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Joined: Oct 2004
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Having moved back to my Southern Illinois roots some two years ago, and currently questioning the wisdom of that decision, the following article really hit home to me.
I think there are ramifications for hunting and firearms ownership, as rural populations and their attendant political power decline. Is rural America being left behind?
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Methland vs. Mythland Timothy Egan, NY Times
Like a brief, intense summer squall, a media storm passed over small-town America a few years ago, stripping away what was left of the myth of the rural idyll to reveal a cast of hollow-cheeked white people smoking meth behind the corn silo.
It was going to destroy the heartland, this methamphetamine epidemic, just as crack cocaine had done to the inner city. There was no George Bailey in this version of Bedford Falls. No John Mellencamp melodies on the soundtrack. Just toothless boys on bikes peddling some nasty stuff cooked up from cold medicine and farm products.
And then it all passed, as these things do, the damage done, leaving the impression of rural America as a broken land, scary. In the interim, the more traditional narrative, of country people somehow more authentic than city folk � �the best of America in these small towns� � came roaring back in the form of Sarah Palin.
In truth, neither of these images does justice to the complexities of small-town life. And neither version does anything to advance the cause of an honest rural policy, something that might help some of the worst casualties of global economic tumult.
People in small towns are more likely to be poor, more likely to lack health insurance, more likely, if they are young, to move out, according to government statistics. In the invisible margins off the interstate, the story about decline takes place in slow motion, rarely attracting a headline.
Palin may soon hit the speech circuit as a woman from another era with an itchy Twitter finger. At the same time, we have a much different look at modern rural life in a new book by the journalist Nick Reding � �Methland: the Death and Life of an American Small Town.�
Reding spent nearly four years charting meth�s course in Oelwein, Iowa, a town of about 6,000 residents nearly 120 miles northeast of Des Moines. There, the people who grow our food are argribusiness oligarchs, and the people who run our factories have cut their workers� wages by two-thirds, dissolved the unions and shipped in illegals to work for a paycheck that would barely pay for dog food.
Meth is a symptom of this collapse, not a cause. And though its presence in small towns can be cancerous, it never took over rural America. The latest national surveys suggest that there are about 1.3 million regular users of meth � hardly an epidemic in a country where 35 million people said they had used an illegal drug or abused a prescription one.
Still, meth is different in at least one respect. Reding says it is �the only example of a widely consumed illegal narcotic that might be called vocational, as opposed to recreational.� It was given to starving Nazi soldiers to keep them in warrior mode on the Russian front. Now it�s a preferred stimulant for people working two jobs in low-wage purgatory.
�Rural America remains the cradle of our national creation myth,� Reding concludes. �But it has become something else, too � something more sinister and difficult to define.�
Of the 1,346 counties that shrank in population between 2000 and 2007, 85 percent of them were outside the major metropolitan areas, according to the Census Bureau. Not far from Reding�s story, the town of Postville has lost half its population just in the last year after one of the largest immigration raids in Iowa.
Oelwein, like so many small towns trying to shape its destiny in an America that may have passed it by, has spruced up its Main Street, modernized its infrastructure and constructed a spec building ready for any employer who wants to move in. Alas, it�s the same story in thousands of Oelweins: if you build it, they won�t come.
When candidate Barack Obama made that comment about bitter people in small towns clinging to guns and religion, he was criticized as a clueless elite from the big city. No one paid attention to the first part of what he said:
�You go into these small towns in Pennsylvania and, like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing�s replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration and the Bush administration.�
Every president said he would do something about it, Obama continued, but never did.
The mistake that Palin made was to cast small towns as more virtuous, morally superior in their struggle. The mistake that Obama made was to speak the truth. She can continue to pander all the way to the bank. But he has a chance to make a difference in places that are neither methland nor mythland, just overlooked parts of the same country.
"Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'" -Isaac Asimov
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Joined: Aug 2004
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Campfire Tracker
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Campfire Tracker
Joined: Aug 2004
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Sounds a like a crock of [bleep] to me.
I agree there is plenty of meth use in the country, but I doubt it is any higher per capita than in a city setting.
I think the irresponsible socialistic policies that drive manufacturing work, and often cause inflation, are far more to blame.
To bad they don't point to where this lifestyle originated and the welfare system that brought it about.
The fact that the author of this is, notice the paper, undoubtedly an Obama knob polisher pretty much lets you know where it comes from...that and the obvious tone.
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." TJ
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing". EB
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Joined: Jul 2004
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 46,965 |
I strongly doubt Mr. Timothy Egan of the New York Times has ever been to Oelwein, Iowa. Oligarchs, indeed!
We may know the time Ben Carson lied, but does anyone know the time Hillary Clinton told the truth?
Immersing oneself in progressive lieberalism is no different than bathing in the sewage of Hell.
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Joined: Aug 2004
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Campfire Tracker
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Campfire Tracker
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I love the part where he laments the loss of half a towns population as a result of them being illegals, then comments on the low wages paid in the plants.
Apparently connecting the dots is not his forte'
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." TJ
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing". EB
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Joined: Jun 2007
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
Joined: Jun 2007
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Yeah....
My dear friend and college roommate's Dad was mayor of the town and headed the drug task force during the time frame written about. Gene was a decorated Vietnam Vet, served in the Navy for 30 years, husband to three kids and the most fervent crime/illicit drug hater I knew.
Gene also worked harder than anyone to straighten kids on the crap out. It broke his heart, but he did not tolerate excuses either. More than one he helped showed up to his funeral when he passed a few years ago.
Obama has never cured his slums of Chicago from its crack whores and thugs....he just gave them someone's money, they gave him votes. Since the dawn of time....
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