IN THIS chat with Ezra Klein , Tom Vilsack, the secretary of agriculture, offers a pandering defence of agricultural subsidies so thoroughly bereft of substance I began to fear that Mr Vilsack would be sucked into the vacuum of his mouth and disappear.

When Mr Klein first raises the subject of subsidies for sugar and corn, Mr Vilsack admirably says, "I admit and acknowledge that over a period of time, those subsidies need to be phased out." But not yet! Vilsack immediately thereafter scrambles to defend the injurious practice. Ethanol subsidies help to wean us off foreign fuels and dampen price volatility when there is no peace is the Middle East, Mr Vilsack contends. Anyway, he continues, undoing the economic dislocation created by decades of corporate welfare for the likes of ADM and Cargill will create economic dislocation. Neither of these points is entirely lacking in merit, but they at best argue for phasing out subsidies slowly starting now.

Mr Vilsack should have stopped here, since this is as strong as his case is ever going to be, but instead he goes on to argue that these subsidies sustain rural culture, which is a patriotic culture that honours and encourages vital military service:

[S]mall-town folks in rural America don't feel appreciated. They feel they do a great service for America. They send their children to the military not just because it's an opportunity, but because they have a value system from the farm: They have to give something back to the land that sustains them.

Mr Klein follows up sanely:

It sounds to me like the policy you're suggesting here is to subsidize the military by subsidizing rural America. Why not just increase military pay? Do you believe that if there was a substantial shift in geography over the next 15 years, that we wouldn't be able to furnish a military?

To which Mr Vilsack says:

I think we would have fewer people. There's a value system there. Service is important for rural folks. Country is important, patriotism is important. And people grow up with that. I wish I could give you all the examples over the last two years as secretary of agriculture, where I hear people in rural America constantly being criticized, without any expression of appreciation for what they do do.

In the end, Mr Vilsack's argument comes down to the notion that the people of rural America feel that they have lost social status, and that subsidies amount to a form of just compensation for this injury. I don't think Mr Vilsack really believes that in the absence of welfare for farmers, the armed services would be hard-pressed to find young men and women willing to make war for the American state. He's using willingness-to-volunteer as proof of superior patriotism, and superior patriotism is the one claim to status left to those who have no other. As Julian Sanchez put it in this insightful post:

[A] lot of our current politics has less to do with actual policy disagreements than with resolving status anxieties. You can think of patriotism as a kind of status socialism—a collectivization of the means of self-esteem production. You don't have to graduate from an Ivy or make a lot of money to feel proud or special about being an American; you don't have to do a damn thing but be born here. Cultural valorization of “American-ness” relative to other status markers, then, is a kind of redistribution of psychological capital to those who lack other sources of it.

Mr Vilsack's retreat to the patriotism of rural Americans as justification for continued subsidies—subsidies that mostly enrich huge corporations—I think vindicates Mr Sanchez's claim that politics is largely a matter of creating and catering to status anxieties, while also demonstrating that the case for agricultural subsidies has hit rock bottom. Unfortunately, winning the intellectual debate over agricultural subsidies is far from sufficient to motivate politicians to begin opposing them in earnest. The combination of rural status anxiety and the lobbying heft of the agribusiness giants should be enough to keep laying the hurt on the world's poor farmers and grain consumers for a long time to come.

(Free exchange has more on this topic. Photo credit: Bloomberg News)