China doesn’t want to grow crops. They want to spy on us, control our food supply, and position themselves on American soil. This is enemy territory and we’re SELLING it to them. Not on Rubio’s watch. Not on OURS.

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Land, Loyalty, and the Image of Foreign Influence: Visual Persuasion and the Debate over Foreign Ownership of U.S. Farmland

The image is constructed to do more than ask a question; it stages an argument. At center is a stern, square-shouldered political figure delivering a formal address; behind him, in circular vignettes, appears a portrait of a foreign leader with a red flag and, on the other side, a red barn and tractor under an expansive Midwestern sky. Bold, all-caps type asks whether the Chinese Communist Party should be banned from buying U.S. farmland β€” converting a complex policy debate into a visceral, easily shareable visual. This composition compresses anxieties about sovereignty, food security, economic control, and national identity into a single, emotionally charged frame. To understand what this image demands of viewers, we need to examine the visual rhetoric, the legal and economic dimensions of foreign land ownership, the security arguments employed, and the ethical and political consequences of framing foreign investment as existential threat.

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