Joe,
Just finished your essay "Welcome to Middle-Class Lockdown." The intellectual brain is still processing.
The feeling part of my mind identifies with much of your imagery and
descriptions. Whatever I have been longing for belongs to that more
collective part that feels deeply about something (a lot of things) you
have described. How to get off the merry-go-round seems to become the
task.
Continue reading "Next generation must make brave choices" »
Joe,
My friend Chutney, a Unitarian Universalist blogger, linked to your essay "Middle Class Lockdown" and I must thank you because it's the
BEST FUCKING ARTICLE I'VE READ ALL YEAR. And I read a lot, because I'm
a minister and I'm always having to say something about everything. I'm
printing it out right now and am going to blog link it (I have a very
modestly popular blog) and also forward it to my entire congregation.
Continue reading "I won't die in urine-stinking nursing home" »
Hello Joe,
I read your article and it reflected much the same frustration that
I've experienced for many years now. Grew up in an auto-wrecking yard
in the north of Canada, in Alberta near a small town. No university
education because of getting married, then moving from Alberta to urban
southern British Columbia and raising three kids and ending up on
welfare as a single mom.
Continue reading "Organizing for Guaranteed Livable Income" »
Joe,
Thanks for putting off the move for one more year. Every time I read
about your plans to abandon us a cold shudder of fear runs up my spine.
I too am locked down in the middle class prison with the unfortunate
curse of being able to see the invisible walls that most of us can't
see. My escape fantasy involves a small Airstream trailer overlooking
the Gulf of California in Baja. Fresh fish, cold beer, my guitar, a
massive heart attack on the beach in my mid 80's, who could ask for
more? But the reality is I'm stuck. Two kids that are still young, a
wife that wants them to grow up as decent, caring individuals. So I
hold on to hope, hope that there are still enough of us out there who
can turn things around. You have become, in the past year since I
discovered your writing, a sustaining part of that hope. Our community
no matter how tenuous or fragile, or perhaps because of its fragility,
needs you.
Continue reading "Locked down in the prison of middle class" »
Joe Bageant,
There been a lot of talk these days of southern and "redneck" culture
coming from a group of people that have been at times called
"Borderers", "Scots-Irish", "Scotch-Irish", "Ulsterman", "Orangemen",
"Protestant-Ulsterites" etc. The elders in my family used the term
"Dirty Black Protestants from the North", to describe this tribe but
I'd rather deal talk about their garbage as it is today.
Continue reading "No logical reasons for redneck bullshit " »
Hi, Joe.
I was trying to grab some free time to send a couple comments about
your "Simulacrum Republic" (powerful article!), when you handed me this
whammy of your "Revenge of the Mutt People" today. I say "whammy"
because, among others this article did this for me: first, I cried.
Especially at the beginning paragraphs.
Continue reading "Russian expat woman, 72, gives up chicken" »
Now shut up and buy something
"Take away America's Wal-Mart junk and cheap electronics and what you
have left is a mindless primitive tribe and a gaggle of bullshit
artists pretending to lead them."
-- James "Mad Dog" Howard
By Joe Bageant
When I was a boy on my grandparents' farm in the 1950s the neighbors
always banded together to make lard and apple butter, put up feed corn,
bale hay, thresh wheat, pick apples, plow snow off roads. One neighbor
cut hair, another mended shoes and welded. With so little money
available in those days in rural America, there was no way to get by
without neighbors. And besides, all the money in the world would not
get the lard cooked down and the peaches put up for the winter. You
needed neighbors and they needed you. From birth to the grave. I was
very lucky to have seen that culture which showed me that a real
community of shared labor is possible -- or at least was at one time in
this country. And if I ever doubt it I can go up to those hill farms
and look into the clouded old eyes and wrinkled visages of the people
who once babysat me as a child and with whom I shot my first rabbit and
quail.
Continue reading "Welcome to Middle-Class Lockdown" »
Big Joe,
Maybe you have to become the Martin Luther King of the Mutt People and
lead them from the Valley of Nowhere. Or somebody else from the Valley
who has climbed to a higher plane and can see the woods from the trees
needs to do it. Martin was middle class, educated, and lived in a nice
clean house, but he had heart for Rosa and his various brothers and
sisters.
Continue reading "You are a voice from the wilderness" »
Hellfar Lawdgawdalmighty!
What a pleasure to discover your essays on your blog (linked by Neddie
Jingo). I'm a working class South Arkansas white boy who sometimes
feels his soul slipping away up here in Hartford, Connecticut.
Continue reading "Southern soul slipping away in Connecticut" »
Joe,
I have enjoyed your writing for a long time now, but I have refrained
from contacting you because beyond praising your abilities, I couldn't
figure out exactly what I wanted to say. I think I have figured it out,
but it turns out to be a question rather than a statement. Go figure.
Continue reading "Liberals must break the chains of comfort" »