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The
Next Conservatism #9: Country Life
By
Paul M. Weyrich
September 13, 2005
In
my next two columns, I intend to write about two places
the
next conservatism needs to consider: the countryside
and cities. Perhaps because most conservatives, including
myself, live in suburbs, we don’t think about rural
life or cities very often. But there are good reasons why
the next conservatism should think about both.
Earlier generations of conservatives were agrarians. They
thought that life on a family farm was a good life for many
people. It built strong families and communities, communities
where faith and morals could flourish. I believe that is
still true, and I therefore think that bringing back the
family farm as a viable way of life should be an important
part of the next conservatism.
Some
people may object that such a program is simply not possible.
The family farm cannot be made economically viable
in today’s world. I am not certain on that point. I
do know that most of the billions we spend each year for
agricultural subsidies go to support big agribusiness, not
family farms. What if we changed that? What if instead of
subsidizing factory farming, we provided financial support
for people who were trying to start new family farms? Such
support should not go on forever, but if it were in the form
of a revolving fund, it could help them get started.
This is also a situation where we, as conservatives, need
to learn from others. One place to start is with the Amish.
The Amish are cultural conservatives. They live according
to the beliefs most conservatives espouse: Christian faith,
strong families, close-knit communities where people depend
on each other, communities based on the church.
The Amish are also successful, often prosperous, family
farmers. One of my colleagues has a friend who is an Amish
farmer. He has a herd of 40 to 50 dairy cows. He recently
told my colleague that he will get about $75,000 worth of
product from his cows in a good
year and buy only about $5000 worth of feed for them. $70,000
is a decent income from 50 cows. Mostly, his cows
graze. He is also organic, which means he isn’t spending
lots of money on pesticides and chemical fertilizers.
The
next conservatism can also learn from the organic farming
movement.
Many people, including some conservatives, want
organic products and are willing to pay a premium for them.
That helps the farmer receive a fair price for his products,
one that makes his farm viable. As conservatives, we should
not see cheapness as the highest virtue. Russell Kirk wrote, “So
America’s contribution to the universal ‘democratic
capitalism’ of the future . . . will be just this:
cheapness, the cheapest music and the cheapest comic-books
and the cheapest morality that can be provided.” He
might have added the cheapest agricultural products, regardless
of what that does to agrarian life. That is not the direction
in which the next conservatism should go.
Agrarian life is a whole culture, not just a way to make
a living, and we should seek to protect that culture and
make it available to more and more families.
A
recent article in Farming magazine, “Conversations
with the Land” by Jim Van Der Pol, gave insight into
that culture:
Recently
I sat in a church mourning the passage of another farmer
from a world that can ill afford to spare even one.
I thought of Leonard’s love of farmer talk . . . the
telling again of stories connected with people and places
in a long and well lived human life . . .
“See,” he would tell me after naming all the
farmers who have exchanged work together in his circle, “nobody
every kept track of who spent how much time doing things
for which others. Everyone just figured it would work out.
It always did.”
Leonard was in his farming and his life a maker of art,
a husband to his wife and to his farm, a human creating in
the context of Creation itself. . .
Beyond
the family farm itself, the next conservatism should seek
to make the countryside available to as many Americans
as possible. The Mennonites have a wonderful program where
they bring inner-city children to their farms for part of
their summer school vacations. What a tremendous and health-giving
change for kids who have never known anything but asphalt
and crime! Many cities and towns now have farmers’ markets,
where people in the city and the suburbs can buy fresh farm
product directly from the farmers. Both the farmers and the
city-dwellers benefit.
The next conservatism should look toward a world where,
as Tolkien put it, there is less noise and more green. Our
goal should be to make agrarian life, in all its dimensions,
available to as many Americans as possible, both those who
work family farms for their living and those who earn their incomes in other ways but
want a tie to the countryside. In this respect, the next
conservatism should be like an older conservatism we seem
to have forgotten. Conservatives should become agrarians
again.
Paul M. Weyrich is Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress
Foundation.
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