The Beef Behind the Deal: How Trump’s Argentina Pact Betrays Black Farmers, Again
If you want to understand how America works — who it feeds and who it forgets — just follow the beef. Donald Trump’s new trade deal with Argentina is being sold as a victory for American diplomacy and consumer choice. What it really is, though, is the latest act in a long American drama: one [...]

If you want to understand how America works — who it feeds and who it forgets — just follow the beef.
Donald Trump’s new trade deal with Argentina is being sold as a victory for American diplomacy and consumer choice. What it really is, though, is the latest act in a long American drama: one where Black farmers get left behind while billionaires and foreign governments cut the checks.
Let’s start with the headlines. Trump, alongside Argentina’s far-right president Javier Milei, announced that the U.S. will resume importing Argentine beef — a market closed for years due to health and trade concerns. It’s being pitched as “competition” and “choice.” But to the farmers who built this country — especially Black farmers — it’s another knife in the back.
While Trump brags about “free trade,” his administration has quietly gutted protections for domestic producers. His One Big Beautiful Bill slashes rural investment, repeals climate protections, and reintroduces “market efficiency” schemes that have historically favored corporate agribusiness over family farms. Meanwhile, the same USDA that once promised to repair decades of discrimination has shut its doors again — literally — on Black farmers seeking debt relief and justice.
According to The Guardian, Trump’s USDA has halted all payments from the previous administration’s $2.2 billion fund meant to compensate Black farmers for generations of racial discrimination. The Charlotte Post reports that dozens of families have been forced back into foreclosure — some on land they’ve owned since Reconstruction. That’s not just policy; that’s erasure.
And now, as Politico notes, the administration is courting global suppliers while “simplifying” programs that once provided loans, disaster relief, and technical assistance to small farmers. Translation: if you’re not white, wealthy, or working 10,000 acres, you’re expendable.
This isn’t new. It’s the same America that drove 14 million acres of Black-owned farmland into white hands over the past century. The same USDA that called discrimination “administrative error.” The same bureaucracy that found new ways to say no — even when Congress said yes.
But there’s something the Trump-Milei alliance can’t export: the resilience of Black farmers who keep planting in a nation that refuses to see them. From Georgia to Mississippi, from North Carolina to Oklahoma, these families are still fighting — forming co-ops, crowdfunding legal fees, and teaching the next generation that survival is resistance.
So when Trump smiles beside Milei and calls it “a great deal,” remember who’s paying the price. Black farmers aren’t just collateral damage in America’s trade wars — they’re the living proof that our government never stopped picking winners and losers by color.
The real “beef” here isn’t about cattle. It’s about courage — and whether this nation will ever honor the farmers who’ve been feeding it for centuries while starving for justice.
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