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fencesitter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 09:38 AM
Original message
Red State Welfare
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/06/28/opinion/28egan.html?hp

Tom Egan, NYT.
I only can link the Times Select page. If you can find a free link, please post.

*******"With upwards of $20 billion a year in federal payments going to a select few in farm country, you would think that these troubled counties would have a more vigorous pulse. After all, corn and wheat prices are at record highs, and big manses here and there, with Hummers in limestone driveways, indicate that somebody is doing well.

It would be one thing if the despair and disparity in farm country were the sole products of history, if time had simply passed it all by. But it comes as a jolt to realize that government policy is much to blame.

The Red State welfare program, also known as the farm subsidy system, showers most of its tax dollars on the richest farmers, often people with no dirt under their fingernails, at the expense of everybody else trying to work the land. Like urban welfare before reform, agriculture subsidies reward those who can work the system — farming the government, as they call it around the diner.

And when you dare ask about the farmer in Colorado who received more than $2 million in handouts, or all those absentee landowners collecting their $150,000 government checks in gilded urban ZIP codes, the reaction is: it’s none of your business.

Thus, the American Farm Bureau, which represents some of the biggest corporate welfare recipients, is terrified that a motley mix of peasants are now at the door with pitchforks. On their Web page, the bureau warns members that “forces outside of agriculture” are demanding change. The audacity! The farm bureau’s attitude to the taxpayer is: just write the check and shut up.

Every five years or so Congress drafts a farm bill. The last farm bill was a masterpiece of Soviet-style goals and giveaways signed by that faux-rancher who likes to show off his cowboy boots, President Bush.

This massive piece of legislation could be a blueprint for rural America. But it has become a spoils system where the congressmen-turned-lobbyists make sure that their clients get triple-figure checks for growing things that the nation already has in surplus.

*********

The farm bill sets the rules for the American food system and helps to subsidize obesity. It rewards growers of big commodity crops like corn, soybeans and wheat — the foundation of our junk food nation. So, a bag of highly processed orange puff balls with no nutritional value is cheaper than a tomato or a peach. Wonder why.

The reformists, by and large, are not trying to get in on the gravy train. They want to revitalize rural America, to encourage farmers’ markets, contribute to environmental health and to make it easier for poor people to buy fresh fruits and vegetables.

In Congress, Jeff Flake, a maverick Republican from Arizona who angered party leaders by taking on earmarks, and Ron Kind, a Democrat who represents dairy country in Wisconsin, are leading the charge. There is likely to be a huge fight later this summer, because the old guard who protect the farm lobby are embedded deep in the early-stage committees.

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sinkingfeeling Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 09:54 AM
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1. I remember when the Farm Bureau was made up of local family farmers in Ohio. My grandparents
were members and I attended local meetings with them.
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blueworld Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 09:55 AM
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2. Thanks for posting this & it also happens (on a smaller scale) in blue states
This is another example of a program originally designed to help hard-working Americans but which was later hijacked by corporate agri-business with the help of a greased Congress.

When I lived in NJ, it was perfectly legal for a homeowner with a couple of acres to plant a small section with evergreens, I mean "Christmas trees", call it a Christmas tree farm and get a reduced property tax rate. All they had to show was $500 in "sales" per year, which frankly they could have simply put on paper. When I challenged this to one "farmer" he irately explained to me that he was part of the movement to keep agriculture viable in NJ. His land was held "open". As if he would have sold his sideyard & let them put in a parking lot. IMO it's fraud, and real farmers need money for important programs.

In the face of food quality, food safety, natural beauty and so much more, kudos to you for posting about this vital issue.:applause:
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