Posted on 11/29/2008 9:29:52 PM PST by neverdem
Michael Pollan, best known for his polemics against the food-industrial complex, has made a minor villain out of Earl Butz, Richard Nixons secretary of agriculture. Faced with a sharp spike in inflation, the Nixon White House sought to win the political allegiance of housewives by taking sweeping steps to lower agricultural prices. Butz slashed regulations and trade barriers while increasing subsidies. The result: Family farms closed down, huge agribusiness concerns expanded mightily, production soared, and domestic food prices fell dramatically. For Pollan, Butzs machinations lie behind the current obesity epidemic and a broader coarsening of American life. But there is a very real sense in which Butz ended the specter of hunger in the United States. Apart from the subsidies, there is much to admire in his approach: His package of reforms delivered a better quality of life to millions of Americans.
Now, Richard Nixon is hardly a model for Republican domestic policy. His crude Keynesianism and his embrace of wage and price controls are rightly condemned by conservatives, not least because such recklessness helped set the stage for stagflation. But Earl Butzs approach deserves another look.
We sometimes forget that strengthening the free market often requires policy activism. Standing pat has its place, but anti-market forces can turn the inaction of the other side to their advantage. This will become very clear in the first few months of an Obama White House. Aided by his shrewd enforcer, Rahm Emanuel, Obama looks set to reshape the American state in ways that will permanently ratchet up the size of government and the cost of living. And until the bill comes due, it is a safe bet that a majority of voters will cheer him on. For now, Republicans can only react to what Obama does. Over the longer term, the party needs to develop a strategy that, like Butzs agricultural reforms, will have a significant impact on the quality of life of working-class and middle-class voters.
American workers are, as we all know, feeling anxious and vulnerable. And when we think of the political implications of this souring of the American mood, we tend to think, correctly, that it helps the Democrats. Barack Obamas victory is not, as some self-described progressives dearly hope, a mandate for robust social democracy. Just as Bush did not win in 2000 and 2004 because of his supposed commitment to free markets, theres no reason to believe that voters carefully evaluated Obamas economic program and found it persuasive. Rather, Democrats won because recent developments have sharply reduced the number of Americans who are optimistic about their economic prospects. As the Pew Research Center has found over the years, economic optimists tend to be Republicans. That is, people who believe that they control their own economic fate, and that the future will likely be brighter than the past, tend to vote Republican by overwhelming margins. This is true among blue-collar workers as well as affluent professionals.
In other words, we still have to manage the minds and emotions of masses who don’t think for themselves or understand basic economics and want to blame “somebody” for “something”. Glad I’m not a politician.
A must-read. Great post.
The republican party for years opposed minimum wage rates, while at the same time supporting open borders to drive down wages. While also supporting reducing taxes and saying they supported a balanced budget while spending like crazy. The truth is the republicans support whomever gives them the most money and whatever their case is and what the lobbyists with the checks wants at that moment in time. The voters be damned!.
Unfortunately, after spending Thanksgiving with my family, they are all falling in to the second half of that argument. They are culturally conservative people, but have fallen in to screw the rich people mode.
Oh yea. Earl Butz.
Lauding Earl Butz is a fast-track to losing ranchers and farmers, a reliably GOP-leaning group if ever there were one.
Any GOP pointy-head intellectual who holds out Earl Butz for praise is going to fast-track the party further into the hinterland with the label “The Stupid Party.”
Earl “Plant Fencerow to Fencerow” Butz is the reason why we have such huge ag subsidies trying to prop up commodity prices today. He encouraged vast over-production on leverage. The result was the farm economy/land price collapse of the mid-80’s, which then got yet another Congressional bail-out.
Please, in the name of all that does not suck, do not hold up Earl Butz as some example of what the GOP should do.
I agree with a lot of it. Republicans are just doing poor imitations of Reagan’s rhetoric, with an even poorer understanding of the nuts and bolts economics and politics that were behind it all.
Subsidies and regulations make food more expensive than it ought to be. That’s a winning argument I don’t see a single Republican running on.
Needless over-regulation, mandatory licensing, burdensome drug policies, etc., have all made health care costs higher than they ought to be. Why aren’t Republicans running on this message?
Corporate taxes simply pass higher hidden costs onto the consumer. They should be abolished. Why aren’t Republicans using this argument?
I’ve just about given up on all politicians. Even the most promising ones (Jindal, Palin, etc.) aren’t advocating the kinds of massive reforms and government down-sizing we NEED. I’m starting to seriously think that Sowell was right when he said almost nothing short of a military coup could do away with all of the bureaucracy and loss of economic freedoms in the government. Not that I’m hoping for such a situation.
no, but we can’t just talk about income tax cuts.
There’s the payroll tax. There’s tremendous inflation in health care and college tuition because of govt policies that stimulate demand and not actual health or inflation. Ethanol subsidies have pushed up the price of food. And then there’s monetary policy. Very few talk about that.
Butz aside (I don’t know much about him), I can safely say I don’t give a crap about who has been a reliably Republican voting group. I’m sick of identity politics. The GOP only got the “cultural conservatives” by default when the New Left drove the moderates away from the Democrats. Politically, they aren’t “conservatives.” They are generally in favor of whatever government interventions in the market are beneficial to *them*.
The GOP could offer poor black families vouchers to get out of the hell hole schools the teachers unions make them attend. You could win over that entire demographic in a generation. And yet we just give up, and keep cannibalizing the same demographics on social issues rather than on actual political issues.
Forget demographics, just make the best possible case you can for your policies, try to convince as many people as possible.
Thank you. I’m getting more and more enamored with the post-Buckley National Review.
“The republican party for years opposed minimum wage rates, while at the same time supporting open borders to drive down wages. “
great, so instead we’d kill jobs and make everything more expensive.
I watched Bill Moyers interview this arrogant prig on Bill's NOW show on PBS last night. Pollan is so "full of it" that it's a wonder he isn't obese!!! Go to PBS.org and download that interview and see if you don't agree with me.
He is the epitome of the pointy headed academic A-hole in my humble opinion. He just exudes unjustified piety and sanctity!!! And besides, he's largely incorrect!!!
It seems that is what has happened, I stated historical fact, if you have a problem with it. then so be it. It still happened.
correction: and not actual health or education
I have a problem with regulations and taxes.
James Watt actually had first rate ideas about protecting the environment but it would be insane to refer to him as the Demicrat/MSM complex has so thoroughly demonized the fundamentalist Christian environmentalist as Secretary of the Interior for Ronald Reagan that it isn't funny!!!
Bring back family farming...including within city limits as workfare. Change zoning to make it legal and save energy.
Let urban kids get a chance to harvest their own crops and be able to help feed the family in hard times. There’s a sense of pride in one’s own handiwork that all should experience.
Big Ag is not good for America, agreed. And USDA price controls hinder the laws of supply and demand.
The thing I like best about the post...is the title which is profoundly true.
remember when radical environmentalism was about stuff that theoretically could actually kill you and the debate was over whether we should get crazy over the tiniest speck of arsenic that had 0.000000001% chance of hurting anyone?
Now we have to go after soda bubbles.
Personally, since we will have to hand carry the deluded public through the recession, perhaps the GOP needs to begin talking about ways to salvage what is left of the middle classes 401Ks instead of Wall Street or the Auto Industry.
Even though salvageing one will mean salvaging the other, what better way to get the publics attention than focusing on how they will salvage 401K’s?
I'll take things that suck for $200, Alex.
I've seen 79 of these editorials from RINOs and libs telling conservatives how to win. The answer is always "Become a Progressive, lib democrat".
Nobody in the lib MSM ever said that they should become conservative when they lost every election. It was always "What is wrong with the hicks in flyover country?"
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