Guebert

Alan Guebert


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Articles

GUEBERT: Acorns, leaves falling

Somehow, a notice went out a week ago to all the blue jays in Illinois that the acorns on (what I think is) a shingle oak outside my office were ripe for the picking.

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GUEBERT: It's August, take a nap

One part of every day on the southern Illinois dairy farm of my youth was inviolate: the noon nap. Nearly everyone took one. We didn’t rest very long, just 30 minutes or so, because the farm work never rested long. The naps, however, were as integral a part of our farm routine as the big, noon dinners they followed.

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OPINION: Long winter days become slow, dull

Only once or twice during all my school days on the farm did snow or ice keep us more than one day from learning and Luther. But the memories of all those special days still quicken the pace of a slow, muddy day a half century later.

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OPINION: Walking with giants

This Thanksgiving Day, like the previous three November holidays, will find the lovely Catherine and me about as far east from the harvested Illinois fields as one can get and still be on American soil. In fact, we’ll be on federal soil, just seven blocks from the U.S. Capitol, at daughter Gracie’s place in Washington, D.C.

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OPINION: A super bad, super undemocratic process

TV talkers and radio ranters briefly bloviated last week on the world’s population topping 7 billion. While 7 billion is a big number, it isn’t the biggest part of the population story.

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OPINION: Again with the crop insurance?

Suggestions on how to change the 2012 Farm Bill are popping up faster than jack-o’-lanterns. Like this gap-toothed hallmark of Halloween, however, most are hollow, scary and shed little light.

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OPINION: Looking homeward on a well-traveled roadway

The usual six-mile drive home from Sunday church took a pleasant turn some weeks ago.

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OPINION: Readers respond to columnists ideas in some unappetizing ways

Six months have passed since readers have had their say about me, my work and its effect on their digestive system. Turns out the first two often riles the third as in a mid-April emailer, who signed his missive “All Small Farmers,” noted.

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OPINION: Like traffic roundabouts, moving left or right lands you where you started

The mid-June Congressional action on ag programs seems to confirm why Washington, D.C.’s streets feature roundabout upon roundabout: moving left or right — a big deal on Capitol Hill now — usually lands you back where you started.

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Why Tobey Farmer died

On Nov. 10, 1918, Tobey Farmer, a corporal in the 365th Infantry Regiment, 92nd Division of the U.S. Army, died while serving his nation, and freedom, in St. Mihiel, France.

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Columns

GUEBERT: Late corn planting in May

The first good corn planting day of spring finally arrived at my central Illinois farmette April 30. Like the month’s previous 29 days, however, no one within 100 miles used it to plant because near-record rains had washed April away.

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GUEBERT: SNAP will bite back if not funded

Cuts to food aid will cut farm sales and profits.

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GUEBERT: SNAP will bite back if not funded

Cuts to food aid will cut farm sales and profits.

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GUEBERT: Ranchers paying for the right to lose

Chicago Cubs baseball fans and American cow-calf ranchers have two things in common. First, they can’t win for losing and, second, they pay heavily for the right to do just that.

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GUEBERT: Odious riders on poultry, genetically modified crops pass Congress

Congress needs more open lawmaking and fewer lobbyists, more bottom-up debate and less top-down dismissiveness, more well-lit transparency and less in-the-dark committee work.

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GUEBERT: Beware the coming market calamity

The money underwriting it all, he claims, is not coming from a healthy, stable economy but from the Federal Reserve’s “egregious flood of phony money” that has “expanded [the Fed’s] balance sheet six-fold, to $3.2 trillion from $500 billion,” since the year 2000.

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GUEBERT: Land prices reach nutty levels

How long will this all last? About 10 minutes longer than the end of mandated ethanol use.

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GUEBERT: Enough fiddling around -- time to fire things up

Come March 31, 90 days into 2013, the House will have spent a backbreaking 35 days in their legislative sweatshop; the Senate almost half-again as many, 50.

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GUEBERT: US exports have soared under Obama

Outgoing U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk is a mostly unsung, hardly ever mentioned and still pretty much unknown bureaucrat, serving from 2009 to 2013.

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GUEBERT: Health care about care, not politics

How this plays out carries bigger consequences for rural Americans because “out here” we’re older, poorer and more dependent on government-supported health care than our urban counterparts.

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