What is the Matter With the Rural U.S.?
I lived in
two small towns for a total of 13 years as a kid, so I have not forgotten these
areas. 14% of the U.S. population lives in rural
areas. Thomas Frank, in his famous book
“What’s the Matter With Kansas?” pointed
out that rural areas in Kansas were getting hammered by neo-liberal capitalism
and still thought guns, gay marriage or abortion were the key issues to be concerned
with. This while rural and small town
hospitals, farms, schools and businesses were closing or going bankrupt, and
while young people left for the city.
Ghost town in Texas |
That was
2004. 15 years later and the situation
in the rural and small town U.S.
is even worse. Farms have continued to increase in size as smaller farmers and
ranchers bail. Farm bankruptcies have increased, especially during Trump’s present trade war, while loan
delinquencies are increasing too. Both are the highest since 2011. Farmer
suicides are up. The meth and opiod drug epidemics are hitting these areas
especially hard, while obesity is high and life expectancy is lower than urban
areas. Doctors and dentists do not want
to practice in places with a shrinking population and no money. Rural schools
are smaller and more limited, so the education they provide is of a lower
standard. Schools are consolidating, so
children have to go longer distances. These
areas still do not have adequate fast internet.
Bus service has disappeared so everyone is overly-dependent on cars and
gasoline. Of course, the poorest rural regions are in the Mississippi Delta, the Rio Grande borderlands, reservations like Pine Ridge and the hills of Appalachia. Nearly all of these are predominantly non-European Americans.
Corporations
like Monsanto dominate the seed and pesticide industry and sue anyone they want
while Wal-Mart destroys small local businesses.
Wages are low, poverty is increasing, unemployment is up and the
population is aging. Land prices are high,
so young farmers have difficulty buying in.
Farm equipment is extremely expensive, driving debt. Year after year the
U.S. Farm bill and subsequent federal aid is dominated by corporate agriculture,
which is true even for Trump’s present trade war ‘aid’ program, giving 60% of the aid to the upper 10% of farms. Towns with one manufacturing or food
processing plant lose it to robotics, Mexico,
the U.S.
south or overseas. Some small towns do
not even have sewage treatment plants.
·
13,000
total farms disappeared in 2018.
·
95%
of poverty in the U.S.
is in rural counties.
·
Since
2005, 120 rural hospitals closed and 673 more hospitals were vulnerable to
closure, especially in the U.S. South and areas with unhealthy populations.
·
Since
2005, 2,700 rural schools have closed.
·
Bankruptcies
are up 24% this year. (Farm Bureau)
All this
while the view of what is desirable food is shifting in the U.S., though
not in rural areas. The recent bankruptcy
of milk producer Dean Foods and its court sale to Dairy Farmers of America (a
milk oligopolist) is proof of this. So is
the protection of hog waste lagoons, the hiding of animal cruelty and the rabid
fight against meat, milk and cheese substitutes. Agriculture in the U.S. is still mainly based on plant
monocultures and heavy pesticide use; antibiotics routinely given to animals; artificial fertilizer; destructive
industrial cow, hog and poultry industrial ‘harvesting’; intensive technology; ground-water
depletion; heavy carbon inputs; cheap migrant labor and corn grown for gasoline and animal feed, not
humans. Just eating at small town cafes tells
you the story – the quality is low, the food is retro based on fat, salt, sugar
and heavy meat. It is like the 1950s never
ended. And yet they did.
Medicare for All won't work if there is no hospital |
Willie
Nelson, Neil Young and John Mellencamp have had ‘Farm Aid’ concerts since 1985,
yet charity efforts have not stemmed the tide. What rural areas need is a
revival of left-wing farmer and land populism, not right-wing culture wars from
the same people that are destroying the rural U.S. This revival will be more
difficult than the days of the Farmer’s Holiday (Iowa),
the Farmer-Labor Party (Minnesota and Wisconsin), the Non-Partisan League (Dakotas) or the
southern Tenant Farmer’s Union in the 1930s. This is because the number of small farmers
is far less. As an example, the present Farm Bureau has been captured by large
corporations, large farmers and large ranchers.
The only
increase in small farming is in agro-ecology, organic, vegetable, bison,
marijuana and hemp farming, along with indigenous ricing. These farms use lower acreages than the large
farms dominating the rural U.S. The other positive increase is the
development of wind and solar farms, which also might push farmers to the left. There are still organizations and unions for
farm and food workers, as well as Latino and ‘black’ farmers, along with
indigenous reservations, which have their own plans for land, animals and food.
Interestingly,
the 1850 Communist Manifesto had
points about these issues. It called for
“improving the soil under a common plan;” reducing the division between town
and country and spreading out populations concentrated in urban areas. It also called for socializing land –
taking it out of the hands of market profiteers. Moving to a kind of agro-ecology agriculture,
which is part of the basis of organic farming, is one way to re-populate
and revive the rural U.S. It is more labor-intensive, produces
healthier food, has a much lower carbon footprint and is less destructive to
the soil, workers, animals and ecology. Large corporate farms could be broken up slowly, as studies show smaller farms are actually more productive, replaced by cooperatives and a restored 'commons.' Local plant closings can be stopped through tough labor action. If
rural areas move to the left, that will direct government funds to public
hospitals and school systems in these areas. Corporate America has planted itself in large cities, demanding you move there. Just as they concentrate profits in their pockets, they concentrate people near their offices.
These ideas
are outside the typical template of Big Ag, which is the real source of misery
in the rural U.S. Farmers are typically contract slaves to
Monsanto, Archer Daniels Midland, Cargill, Dole, Tyson – name your big Ag
conglomerate. Or in debt to expensive
farm equipment manufacturers –Deere & Co., Case, Caterpillar - all based on
mono-cropping. So why love your bosses? Reports
indicate that 40% of farm income this year is coming from federal or state
government welfare payments, much of that going to the largest corporate
farmers and ranchers.
At some
point there will come a break in rural areas and small towns. Underpaid local workers who have lived under
the thumb of local businessmen, along with some small farmers and small businessmen may
realize they have been conned by the Republican Party and Democratic Party centrists,
the farm elite and the corporate monsters.
The soil and environment suffer from pesticides, artificial fertilizers
and mono-cropping; the water quality and quantity decrease and they themselves fall further
into economic and social trouble.
Whether any left populist organization or political candidate captures
this sentiment is another matter, as most do not have a real program for the
rural U.S.
P.S. - on 1/6/20, Borden Dairy announced its bankruptcy.
P.S. - on 1/6/20, Borden Dairy announced its bankruptcy.
Other
reviews on this topic below, use blog search box, upper left with these terms:
“Foodopoly,” “A Foodie’s Guide to
Capitalism,” “Damnation,” “Salt, Sugar, Fat,” “Land Grabbing,” “Behind the
Kitchen Door,” “Farmer-Labor Party.”
Red Frog
November 25,
2019
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