Ag Has Bigger Problems Than Weather, Trade, Bailouts…
Posted on July 10, 2019
When you’ve been in the ag journalism game for almost 40 years, few things surprise you. Floods, droughts, market crack-ups, political crockery, price fixing: none of it is shocking anymore.
And, yet, on June 21, the Washington Post published a farm-based story that made even this graybeard marvel at how tone deaf and superior-sounding rural politics has become to much of the non-farming nation.
Even more startling was the reader reaction to that growing tone-deafness. Within four days of the piece being published, nearly 5,000 readers posted online comments; almost all were soaked with contempt and sarcasm for the featured farmers, who farm 15,000 acres in South Dakota, and by association, rural America in general.
In fairness, the farmers and others quoted in the story only related what almost every farmer and rancher has thought or said this troubled year: it’s getting tough out here. How they said it, though, undermined almost every ounce of empathy readers might have had for that message.
It began with one farmer noting “This trade thing”—Mexico, in this instance—“is going to kill us.” Next, more tough-minded, toughly worded quotes tumbled out as the farmers and their rural neighbors listed their worries and explained their views:
–The latest farmer bailout package, estimated at a staggering $16 billion, “is like putting a Band-Aid on a bleeding artery. It’s not going to save anybody.”
–“Trump’s going to do right by us… and get this straightened out.”
–“I always say the West Coast and East Coast can each be a country and the rest of us will be just fine.”
–“Here in flyover country, we have everything we need—food, oil…”
Then came the swift and searing replies. Here’s a sampling of the more printable comments:
–“They disdain the coastal elites who pay their bills. They hate socialism that they rely on. They complain about taxes they barely pay. The sheer ignorance of thinking they feed us (when) it’s us feeding them.”
–“Coastal elites? It might surprise those farmers that the majority of the folks on the coasts don’t live in penthouses and make millions a year. I don’t pretend to know what it takes to be a farmer. Please don’t assume you know what it’s like to live in a city on either coast.”
–“I’m kinda wondering where the heck they think the rest of food comes from, like food that isn’t corn, wheat or soybeans.”
–“These poor (expletive deleted) states need us and not the other way around… I hope every last one of them loses their farm…”
In contrast, the number of farmer-defending comments were too few to count. When one does appear, responding readers pummel the defender and the argument.
So what’s going on here?
Part of it is simply piling on. Angry, Trump-bashing non-farmers see a chance to vent against “rich” farmers and they willingly join the rising chorus.
The bigger part, though, is more troubling: American farmers and ranchers have a growing problem with today’s younger, better educated, more influential generation of eaters who are unafraid to challenge Big Ag’s views on GMOs, trade, politics, global warming, and the scornful pats on the head—rather than real answers—they receive to their serious questions about quality, cost, and consequences of today’s farm and food policies.
As such, the almost automatic, guaranteed political support farmers and ranchers once received from the public is quickly draining. Political divisions, now steeped in today’s unbridled rhetoric, have split most of the remaining support along widening rural/urban lines.
Farmers and ranchers are, of course, free to reject the Post story as liberal or elitist and its reader comments as biased or uninformed. What can’t be dismissed, however, is that almost 5,000 people reacted angrily to a story told through the voice of rural America.
If that means anything, it means that American agriculture has a bigger problem than either weather or trade, and this one won’t be solved by turning inward or telling others to butt out.
© 2019 ag comm
“almost 5,000 people reacted angrily to a story told through the voice of rural America” I would love to meet the author of the Post article. I personally do not feel that one farmer is the voice of rural America. At least I hope not. Perhaps a cross section of briefer interviews with farmers in a variety of situations would have painted a more responsible picture. This ended up being a pretty damaging piece of work in my estimation.