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The Water Cooler
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Did Cortez really say this?
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<blockquote data-quote="SoonerP226" data-source="post: 3207979" data-attributes="member: 26737"><p>I'm not sure. From what I understand, a lot of "family" farms and ranches could be considered "corporate" or "commercial" because they are, in fact, corporations, especially the ones that have been around for a few generations. After a couple of generations, they have so many heirs with a stake in the farm that the only way it can operate is for it to be a corporation with the heirs owning the stock (corporate, not literal), and only some of them actually working the farm/ranch. </p><p></p><p>So, it's still a family farm, but it's also a corporate farm. I'm not sure, but I think that's how Braums is structured--the family owns the corporation, which in turn owns the farm, stores, and so forth.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SoonerP226, post: 3207979, member: 26737"] I'm not sure. From what I understand, a lot of "family" farms and ranches could be considered "corporate" or "commercial" because they are, in fact, corporations, especially the ones that have been around for a few generations. After a couple of generations, they have so many heirs with a stake in the farm that the only way it can operate is for it to be a corporation with the heirs owning the stock (corporate, not literal), and only some of them actually working the farm/ranch. So, it's still a family farm, but it's also a corporate farm. I'm not sure, but I think that's how Braums is structured--the family owns the corporation, which in turn owns the farm, stores, and so forth. [/QUOTE]
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