Hi Joe,
Faith. It's the only thing that gets me out of bed in the morning and
it has taken quite a beating lately. Seems there are a huge contingent
that don't like us to keep it. Faith in God, faith in our fellow man,
faith in those strange foreigners that seem to hate us. Faith has been
down on the ground getting the shit kicked out of it for quite some
time now. But it's still there. Sure, I'm one of those mutt people you
describe that will probably never get a leg up. I'll never have to
worry about managing a trust fund. Never have that McMansion on the
hill. I've lived all of my 42 years working every day knowing that it
will only bring enough to get me to the next day of more of the same.
Continue reading "Is Gandhi coming, or is it Caligula?" »
Hey Joe:
This past week the Marine Corps announced the recall of up to 2,500
members of the Individual Ready Reserve. These are men and women who
have already served their active duty and most have served multiple
tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. The reason given by the Marine Corps is
that they have not been able to meet recruiting goals. Of course they
are not able to meet recruiting goals; not that many people willing to
get themselves killed or maimed in Iraq for a questionable cause.
Continue reading "Retired Marine deplores reserve recall" »
Mr. Bageant,
I recently read your article What the Left Behind Series Really Means and I felt compelled to email you. I grew up as an ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America), the most liberal group of Lutherans in my area. You'd think that I would've grown up loving my Christian faith.
Instead I feared it. I was molested by a peer as a high schooler and sexually harassed by a teacher and was constantly told it was hopeless, I could no longer get into heaven because of these transgressions. Even as a teenager, I would come home to an empty house and think "This is it, they've been raptured, I'm going to have to face this alone."
Continue reading "Growing up fearing her Christian faith" »
Dear Joe,
We need more people like you. I think men, in general, are more radical than women. Even though women have been "liberated" and, by law, can do anything that men can do as long as they are physically able, women are still the "caretakers" and, as such, are more loving than men. This is not to put men down, by any means. My husband (and I) were brought up at a time when men made the important decisions and women had the children and took care of the family. He had the intelligence to see that I was better suited to look after the family finances and he was happy just to do his job. I later went to work because we needed the extra income to educate the children. And it was a good thing I did because he passed away 31 years ago at 53 and I was left with being father and mother. My son was only 15 and I had two daughters in college.
Continue reading "Men are more radical than women" »
Joe,
Another lesson for you: "My Name is Earl" was nominated for Emmys.
Judging by the ratings, people who watch Earl are the same people who
watch "The Office". If that doesn't prove that your so-called "elites"
watch it, I don't know what would. Your buddies watch blue collar
comedy, not Earl. How many Emmys did "Larry the Cable" guy get
nominated for?
Continue reading "By your own logic, Joe, you're an elitist" »
Dear Joe,
I've been reading all your eclectic and electric essays on
joebageant.com over the past few months. Let me just say, "Yeeeeeha!"
Being plugged into Joe Bageant for the first time is something like
sticking your finger in the power socket. You may not be quite sure
what it is but you damn well know you've got a hold of something! That
much truth just makes my hair stand on end.
Anyway, reading your essays is a great insight into the fundamentalists'
beliefs of the working-class, but I thought I'd let you know about my
own experiences in the world of middle-class Christian fundamentalism.
This is a problem that has transcended class boundaries in the US and
in supposedly more rational cultures overseas. Within 50 kilometres of
where I'm sitting there are several mega-churches with congregations in
the thousands -- and this is in good old agnostic, sinful Sydney,
Australia.
Continue reading "Australian view of American fundies" »
Hello, Joe!
It is so good to hear that you have done it! You have written the book! From
Russia, my most sincere congratulations! Although we are virtually
worlds apart (both in geographical and geopolitical senses) I very much
sympathize with what you are saying in your essays. In a nutshell:
working folks are being had, now not only in the third world but in the
imperial land too.
Continue reading "Organizing a trade union in Russia" »
Dear Joe,
I am sorry to hear of your illness. If it's any help, my
great-grandfather was told he had a terminal illness when he was about
fifty. He lived to be 93. What I'm saying is, doctors make prognoses, fate disposes. Hope your doctor is wrong.
Now I have a stupid question. This is coming from an eastern
liberal, formerly Jewish, now turning Quaker. I like the Quakers since
their principles roughly encompass my own. Not to be a total narcissist
of course, I should say my own principles approximate theirs. Quakers
are good people who believe in communal effort. They pray in Spirit,
believe that all life has a spark of the Divine in it, and have been on
the right side of the protest movements for 300 years.
Continue reading "Preacher manipulates credulous audience" »
Hello,
I never know whether to refer to older people by their first names or
last -- is it "Joe" or "Mr. Bageant?" I suppose, out of my intense
respect for your writing, I should go by the latter. Most of what I
read on the Internet is juvenile ranting, but your site is the only one
I've run into that I think I can take without a grain of salt. What
strikes me, first of all, about your writings is the similarity of your
southern rednecks to my Yankee hicks. It just goes to show that in an
age when we all watch the same TV, geography no longer has the power to
divide us -- class does.
Continue reading "Vermont teen happy in agrarian paradise" »
Joe,
Every time I read one of your articles, I think, he's outdone himself this time, but this one (Adam Smith Meets Cousin Ronnie's Boy) is exceptionally exceptional. My son-in-law is a high school teacher, teaching physics
and chemistry. About half of your article could have been written by
him. To start from the beginning of the article, you say you were born
in 1946. I was born in 1925 and had my first child in 1948. The
doctor's bill was $75.00. Since we didn't have any medical insurance, I
paid the doctor some money every visit, so she was paid for when she
arrived. We saved money for the hospital bill so we were able to pay it
when the time came. I stayed in the hospital 5 days for the princely
sum of $51.50.
Continue reading "Grandmother, 80, sees no immediate peace" »