitalization it's a million dollar business uh two hundred thousand would be you know two million dollar business if it was at a twenty percent capitalization rate and it's probably you know half of that but uh the point is is that you're getting taxed on the value of that business that you just inherited so as you can see with a farm you could very very very quickly even on a small to medium-sized farm get over four hundred thousand dollars so whether or not biden is protecting people who make less than four hundred thousand dollars doesn't matter because when you inherit and you take over your family's business it's most likely going to be north of that you're not going to have the cash to pay it though because i guarantee you your family business does not have that kind of money sitting in a drawer somewhere unless it's maybe that you know maybe maybe you're you're you're in the marijuana growing business i think somebody just sold uh what a one of those marijuana farms for like i it was well it was a farming business for like six billion dollars substantial business there i'm sure they had a lot of cash hidden in places to pay that tax bill but for a regular farmer they're not going to be able to pay that tax bill it doesn't matter to the government that you have spent your entire life working on your family farm that you inherited a business that you have spent your entire life managing and running the person you inherited in probably technically retired 10 years ago and you've been running it ever since that doesn't matter because you have now inherited that asset and you must pay capital gains on the appreciated value of that asset from the time it was started or the time that the previous person inherited it and they paid the capital gains which that never happened because his taxes never really existed before how are you going to pay that tax are you going to be able to take out a mortgage if you take out a mortgage for that kind of money i mean what's you know what's 30 percent on 400 000 120 grand that's a lot of money for some people to take out i mean how are you going to do that you can't so you have to sell so this is a taxation system that's forcing people especially farmers who are inheriting assets that aren't liquid into selling i think it's a very dangerous situation but to add complications to all of this they're also discussing the possibility of an unrealized gains tax on everybody's assets that they own so what that's a similar thing only nobody has to die in this situation they will look at your cost basis of the asset and how much you've gained in value over the course of a tax year with all the positive media coverage about joe biden you may have missed that the new biden administration has outlined a raft of tax increases the most controversial of which is a plan for a new tax on unrealised capital gains so that's an un that's an annual capital gains tax on assets someone holds on paper not just at the point of sale and this could be a house or shares there are also plans for an increase to the company tax rate and here's incoming treasury secretary janet yellen talking about this a few days ago on the 2017 tax cuts the president has said that um eventually as part of a larger package that would include significant spending and investment proposals he would want to repeal parts of the 2017 tax cuts and they will tax you on that unrealized gain now the reason why we call it unrealized gain is because it's only on paper it's not a real game anybody who knows a farm knows knows this and anybody i mean anybody who owns anything knows this just because something appreciates some value does not mean you're going to get that much money for it often you know we i when i listed real estate people always thought their house was worth a lot more than it actually would sell for on the market but that's how the market works so when we pay capital gains on an asset that we've actually sold that's based on a realized market value when you're talking about taxing assets that have not been sold you're talking about a fictitious value that is unrealized it's unreal it's not actually there yet there is absolutely no value of a of something until it goes to a market a free and open market sells that's generally how it works so now you've got all this land let's say you're in your 50s and you bought your farm when you were in your 20s and it's gone up in value the land has gone way up in value over the last 30 years the government comes to you and says you need to pay a income tax on that unrealized gains you can call it capital gains tax but when you raise the capital gains tax rate up to income tax levels it's an income tax an income tax on unrealized gains unreal gains how do you pay that where are you going to come up with the cash for that you buy you i mean think about the increase in value over 30 40 years the first year this is in play is going to be a substantial amount of money and most farmers are not going to have the cash to pay which is going to force farmers to sell all of this fits very well into biden's plan to put 30 percent of u.s land back into conservation by 2030. that's a very lofty goal and what makes it even more lofty is that he needs to put not just land back in conservation but he needs to create enough public lands and conservation to increase the availability to the public that is also in that executive order just by paying farmers to put their land back in conservation isn't going to achieve the goal they've got to do more they've got to take the land from the weakest and make it available to the public and i think that's something you're going to see happen look at what happened with that dodd-frank bill everything went to institutional owners some went to the government that will happen again with tax plans like this now i've been told not to worry about these tax bills because nobody in their right mind would ever pass such a thing but then it makes you question again the viability of those who are even discussing it that's kind of a concern that i have i know that where their heads are at um their their heads are at we need to put 30 of our land back into conservation and this is how we do it because people can't hold on to something that they can't pay their taxes on even if it's a fake tax on unrealized gains they can't pay for that and that could happen too with businesses if you're a farming business you're gonna you're the value of your business has gone up over the years because of your your sales base you've you've grown your sales you've you've you've improved your income i talked about cap rates and how to value the business on that that's another thing that's going to get taxed because your shares in that business have appreciated in value anybody who owns stock is going to be taxed so if you own a stock that you purchase for fifty dollars a share at the end of the year set a hundred dollars a share you pay taxes on that unrealized gains that's what an unrealized gains taxes it doesn't matter if it goes to 25 the next year the government's not going to give you your money back that's not how it works when you get taxed on something that doesn't exist a fictitious number on paper there's no way to get it refunded to you either and that's what makes this whole thing slightly unconstitutional but so far what we have seen from an administration that's thrown out 40 executive orders within a week following the constitution is no longer applicable to society to a lot of these people we have a situation where we need to put as much land back into conservation as possible in their minds and we need to redistribute the wealth as much as we possibly can and this is the way that we're going to do it now mayor cheryl merrill who's on his transition team is with the appalachian southern appalachian stewardship association or foundation and respect she specializes in land conservation putting land back into conservation turning it back into habitat i don't know where they have where their foundation is or what areas they've worked on i know that from visiting the appalachian area what i see are a lot of degenerative forests overgrown forests because they don't have the large ruminants like bison and elk that they used to have roaming through those forests many many years ago so you've got this overgrowth going on it's not actually a good habitat it's not sequestering as much co2 as you've been necessarily made to believe but i think that she's on that transition team to help fulfill part of this agenda the other big player on this agenda in my perspective is tom vilsack now a lot of people don't like tom vilsack tom vilsack's not liked by small farmers he and obama had promised to go after the big meat packaging companies for price manipulation and what they ended up doing was they extended the comment period from the normal 60 to 90 days at the request of the meatpacking industry to 150 days which pushed it just past midterm elections and then obviously we had midterm elections and nothing ever got done small farmers are very critical of tom vilsack for that among many many other things and then you've also got the fact that he's the largest lobbyist in the world for the dairy industry which animal rights groups are not happy with so you've seen a lot of people flying off the cuff on that and when we hear about the usda manipulating numbers with how many african-american farmers there are that was also tom vilsack that's one of the things he's famous for he was manipulating the numbers to make it look like under the obama administration they were improving whereas in fact they were lying and he got busted for it so tom vilsack is known for a lot of things when it comes to usda and they're not good things but the reason why i think tom vilsack is exceptionally good for this 2030 agenda is because when he was the governor of iowa slate legislation had put forward a bill to reduce the state's power under eminent domain and tom vilsack vetoed that bill and said that he believed eminent domain the right of the government to take property from a private citizen was for the public good now when you have that mentality on a team of people who are looking to reclaim 30 percent of the land in america you have somebody who is in the top policy making position of the usda who supports that type of legislation so tom vilsack is kind of the perfect guy to be in that particular seat for this particular agenda i don't think that this agenda is going to do much for the environment and i don't think that a lot of the things that they're doing are for the environment when we talk about this carbon banking system i generally would disagree with wired magazine on a lot of things but i agreed with them on an article they released about regenerative agriculture and you guys know i support regenerative agriculture that's not what this is about what they were talking about was the carbon banking system and how on an economy of scale there is absolutely no way that that system could possibly benefit the small farmers in america the only people who could possibly benefit for large farmers i mean if you think about it when you're talking about 1.5 billion dollars going into this carbon bank and you're talking about 100 billion dollar industry there really isn't much that can benefit off of that and so the people who do benefit are large institutional farmers who can make a deal with a corporation that's going to face a carbon tax so bill gates can go to microsoft and say hey buy my carbon credits and you'll get off the hook and that's pretty much how it's going to work so large institutional farmers and and and large corporations can kind of benefit off of this trade but the small farmer isn't going to see anything off of it somebody who's got 100 acres or left which is you know the average size of a farm in america or less is not going to really benefit off of a an economic part of a hundred billion dollar industry that's only one percent one and a half percent economy of scale is not there for that's not why they're doing it they're doing it as a shelter for the institutions they're doing it as a way to shelter the institutions from having to pay a carbon tax that they plan to put on people and and through this whole climate trace program and it's just about and if you look at who they put in charge of climate john kerry flies around the us and the world and his private jet just burning gas i mean these people don't care about the climate that's not why they're doing this to them there's another advantage to this and that is the institutional farming advantage the the more you can grow the large farmers the cheaper food becomes when you look at the usda budget that's 150 billion dollars a year 120 billion of that goes into crop insurance and mandatory programs the remainder 30 billion about 65 70 percent of that actually goes to food nutrition services so for the government they're looking at how do we reduce our costs there and and at the same time you have by nick on the side that's looking at how it can invest you know we were just talking we just heard about his son-in-law investing in you know vaccine companies there's there's definitely a money game going on there both for what they view as a taxpayer problem but also to line their own pockets because you have these these synthetic food companies who are convinced that within 10 years they will have the most consequential disruption in the agricultural industry they just need to figure out a way to shut the real food down so they can get their foot in the door and so they're going to pay and lobby to have as much of this stuff put in place as possible so i'm going to get to a lot more of that in my cfap video talking about why cfap was put on hold and for those of you who don't know what cfap is that's the coronavirus food assistance program congress passed that bill they're working on the cares act 3 is what i'm calling it and they'll have more money in that but from what i could tell a lot of that money is not even i mean it's it's not the same as the second cfap was originally and so i'll go into the biden transition team to the usda and try and digest a little more of what their agenda is for the usda going forward but i can't fit all of it into one video you're already falling asleep hearing me talk about taxes so i'm going to stop here in a couple days i'll release that next video on cfap and what's actually happening who these players are and the transition team and how they all fit in i mean why do you need an attorney for computational medicine on the usda team has anybody asked that question another interesting thing that i'm going to talk about i just need to figure out a way to approach it is when sonny perdue is leaving office he actually put in a rule making to transfer genetically engineered animals approval from fda and usda to solely usda so he's trying to limit the power of stopping genetically engineered animals and there are some farmers out there who are 100 in favor of genetically engineered in my perspective i think that when we do too much of this engineering bio technology and stuff and we're putting it into our ecology that is extremely dangerous in my perspective it's not they don't you're putting living organisms back into the created organisms into an ecology that didn't normally have those organisms and when you look at our ecology when you look at everything it all starts with the microscopic ones i think that's a very big deal and i think that tom vilsack is going to sign that one off you know you can't really blame either one because it happened right during that transition nobody was even paying attention to it so i'm going to do a couple videos coming up talking about some of these issues and again i'm not trying to hound one administration over the other i wasn't happy with the last one i definitely would have chosen that one over the current one but this is what we're dealing with now and so let's look at some of these problems that are being thrown out there and figure out ways to get around them you
Info
Channel: Yanasa TV
Views: 324,591
Rating: 4.8781695 out of 5
Keywords: Ranch, Farm, Tax, Biden Tax, 30/30, Agenda 2030, Farm Land, Estate Tax, Inheritance Tax, Tax the rich, Biden, Biden Land Conservation, Biden 30/30 target, President Biden Executive Orders, 30 Percent Conservation, Farm Income, Farm Inheritance
Id: 3aDCbioe5RM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 38min 6sec (2286 seconds)
Published: Sat Feb 13 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.