Originally posted by ABC
The Rural Electrification Administration is a dull phrase for a program that revolutionized farm life. How this groundbreaking program was pushed through the political process is a story that involved the new president and an independent U.S. Senator from Nebraska.
In the 1930s, there was a huge gap between people in town and people on the farms. Only about 10 percent of U.S. farm families had central station electricity in the mid-30s. Nebraska's average in 1929 was even lower – only 5.9 percent of farmers had electricity. Almost all urban people had power
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In less than 15 years after the passage of the Rural Electrification Act (REA), the authors claimed that 91 percent of "our farms" had electric service available. But, some farmers in Nebraska and other sparsely populated areas point out they didn't get service until well into the 50s.
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Now considering that supplying electricity to rural areas was ecomically impractical (see the wikipedia article) its clearly evident that a law, interfering with the normal market, resulted in the improvement of a significant amount of peoples lives in Nebraska.
Originally posted by ABC
Originally posted by ABC
Originally posted by ABC
Btw...No hard feelings but I am trying to get you to justify your positions with some sort of evidence. If you get upset or anything we can do the old 'agree to disagree' sort of thing. We also have strayed quite afar from the original topic but hey, I can keep this all day. Cheers.
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