A Quote by Erik Prince

I can relate to ranchers and roughnecks and professional game guides and farmers and homemakers. — © Erik Prince
I can relate to ranchers and roughnecks and professional game guides and farmers and homemakers.
In the past 40 years, the United States lost more than a million farmers and ranchers. Many of our farmers are aging. Today, only nine percent of family farm income comes from farming, and more and more of our farmers are looking elsewhere for their primary source of income.
Poor governance affects us all - entrepreneurs, homemakers, farmers, labourers, whatever identities we might have.
We need to make sure the Department of Agriculture is promoting farmers and ranchers.
Never in my life would I have expected USDA to be opposed to farmers and ranchers.
America's ranchers and farmers produce the highest-quality products in the world.
Farmers and ranchers need long-term certainty about who they will be able to sell to and under what terms.
We need to create incentives for our ranchers and farmers to manage their lands to maximize carbon sequestration.
When farmers and ranchers are confronted by weather-related disasters that are beyond their control, we need to do something to help.
You talk to the farmers, the ranchers, our small community bankers, and boy, one of the No. 1 issues is the regulations coming out of Washington.
American farmers and ranchers deserve a USDA that will pursue supportive policies rather than seek their further harm.
Mississippi farmers and ranchers continually deal with factors that can mean disaster, which is why they look for certainty and flexibility in farm programs.
What this means is that children, homemakers, executives, farmers, and long-living persons can all have high ego strength and good mental health if they possess the courage, humor, and flexibility of equilibrium between their rational and metaphoric minds.
Business leaders, social justice groups, farmers and ranchers, doctors and nurses and people from all walks of life are concerned about the climate threat.
The federal government does not have the authority to tell landowners and ranchers and farmers that they can't farm and ranch their land because someday an endangered species might live there.
With global markets ever expanding, we need to make sure that our American farmers, ranchers, foresters, and producers are well positioned to continue to lead the world.
Floods, droughts, and natural disasters are a fact of life for farmers, ranchers, and foresters. They have persevered in the past, and they will adapt in the future - with the assistance of the scientists and experts at USDA.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!