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Money for Nothing

Why is there a stigma attached to using government-financed food stamps to purchase food but there's no stigma attached to accepting government money to grow the food in the first place? American farm policy is filled with such stumpers. Consider that federal cash payments to individuals--the program formerly known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children--were widely criticized for creating intergenerational dependency on government and allowing people to maintain an idle lifestyle. Yet cash payments to American farmers are justified by some precisely because they promote intergenerational dependency on the federal government. "If we'd kept our land in wheat, the fixed costs for equipment [and] fertilizer would have played havoc with our budget," North Dakota farmer Lyle Sjostrom told The New York Times in late August (the Times' Elizabeth Becker has done tremendous work on the topic). He dedicated 40 percent of his 4,000 acres to the federal government's conservation program, a move he credits with allowing his son, a full-time seed peddler, to become a farmer in his spare time. (When women on welfare work a job on the side to supplement their government checks it's considered welfare fraud, but when farmers take outside jobs, such as selling seeds or legislating farm policy, it's considered noble.)Others praise farm handouts for the leisure it provides. "Subsidies are critical to most gentlemen farming in Arkansas," Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) told the Times.Lincoln is one of seven congressional farmers who receive thousands of dollars every year from taxpayers. Some, like Texas Rep. Charles Stenholm (D), an author of farm legislation, find value in dependence on government. "Working a farm and relying on subsidies has been a plus for me," Stenholm told The New York Times. Perhaps that's why Stenholm joined with Arkansas Rep. Marion Berry (D) in voting against the modest tax cut passed earlier this year. They recognized that ha...

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