In federal farm offering this is about three hours. Good morning. The subcommittee on commodities, Risk Management and trade will come to order. Welcome to all of our witnesses. Senator hyde smith thank you to you and your staff working together with us to organize this hearing today. Chair stabenow and i believe Ranking Member boozman will be with us shortly but it would to thank them for joining us many thanks to the full Committee Staff for all of your help and support with this hearing. Thank you to everyone for attending. This morning is going to be a twopart hearing. Today was on the farm bill, the products title. On thursday will take on title v. The credit title in title 11 the Crop Insurance title. February the full committee the full Senate Committee heard from usda officials their family views of Risk Management and credit. Today we have the opportunity to hear directly from farmers, producers, stakeholder groups that work with farm Safety Net Programs every day. Hearing fro
Democracy doesnt just this. Looks like this. Americans consume democracy at work and citizens are truly enforce public thrive. Get informed, straight from the slopes. Unfiltered, unbiased word for word. The nations capitol to wherever you are to get the opinion that matters the most is your own. This is what democracy looks like. Cspan powered by cable. Next groups representing farmers testify on Crop Insurance and other federal Safety Net Programs also discuss changes they would like to see in federal farm offering this is about three hours. Good morning. The subcommittee on commodities, Risk Management and trade will come to order. Welcome to all of our witnesses. Senator hyde smith thank you to you and your staff working together with us to organize this hearing today. Chair stabenow and i believe Ranking Member boozman will be with us shortly but it would to thank them for joining us many thanks to the full Committee Staff for all of your help and support with this hearing. Thank y
We started discussing what was the future of this place. In october of 2009 i came with my crew for three days just as an experiment and film in the city just as an outsider. Talked to a few people. Absolutely riveretted by the people and the plays. I thought theres definitely a movie here. We need to make a film in detroit. Host when impacted, i read your father had an impact on you watching him and his business over the years. Guest , thats right, my father is had a manufacturing company. He really like in the 1980s with the rise in japan had to innovate and come up up with new ideas and making it difficult to create products. He started engineering complicated things that couldnt be replicated or stolen or easily made overseas. Thats now his business arrived. I kind of had a front row seat to what it was like going you in the 1980s. How he survived was interesting it was all about being nimble and innovative. Which i think detroit needs and the rest of the country pretty much needs
Connection. I had never considered making a film in detroit, or one with any personal ties to myself. Mike codirector and i started talking about a detroit in late 2008. Things seemed to be getting worse. It was already bad in the 1980s. In lot of people i knew were leaving. In october of 2009 i came with my crew for three days just as an experiment and film in the city just as an outsider. Talked to a few people. Absolutely riveretted by the people and the plays. I thought theres definitely a movie here. We need to make a film in detroit. When impacted, i read your father had an impact on you watching him and his business over the years. Thats right, my father is had a manufacturing company. He really like in the 1980s with the rise in japan had to innovate and come up with new ideas and making it difficult to create products. He started engineering complicated things that couldnt be replicated or stolen or easily made overseas. Thats now his business arrived. I kind of had a front ro
Brothers. They were adamant to keep their products made in the United States. However, i would say the vast majority, Something Like 60 of my fathers went out of business. Partly because of it was just cheaper to make things overseas. How many documentaries have you done before this one . A lot. Ive been making films over ten years. This is our fifth documentary feature off of theaters. We made a lot of small and large Television Products for hbo. We make our living in the nonfiction world which is rare and lucky. Are you based . New york city. Which of those documentaries made it biggest . Jesus camp. We made a film called jesus camp. We lost to al gore convenient truth. We all knew we were going to lose. It really sort of struck a nerve. It was really a look at the evangelical right through the eyes of children who are being home schooled and creationism, etcetera. It was at that time in 2007 a real window into this world. We impact judgment on the kids. Sort of put a face on the nam