Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Let me get a few things out of the way first.

1. I live in East Tennessee, though I am not a native to this area. Nevertheless, East Tennessee is the heart of Southern Appalachia.

2. I support Barack Obama and have always supported him. But I'm a Democrat first and I would vote for any Democrat in November.

3. I teach Appalachian History at a liberal arts college in East Tennessee so I've devoted at least some of my life to understanding this region.

So what do we make of Hillary Clinton's massive advantage in West Virginia and in Appalachia in general? No region has been kinder to her from the very beginning than Appalachia. On Super Tuesday I noticed that my own county voted 65-34 for Clinton and that some less-populated counties nearby gave her an even higher margin. Yes, Obama never campaigned in Tennessee, but I never thought the margin would be so great here.

A student of mine who lives in a very sparsely populated county - and who is an outspoken Obama supporter on campus - attributed the margin to ignorance. "They all think he's some kind of Muslim or something. If Obama had campaigned here he would have convinced at least some of them that he is a real Christian." The pattern continued in the later Appalachian states.

And it hit me at that time the three reasons why Obama has done so poorly in Appalachia.

1) People in this region want to get to know their candidates. They have always been distrustful of outsiders and often for good reasons. Since the mid-19th century, outsiders have come into the region looking to save souls, exploit the coal and timber resources, build highways and dams, evict people from farms, mock the culture, and wreck their environment. Most of the time these outsiders came in under the guise of reform.  Not surprisingly, Barack Obama's message of reform raised suspicion in Appalachia. Was he just another slick-talking politician asking for our votes so he could make us change our way of life?

2) Obama has made no real effort to overcome these obstacles. His trip across PA with Bob Casey was a nice start. He should have at least taken the opportunity to travel across WV with Sen. Rockefeller (hey, at least WV folks voted for him) and Cong. Rahall.  He didn't need to do what the Clintons are doing, but he should have made some effort to show up and let people realize he had substantive ideas and he wasn't the anti-Christ.

3) All of that said, the cultural barriers are real here. Historically, those with lower education levels have been more suspicious of cultural difference. Barack Obama is about as exotic a candidate as you can get. His name, his race, his family's origin, his path to Christianity, etc. are nothing like that experienced by most folks in Appalachia. Not surprisingly, Obama has faired poorly among non-college-educated whites everywhere, though especially so in culturally conservative areas like Appalachia and the Rust Belt. It isn't just race, though that's a part of it. My WV-born neighbor who is a lifelong Democrat confided in me early on that she worried that Obama would be just like Jesse Jackson and would "give everything to the blacks." Though I convinced her that Obama was more like Bill Cosby than Jesse Jackson - she came around and supported him for a while - she buckled under again when Rev. Wright came out. I think she's winnable again for Obama. But lots of Appalachian white voters will have seen enough to convince them of their suspicions about this very un-traditional candidate.

But then there's a fourth issue that applies mostly to West Virginia alone. Yes, West Virginia voted for Carter in 1980 and Dukakis in 1988. There are few "Reagan Democrats" in West Virginia in the historic sense. But there are LOTS of "Bush Democrats in West Virginia. What's the difference? Economic change. In 1988, West Viginia was about to embark on one of its many historic labor strikes with Pittston Coal. As in the past, West Virginians voted along with its union population more than anything else.

But since 1990, the union population in WV has plummeted. Coal mining is entirely mechanized now. Surface mining - often mountaintop removal - brings in lots of tax revenue for local governments, even though it doesn't employ many people. And the Democratic Party has (rightfully) condemned mountaintop removal and the excessive emission of greenhouse gases coming from coal-fired power plants in the Tennessee Valley. As a result, the GOP has pushed its economic message with great success.

But the big payoff for the GOP is culture. With unions no longer around to remind voters of the economic stakes, voters in Appalachia are more susceptible to culture war arguments than before. This is true not just in WV but also here in TN. When Tennessee voted on its anti-gay marriage amendment in 2006, it was Carter County in far East TN that gave the measure 88% in support - the highest in the state.  Appalachia is a deeply religious part of the country, having spawned the Pentacostal movement (Assemblies of God comes from Kansas, but it really dates to the Holiness movement near Cleveland, TN), and myriad Baptist movements (Missionary Baptists, Primitive Baptists, Old Regular Baptists, etc.). The Scopes Trial was argued in Dayton, TN, in the Cumberland Mountains of East TN.  If voters anywhere would be susceptible to religious politics, it's here.  

Yes, Appalachia has always had a strong grassroots, progressive countercurrent to this deep-seated conservatism. The early abolitionist movement, Highlander Research and Education Center (formerly Highlander Folk School) that trained Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, Save Our Cumberland Mountains and the environmentalist movement, labor activism, and numerous small-scale movements have found their voice here in Appalachia. Author Jeff Biggers has eloquently - if a bit romantically - summarized the long progressive tradition in Appalachia in his book, "The United States of Appalachia." 

So why does Barack Obama do so poorly in Appalachia? The one-sentence answer is: Obama is a non-traditional candidate who made few serious attempts to win over a constituency that values tradition greatly.

UPDATE: Thanks for reccing this diary, folks! I keep thinking of ways I should tweak it as I reconsider what I wrote, but I'll just keep it as is and let commenters add their own "tweaks."

Tags: West Virginia (all tags)

Comments

152 Comments

Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

So poor bitter people don't support Obama?

"low information voters" ?

You Obama folk make me sick.

by DTaylor 2008-05-12 09:03AM | 0 recs
Coercion

I don't think many Obama supporters see the level of coercion that we Clinton supporters are seeing on the media as unnatural.

I don't know why.

by architek 2008-05-12 09:11AM | 0 recs
I am not a traditionalist..

I think Obama is 'owned' by big business. Very skillful marketing is being done, indeed.. but thats at the core of why I mistrust him.

Too much money is at stake for them to leave it up to democracy.

by architek 2008-05-12 09:12AM | 0 recs
Follow the money.

Senator Clinton is quite clearly in the pocket of big business, oil and pharma in particular, to a much greater extent than Senator Obama.  Simply look at the bundled corporate donations, where she is the clear leader even over John McCain.

by McNasty 2008-05-12 09:15AM | 0 recs
I don't think so.. She just isn't as SLICK..

Look, a huge amount of money is riding on the healthcare issue alone. There are hundreds, in all probability thousands of healthcare companies that desperately want to avoid having to deal with the government in the way that Hillary's health plan chooses to do. Under Obama, each one of us has to fight them on our own.

Thats worth trillions of dollars to them.. They know how to get money to candidates they want to win..  They do.

by architek 2008-05-12 04:54PM | 0 recs
Re: I don't think so.. She just isn't as SLICK..

So Obama is SLICK and that is why he is winning!  Why is HRC distrusted by so many more people then any other candidate running this year?  Is is because she lies, lies, and lies.  SNL told the whole truth about her Saturday night.

by ajleiker 2008-05-12 07:06PM | 0 recs
Re: I am not a traditionalist..

Yes the former community activist is in the pocket of big business, not the former member of the board of directors of Wal*Mart.  The candidate not getting any PAC money is in their pocket, not the one who is proud to take money from PACs and lobbyists.  

by PantsB 2008-05-12 09:52AM | 0 recs
Re: I am not a traditionalist..

Hillary has been a community activist, a civil rights activist, a women's rights activist and a health care and children's advocate for over 30 years.  She got on the board of Walmart because they were stupid enough to invite her and she made it clear that she was going to use her tenure there to fight for equal employment opportunities within the company for women...which was just what she did.

You were saying?

by mtnspirit 2008-05-12 11:11AM | 0 recs
Yeah right

She was really successful at changing sex discrimination practices at Wal-Mart.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5269131/

You shouldn't make such wild claims without obtaining at least a passing familiarity with the facts.

And do you know what kind of work the Rose Law Firm does?  Hint: it's not public interest.

by JJE 2008-05-12 11:59AM | 0 recs
Re: Yeah right

She wasn't as successful with women's issues, but she did move the company on environmental issues.  From the NY Times:

John E. Tate, who served as a director with Mrs. Clinton from 1988 to 1992, recalled that by her third board meeting Mrs. Clinton had announced "that you can expect me to push on issues for women. You know that. I have a reputation of trying to improve the status of women generally, and I will do it here."

Mr. Walton appeared relieved to have a woman on the board to deflect criticism, telling shareholders during the annual meeting in 1987 that the company had a "strong-willed young lady on the board now who has already told the board it should do more to ensure the advancement of women."

Still, the board's discussions did not translate into significant progress. By the late 1990s, after Mrs. Clinton had left the board, Wal-Mart had added a second female director, but the number of women in senior management remained paltry, according to company records. (Today, 23 percent of Wal-Mart's top 300 corporate officers are women, but the company is fighting a class-action lawsuit claiming sex discrimination filed on behalf of 1.6 million current and former female employees.)

Mrs. Clinton had greater success on environmental issues. At her request, Mr. Walton set up the environmental advisory group, which sent a series of recommendations to the company's board.

<snip>

Under her watch, the advisory group drew up elaborate plans. Consumers would bring in used motor oil and batteries for recycling. Suppliers would reduce the size of their packaging. And Wal-Mart would build stores with energy-saving features.

Wal-Mart executives put much of the program into place. In 1993, for example, they opened an experimental "eco-store" in Kansas, with skylights and wooden beams from forests that had not been clear cut.

One executive derided it as "Hillary's store" because it was more expensive to build than the average Wal-Mart, but several of its features, like the skylights that cut energy bills by reducing the need for artificial lighting, were widely copied across the industry.

"We were on the leading edge of something that is being mandated now," said Bill Fields, the head of merchandise at Wal-Mart in the early 1990s who worked closely with Mrs. Clinton on the environmental project.

by psychodrew 2008-05-12 02:58PM | 0 recs
YEAH, right.. you better believe it..

How Obama's plan is designed to leave the people who really need it out..

http://online.wsj.com/public/article_pri nt/SB119681696156513818.html

How Obama's healthcare guy fared in 1994 (the money came rolling in when he killed the Clintons universal healthcare plan then)

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.ht ml?res=9B00EEDD1431F93AA25757C0A96295826 0&scp=14&sq=%22Jim+Cooper%22& ;st=nyt

" Health Debate Is Filling Campaign Coffers

By RICHARD L. BERKE,
Published: April 19, 1994

Representative Jim Cooper offers a simple explanation for his putting forward a health care proposal: "This is a pocketbook issue. It really matters to every family."

It has also become a pocketbook issue for Mr. Cooper, and whatever the fate of his health plan, he is already a winner.

In less than a year, the mild-mannered Democrat from the most rural House district in Tennessee has become the toast of health care providers and insurance companies, which have channeled tens of thousands of dollars of contributions to his campaign for a Senate seat.

Mr. Cooper is only one of the many politicians benefiting from the fund-raising frenzy set off by the national dialogue over health care.

Since drug companies, hospitals, insurers and doctors have so much at stake in the legislation that may emerge from the Congress, many are investing all they can in lawmakers whose proposals would be most favorable to them -- or the least damaging.

They are showering millions of dollars in donations to members of Congress with prominent roles in the debate, like Mr. Cooper, whose plan is the alternative to President Clinton's proposal most often preferred by business because it neither requires employers to provide coverage nor limits insurance premiums." (see the rest of the story at the URL above)

Hillary Clinton DETAILS PREMIUM CAP ON HEALTHCARE COSTS (Obama DOES NOT LIMIT uncovered costs, in fact his cutting the cost of INSURANCE - DEPENDS ON IT COVERING LESS!)

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/28/us/pol itics/28clinton.html

by architek 2008-05-12 05:00PM | 0 recs
Re: Yeah right

You ought to check yourself in the mirror before you start deriding others for not knowing what they're talking about. Hillary Clinton absolutely did help women while she served on the board of Wal-Mart. She helped to get more women in management, and she WAS the FIRST FEMALE on the board, you know.

She also worked with Sam Walton to expand educational programs around the state of Arkansas.

Don't be so quick to dismiss Hillary Clinton. Have a little respect for her incredible contribution to this country over the course of 35 years.

by Tennessean 2008-05-12 06:03PM | 0 recs
Do you have any support

For those claims?  Cause I'm kind of reluctant to take your bare assertions at face value.  Whatever changes she made, they didn't keep Wal-Mart from discriminating against the most women of any company since the Equal Opportunity in Employment Act was passed.  Quite an accomplishment.

by JJE 2008-05-12 08:04PM | 0 recs
I was saying that her work on Children

just served the Patriarchy.

Specifically, her work on violent video games, where she failed to understand that the scientific research had basically only shown that five year olds, when they watch boxers, are more likely to use physical force.

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:10PM | 0 recs
Re: I am not a traditionalist..

Architek--

It's time to update your sig line.  You're spreading misinformation:

Obama                        Clinton                Spread           
16,003,521    49.5%    15,266,942    47.3% Obama +736,579 +2.2%
Estimate w/IA, NV, ME, WA*
16,337,605    49.6%    15,490,804    47.0% Obama +846,801    +2.6%
Popular Vote (w/FL)           
16,579,735    48.7%    16,137,928    47.4% Obama +441,807    +1.3%
Estimate w/IA, NV, ME, WA*           
16,913,819    48.7%    16,361,790    47.1% Obama +552,029    +1.6%
Popular Vote (w/FL & MI)*           
16,579,735    47.9%    16,466,237    47.5% Obama +113,498    +0.33%
Estimate w/IA, NV, ME, WA
           
16,913,819    47.9%    16,690,099    47.3% Obama +223,720    +0.64%

You can use whichever metric you want, but at least get your facts straight: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/ 2008/president/democratic_vote_count.htm l

by The Distillery 2008-05-12 12:57PM | 0 recs
Obama is the LEAST owned by big business

candidate we have ever had.

That said, Wall Street, liking Clinton better, did bother to contribute to Obama because they like to play both sides. Edwards campaign died by wall street.

The Media hate Obama, because Obama will have an axe to grind against them, and will drive many out (using Fairness doctrine).

Wall Street just badly wants a democrat, so that they can make some more money.

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:12PM | 0 recs
Re: Coercion

Because after Wright, and Bitter, the antagonism of FOX NEWS (and to some extent CNN) we feel the media has been against us too.

Do we think the Media has a right to tell Clinton to get out of the race? No.  We think the DNC should have done that long ago(some of us).  But the Media should not take sides.  The Pundits have been unfair and ugly to both candidates.  Arugula?  I mean has the Media heavily carried any story heavily that was about policy for any candidate?  They might have pounced on Bosnia but they allowed her to get away with outrageous experience claims, and pretending her opponent didn't have solid policy proposals.

So the media has been unfair to both.  Why should it be suprising that Obama supporters don't reject, the attacks on Clinton, any more than Clinton supporters did not reject the attacks on Obama?

I mean it goes beyond the media, we have anonymous people here posting without facts about some conspiracy, or I "heard" this from an unnamed person and it makes the Recommended list here.  And them is wildly supported in the comments section, without fact, or reason.

"What is good for the gander, is good for the goose".

by Tumult 2008-05-12 02:40PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

it REALLY helps to read the diary. you know, reading. it's that thing you do when you want to NOT make a fool out of yourself. the diarist even placed some blame on Obama. you should be jumping for joy.

by terra 2008-05-12 09:14AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

A number of posters are on "their anger" tour.

I read this, and thought like you, a carefully crafted and thoughtful diary?

I expected it to get flammed, and it did.

I also did a very neutral diary this morning, and the first two posts seemed as if they had not read it, certainly didn't care what the subject was, they were just looking for an excuse to unload.  I intentionally kept it gender neutral, but no matter? They COULD have agreed that this was right down Senator CLINTON's alley, but instead, went right back to "Fl and MI' instead.

IMO, they are not interested in actual discussion at this point? Unless it's why their side is great and the other side sucks?

I think this is going to get worse before it gets better.  

I am planning to stay away for the day of the WV primary, and probably a couple of days after that, I expect it to get pretty vitrolic here post a big Clinton win-ON BOTH SIDES, as the Obama supporter try to keep telling the Clinton Supporters that it doesn't matter, and they responding "this indicates Obama is doomed...."

by WashStateBlue 2008-05-12 09:25AM | 0 recs
by math, it don't matter

but we are talking superdelegates, so... you do the math!!

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:14PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Did you read the diary?  

It's a very thoughtful look into why Obama is doing so poorly in these areas, one that doesn't look down on those voters at all.  It's worth the time.

by davisb 2008-05-12 09:14AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Did you even bother to read the diary?

Only you are stereotyping people here.  He does not call them bitter, poor, or low information voters.

Please actually read the diary and then make an informed comment

by CAchemist 2008-05-12 09:20AM | 0 recs
well he does a little bit

call them those things.  But I think DT is just tired of those memes as we all are.

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 09:37AM | 0 recs
Re: well he does a little bit

Non-college-educated often translates into suspicion of cultural others. That's true among the black community too, by the way. Homophobia is very high in the black community and is, in many ways, a product of low education levels. It goes both ways.

No matter how you slice it, Barack Obama is an unusual candidate and it was incumbent upon him to let voters know how "normal" he really was. He successfully did that in much of the country, but didn't even try in Appalachia.

by elrod 2008-05-12 10:33AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

"All of that said, the cultural barriers are real here. Historically, those with lower education levels have been more suspicious of cultural difference. Barack Obama is about as exotic a candidate as you can get. His name, his race, his family's origin, his path to Christianity, etc. are nothing like that experienced by most folks in Appalachia. Not surprisingly, Obama has faired poorly among non-college-educated whites everywhere, though especially so in culturally conservative areas like Appalachia and the Rust Belt. It isn't just race, though that's a part of it. My WV-born neighbor who is a lifelong Democrat confided in me early on that she worried that Obama would be just like Jesse Jackson and would "give everything to the blacks." Though I convinced her that Obama was more like Bill Cosby than Jesse Jackson - she came around and supported him for a while - she buckled under again when Rev. Wright came out. I think she's winnable again for Obama. But lots of Appalachian white voters will have seen enough to convince them of their suspicions about this very un-traditional candidate."

by DTaylor 2008-05-12 09:39AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

"Non-college educated whites" is an actual demographic, one in which Obama has objectively done very poorly in.  It's not made-up or condescending like the whole concept of "low information voters" can be.

by davisb 2008-05-12 09:43AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

You're getting it all wrong Davis.  See, when Clinton talks about "hard-working Americans" or "white blue collar Americans" she is just pointing out facts.  But when Barack Obama or any of his supporters use the word "white" or "non-college educated whites" they are being racist.  Did that clear it up for you?

by belicheat 2008-05-12 12:48PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Uh. Clinton said those very things just a short time ago...

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 04:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Did you even read the damn diary?

by elrod 2008-05-12 10:29AM | 0 recs
This diary is being infested

With MyDD's resident Obama-hating trolls.  The best response is no response.

by JJE 2008-05-12 11:56AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I read it, and I appreciate it. I added something below from Jim Webb. Anyway, it's best to post the diary and then leave and never come back to read the comments in the thread hijacking, Elrod. You'll sleep better that way. :):):)

by Tennessean 2008-05-12 06:05PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Get over yourself Taylor.  You seem to be supportive of Clinton "telling it like it is."  Well, the statment "low information voters overwhelmingly support Clinton" is telling it like it is.

And quite frankly, I find it rather telling that voters with the least amount of education find Clinton's pitch appealing.  I have a college education, and find it hard to cut through all the bulls*** spin.  It shouldn't take an undergrad economics degree to realize that Clinton's gas tax holiday is nothing but smoke and mirrors.  It shouldn't take hours of internet research to find out how Bill Clinton made $100 million dollars in just a few years.

These people denigrated as "low information" voters are putting their faith in Clinton, and she is letting them down.  All she has offered them is a corporate DLC agenda blanketed with her best populist John Edwards impression.  The only way she would know how most Americans lived would be if her Lear Jet crashed into a small town.  She hasn't known anything besides a life of luxury since 1990 at the latest.  From Air Force One and the White House to Ron Burkle's private jet and a Chappaqua mansion.

by belicheat 2008-05-12 12:44PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I have a college degree too.. aren't we special...

And what takes an amazing amount of time is finding quotes from Obama.

Actual quotes such as "I have always been a christian" from mainstream sources if they don't favor Obama.

I use the I have always been a Christian because its clearly a lie and Obama alludes to becoming a christian 20 years ago in his race speech.  And his sister said they were raised muslim.  And it makes you wonder how his "Christian" mother managed to marry two different muslim men...

But thats not the issue.

The issue is why knowing that the quote exists is it hard to find from Mainstream media?

I suspect MASSIVE bias from the media but lets hear your opinion...

by DTaylor 2008-05-12 02:32PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I don't have a college degree, so I am not special.

So maybe I am too uneducated to understand you right.

And what takes an amazing amount of time is finding quotes from Obama.

Actual quotes such as "I have always been a christian" from mainstream sources if they don't favor Obama.

The issue is why knowing that the quote exists is it hard to find from Mainstream media?

I suspect MASSIVE bias from the media but lets hear your opinion...

So just out of curiosity, are you admiting that the mainstream media is bias against Obama?
Because my limited educated mind cannot see how both "amount of time...if they don't support Obama" and "hard to find from Mainstream media" can be true, and at the same time you think the "mainstream media" is favoring Obama.

So which is it?  You were completely wrong in your above comment or does the Mainstream Media not favor Obama?  

I would like to know for the record...

by Tumult 2008-05-12 03:00PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

So your point is what?  Obama is a Muslim?  You are seriously pathetic Taylor.  Of all the topics you can bring up, you go right back to the "Obama is a Muslim" smear.  You and Clinton must have been cut from the same mold, "as far as I know."  Take your religious hatred elsewhere, the adults are trying to have a conversation.

by belicheat 2008-05-12 04:11PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Obama lied about always being a Christian.  Why?  I don't care if he is a muslim or athiest or christian.  But why lie about it?

He lied about not knowing what Wright was all about.  Why?  What was his motivation of tying himself so closely to Wright and then cutting him so loose?

He says Ayers was bombing American when he was 8 so its no connection to him but Ayers helped launch his career.  Why?

He said that there was nothing wrong about Rezko buying him a house garden.........

And that is the question I would choose to focus on.

Obama Lies

Obama Lies

OBAMA LIES

by DTaylor 2008-05-13 12:29AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Are you stupid?  You have to pick one smear or the other.  Either:

a) He is a Christian who sat in Reverend Wright's church for 20 years

or

b) He is a Muslim

You can't be a Muslim who simultaneously has a radical black preacher.  Jesus you are low information.  

by belicheat 2008-05-13 06:29AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Your comments consistently sicken me, so we're even.

by The Distillery 2008-05-12 12:58PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Great diary.  MyDD could be inching back toward more objective analysis of candidates and issues rather than bashing/hero worship diaries that have come to dominate.

by minnesotaryan 2008-05-12 09:15AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

can't rec it because that was taken away from me :(

Does this have something to do with me rec'ing those Obama diaries that had been on the rec list this weekend for the sake of candidate balance or my sarcastic rec's of obvious troll/hilarious diaries?  I'll probably never find out.

by minnesotaryan 2008-05-12 09:27AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I too would rec this diary, but the button mysteriously disappeared this weekend. Interesting that my rating ability has been blocked, but I am still a 'trusted user' who can read hidden comments. Stranger still since I have rarely gotten any 'troll' ratings for any comment I have ever made. Seems very arbitrary to me.

by awobbly 2008-05-12 12:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Guys, write Todd beaton and ask for your privledges back.

They will do it,  just go to bottom of page and click Contact US,  just say you were one of hundreds that lost their privileges that day.

by GeorgeP922 2008-05-12 12:35PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Will do. Thanks for the tip.

by awobbly 2008-05-12 12:51PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Thanks guy

by minnesotaryan 2008-05-12 04:30PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

i'll give you kudo's for writing a positive diary . I disagree with some of your points but you deserve credit.

by lori 2008-05-12 09:17AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

An excellent and thoughtful diary. I do think there was a conscious decision in the Obama campaign not to contest these areas. As in all campaigns decisions need to be made where to allocate resources. The Obama camp had a near-perfect strategy based on its projections. While he no doubt could have made a play for some of these areas, and done much better there, there would have been a cost involved in taking resources from other contests.

by fugazi 2008-05-12 09:28AM | 0 recs
I actually recommended your diary

because I think you make some good points and you have some understanding of the region.  However I wish you could see what I do, that people know Obama doesn't like, understand or respect them.
There is no doubt some ignorance and even racism.  But mostly people will not vote for a candidate who doesn't like them and to like someone you have to stop thinking of them as "ignorant and unable to hear a message of hope because it comes from a Black man".

Obama really is an elitist edrod and I think you know that.  I am an elitist too, but on different grounds and so I recognize one when I see one.  His problem is that he will not address his own snob problem. He has a very narrow parochial view of the country and it could have changed if he had spent more time in the senate before running, but I think it has doomed him in the GE this year.

And people's concerns about his Church are real and valid. No white candidate can get elected by going to a church that said the things about blacks that reverend said about whites.  Trying to deny it is a problem is just hiding one's head in the sand. No amount of time spent discussing the non-effect of reverse racism is going to change that people will not vote for a candidate who seems to be out of the mainstream and not willing to take their concerns seriously, who brushes them off as too beaten down to understand.

So why didn't Obama go meet and talk to the people of WV?  Why didn't he spend more time in PA?  He lost the advanced degree crowd in PA, Does he know why?  I do not think he does because it is easier to group people who are not voting for him in to some unflattering groups designation than question himself and his own views.

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 09:31AM | 0 recs
Re: I actually recommended your diary

I disagree.  I don't think Obama doesn't like, understand, or respect them.

I think the media has told us that Obama doesn't like, understand, or respect them.  People believe the media.

This primary season the media has tried harder than ever to box our candidates into easily described soundbites but that doesn't make it true.  

Barack is as elitist as Hillary is racist.

by CAchemist 2008-05-12 09:41AM | 0 recs
Re: I actually recommended your diary

except Hillary said nothing racist and Obama really did make elitist statements.  I know it is easier to not look at the problem but if he doesn't he can't possibly win in November should he be the nominee.

There is a reason that republicans paint liberals as out of touch elitists.  We are.  I had an argument with my sister about the flag pin brush up.  She doesn't get it either.  Obama insulted people who wear them by saying it was a sort of false patriotism.  Now I have never worn a flag pin.  I never flew a flag on my house or on my car.  In fact I was one of the few people who didn't think we should go in to Afghanistan.  So I know where Obama is coming from.  The problem is that he doesn't know where other people are coming from (to use cheesy 1970s phraseology) and he doesn't pick his battles very well.

Look, I don't like Mudcat Saunders much, but read what he says on the topic of our party and the rural and working class voter.  He understands the problem and can explain it.  He will tell you that our problem with them is less about racism than disrespect and Obama considering to insist he did not misspeak (and was only in-artful) when he called them bitter and clingy just shows he doesn't understand.

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 01:26PM | 0 recs
continuing to

not sonsidering

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 01:57PM | 0 recs
Re: I actually recommended your diary

You don't get to tell us what's racist and by us I mean African-Americans. Just like I don't tell women what's sexist.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 04:29PM | 0 recs
Re: I actually recommended your diary

Spent more time in PA? He toured through by bus and train all around the state in both big cities and small towns, what more did you expect of him that he didn't do? You seem to think he didn't do enough, what was missing in your opinion that might have made a difference?

by Obama Independent 2008-05-12 09:59AM | 0 recs
Dumb

You don't like, respect, or understand Obama.  Don't project your attitudes onto him.

by JJE 2008-05-12 11:53AM | 0 recs
I do understand him

but that is hardly the point since I am not asking him for my vote.  How's the view there under the sand?

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 01:30PM | 0 recs
Great post

Obama never answers questions about his religion or how much he knew about his church.

It's getting to the point where it's more a statement on his dishonesty and evasiveness than his questionable sociopolitical beliefs.

We know he converted to Christianity in 1988, but from what?  It's like taboo to even ask.  I don't particularly care what religion he had back then, but it concerns me that he and his supporters are so HUSH! HUSH! about it.  If he was Atheist or Muslim, he needs to just say so.  The more these things are shrouded in secrecy, they more they just seem suspicious and alarming.  

by BPK80 2008-05-12 05:40PM | 0 recs
Re: I actually recommended your diary

But aren't all politicians elitist? It seems the only real question is: how much do their policies help the elites, and how good of a job do they do pretending they are not elitist. The former question is worthy of voting on, and the second is the sad nature of American political culture since Tippecanoe and Tyler Too.

by elrod 2008-05-12 06:31PM | 0 recs
Thanks for the insightful remarks

It actually makes the people of appalachia sound (somewhat) rational, just like everywhere else in this country.  I agree that the democrats (not just Obama) should give the region more attention. Otherwise the republicans are going to continue to use social wedge issues (i.e., Bill's term for bitter) to mislead them into voting for people who just are not going to help them.

by professor 2008-05-12 09:49AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Elrod thanks for sharing your thoughts. The bigger question is - can this be changed before Nov? Or should we just let go Appalachia and focus the money and effort on other regions?

I still feel Obama is a weaker candidate but we have to do with what we got and make things happen for Nov.

I am curious to hear your thoughts since it seems like you have your ears to the ground when it comes to Appalachia.

by Sandeep 2008-05-12 09:52AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

FWIW, I'd think the "rational" decision for Obama is to weight a few factors in planning a travel schedule.  In order of decreasing importance (roughly):

1) Opportunity of moving electoral votes (i.e., swing states for this contest get first consideration)

2) Fundraising potential: a reason to visit places like Atlanta or Phoenix.

3) Ability to help down-ticket races -- Obama will have broad coattails in many districts

4) Ability to help or reward a state Democratic party organization.

One problem w/ WV, KY, and TN is that they don't satisfy criteria #1, and probably not #2 or #3 either.  (Exceptions: fund raising in Memphis or Cincy suburbs).  On the other hand, the Appalachian regions in NC & VA will see Obama, because both states are in play in the fall (VA far more than NC).  In addition, each state has a strong D candidate for Senator (Warner romping, Hagan close).  IMO, Obama would be much better off campaigning in the Rust Belt, CO/NM/NV, MO, VA, and northern Plains states (WI/MN/ND/SD/MT/IA).

BTW: Take a look at Poblano's analysis at 538 for all the good stuff :)

by Twin Planets 2008-05-12 03:36PM | 0 recs
He's not going to win everywhere

And he has to choose wisely where to campaign. If I were Obama, I think I'd more or less write off Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia. I just don't think it would be worth it to spend much time or money there. I wouldn't write them off altogether, but I'd spend far mor time and money in states like Iowa, Virginia, Ohio, Colorado, North Carolina, Nevada, New Mexico, Missouri, Montana, and even states like Alaska and North Dakota. I think he could win any of those before he'd win Tennessee, Kentucky or West Virginia.

by Mumphrey 2008-05-12 04:17PM | 0 recs
On point #2

It's really hard to compare campaign stops by the Clinton and Obama camps. The Clintons have two stars to field and Barack just has himself. The President can roll into these small towns and he is the biggest name in decades. It's hard for Obama to counter that and keep up with press requests, fund raisers, big campaign stops, etc.

In my state he's been all over the place including costal towns like North Bend. North Bend is big by Oregon costal town standards but it's really quite small and out of the way, not the kind of stop that is an economical use of Obama's time.

by Obama Independent 2008-05-12 10:04AM | 0 recs
Re: On point #2

He in the 2nd part means President Clinton, in case it wasn't clear.

by Obama Independent 2008-05-12 10:05AM | 0 recs
&quot;Cultural barrier&quot;

What is the difference between

3) All of that said, the cultural barriers are real here. Historically, those with lower education levels have been more suspicious of cultural difference. Barack Obama is about as exotic a candidate as you can get. His name, his race, his family's origin, his path to Christianity, etc. are nothing like that experienced by most folks in Appalachia.

and racism/racial prejudice?  Most of the above - his name, his race, his family origin, his religion - often portrayed as "Muslim" used almost like a slur - are basically racial.                                

If Hillary's name was Siobhan, do you think people would be saying they wouldn't vote for her because her name didn't sound right for an American?  

by PantsB 2008-05-12 10:07AM | 0 recs
You do realize that Siobhan is Celtic, right?

by lombard 2008-05-12 11:13AM | 0 recs
That's the point

Siobhan sounds foreign and white, as opposed to Barack Obama, which sounds foreign and not-white.

by JJE 2008-05-12 11:51AM | 0 recs
There's worse than racism going on with Obama

... even in the progressive parts of WV, you'll hear "I don't have anything against blacks, but I wouldn't want my daughter to marry one."

and to think that suddenly the feminist horde around hillary is trumpeting these people as "fair and unbiased".... frightening.

That said, the region is politically corrupt.

I don't believe this is the only thing that means that people won't vote for Obama -- but it is one of them. As someone in a different diary said, "hillbillies will size you up and change their opinions -- liberals wont'"

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:21PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Thanks for the thoughtful analysis.  I'll admit that I tend to believe that Hillary's lead in Appalachia is due to some...uh...less charitable characteristics of Appalachia.  But I'd be delighted to be wrong about that.

Also, I grew up in NW PA and was astonished to see (somewhere) that it is considered part of Appalachia.  Do you know if this is true or how I could find out?

Thanks again.

by the mollusk 2008-05-12 10:19AM | 0 recs
NW PA not part of Appalachia

SW would be, but Pennsylvanians call them the Allegheneys anyway.  

by lombard 2008-05-12 11:15AM | 0 recs
NW is part of Appalachia

you just have to look at where the mountains lie (NW is a big plateau, but that thing is high! plus the mountains extend into NY).

I fell off my chair when someone said that Harrisburg was Appalachia. It is, just low mountains.

;-)

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:22PM | 0 recs
Re: NW is part of Appalachia
Actually, Harrisburg is culturally more Pennsylvania Dutch than Appalachian. That part of Pennsylvania that is geographically right in the Appalachians (or Allegheneys, as we call them) doesn't fit in too well culturally with the rest of Appalachia, since the Pennsylvania Dutch are their own culture and they influence the rest of the non-Pennsylvania Dutch people in that part of the state.
Harrisburg is only in the easternmost foothills of the Appalachians, anyway, as are Lebanon, York, Gettysburg and maybe Reading and Bethlehem. Even though they're on the fringes of Appalachia, and other towns farther north are right in the middle of the Appalachians, they still don't fit in culturally.
by Mumphrey 2008-05-12 04:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

ABC News asks why Obama can't win West Virginia:

http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/ 2008/05/why-shouldnt-ob.html

by TexasDarlin 2008-05-12 10:32AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I'm sure the Obama campaign IS concerned how they can win places like WV in the fall?

It's going to be a struggle, that's for sure?

But, Texas Darlin, what's your answer?

He should drop out because he is going to lost a southern state?

Also, I am NOT sure this is really a certain gimmee for a Senator Clinton run in the fall?

How did Bill do in his second run in WV? I know he won it the first time.

I think, Hillary's negatives makes it hard for me to believe, she has a cakewalk in the fall in WV?

And, again, you very rarely answer posts you don't want to, but how about MY state?

Seen a poll out here lately? WA state?

Obama Crushes McCain, Hillary is running neck and neck with McCain?

I could just as easily say:

Why does Senator Clinton have a problem in WA state?

by WashStateBlue 2008-05-12 10:43AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I actually think Obama made a mistake in not campaigning in WV except for today.  I'm not sure either Dem could win the state in the fall, but I think there is a shot because of the rough economic times.  I would hope that if Obama wins this thing as he seems likely to do, that Hillary would work her buns off doing what she can for him in those states where she has so much pull, as I would hope for the reverse if she had won the nomination.  

She would have a lot of power in the GE campaign, and hopefully, even without winning nomination, there is a prize for her in all this.

At any rate, to digress a bit, she has made it seem "normal" to see a woman in hot pursuit of the presidency, just as he has done the same for AAs, and I think we all need to breathe a deep sigh of relief that these barriers have finally been crossed.

by mady 2008-05-12 11:23AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Agreed.

But, I am truly troubled that those who were so thrilled when a woman AND a black man were running, now a lot of the women are threatening to vote for the White Male of the Republics, cause THEIR choice for milestone isnt winning.

I think it IS a troubling statistic, when almost DOUBLE of the Clinton supporters are polled as saying they will NOT vote for Obama in the fall?

Seems like they are saying "put BOTH barriers back up, cause mine didn't fall first...."

by WashStateBlue 2008-05-12 12:36PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

That's irrational as McCain is going to be worse no matter what. What explains the irrationality?

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 04:31PM | 0 recs
Assuming you're a democrat

it's irrational for you to think that Obama would be worse than McCain.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 06:20PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I appreciate your thoughtful diary, and I agree with many of your points.  So many readers seem to be going directly to race without passing go at outsider.  The two are not synonymous, and if one are not familiar with the history of Appalachia and/or the traditional nature of the culture here,  one is much less likely to grasp that the two are definitely not synonymous.  Since Rockefeller's endorsement of Obama, I've heard some of his big supporters remarking on Rockefeller's "foreignness" lately: how little time he spends here; how rarely Sharon visits the state; how and why he came here in the first place, not because he endorsed Obama, but because the endorsement is so out of step with his constituents.  

That said, I don't entirely agree that union culture is dead in WV, or that the phenomenon of Bush Republicans in WV is the result of the death of union culture in WV.

I believe that the biggest job losses in coal country happened from 1950 to the 1980s, not in the 1990s.  I don't have any data to back it up, of course.  

There was also a big union push in the WV democratic gubanatorial primary in 1996 for Charlotte Pritt - are you familiar with that campaign at all? - who beat our present governor in the primary, but was abandoned by conservative Democrats (basically, the Manchin voters) in the general and lost to a genial old dude, Cecil Underwood, with whom many WVians were familiar because he was governor in the 1950s.  

Pritt had alot of support from "progressive" activists/environmentalists in the state AND from unions.  I think she was the last candidate to have a significant base in WV that included both out and out liberals and major union support.  

I believe that Gore lost WV for two reasons: 1. guns; 2. the environment.  Look, when it comes to the long-term viability of the coal industry, the UMWA has to side with big coal; it's in the interests of both the coal miners and the mining companies.  And there are loads of union- and or union-minded people who are indirectly involved in mining, if not directly involved.  Meanwhile, environmentalists make their pitches for regulation without the kind of nuance and committment to the local economy that would at least make their positions more palatable.  

I am definitely opposed to mountaintop removal mining.  I also think that most talk of "clean coal" is a crock.  But it is much easier to demand an end to mining and the coal industry when you live in NYC or Washington than it is when you live in Bloomingrose, West Virginia, especially in the absence of a genuine committment on the part of the country (and many environmentalists) to the economic viability of small-town Appalachia.

by mgee 2008-05-12 10:46AM | 0 recs
pause too at muludgeon

... he's half white. and that in most parts doesn't wash even worse than if he was black.

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughs on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I think you make some excellent points, and, yes, it is a pleasure to read an election diary that is sincere, well-informed, thoughtful, and balanced.

At the same time, I think the issue (of Obama's lack of support) goes a bit deeper than you suggest.  Basically, his positions (focusing on process, corruption, etc.) are ones that typically appeal of high-income intellectuals.  Clinton's experience, approach, and positions are ones that have stronger appeal to the working class.  (This class split has been largely mitigated by Obama's strong appeal to African-Americans, many of whom appear to be voting for him out of racial solidarity.)  However, it still exists, so even if Obama spent a good deal of time campaigning in West Virginia, he could increase his support there, but perhaps by not too much.

by markjay 2008-05-12 10:49AM | 0 recs
Is it racial solidarity?

or just the pride of knowing that your president will know what it's like to be arrested for Driving While Black? (err... and that he might do something about that!)

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:26PM | 0 recs
Re: Is it racial solidarity?

Was Obama arrested while driving black?  Just like someone argued upthread, Hillary living in Arkansas doesn't mean she was a farmer, and Obama being black doesn't mean he led the life of anything but a priveleged black person.

by Scotch 2008-05-12 01:42PM | 0 recs
Re: Is it racial solidarity?

You think Sen. Obama live the life of a "priveleged black person"? What makes one "priveleged"? I mean, what the cut off? Where is the line in the sand, so to speak.

by Rationalisto 2008-05-12 03:19PM | 0 recs
Re: Is it racial solidarity?

So what makes him know what it feel like to be arrested driving while black?  Are you assuming that all black people can relate to all experiences of other black peoople? I have seen a lot of female Obama supporters who say they can't relate to descrimination and sexism described by other women.  Is it the color of his skin only?

by Scotch 2008-05-12 05:02PM | 0 recs
I know a black blogger from Philly

He says that white women clutch at their pocket books and actively shrink away from him in the elevator.

He's a lawyer, so it's not like he's dressed down.

He's been felt up by police while his kids and wife are in the car.

If you ask blacks, more than half can point to discrimination that they experienced within the last month.

Maybe you need to be convinced that Obama hasn't lived a life of highfalutin' priviledge, but I'm not surprised that a lot of African Americans are easier to convince.

Besides, did you hear that speech on race? ;-)

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:34AM | 0 recs
Re: I know a black blogger from Philly

My black buds have said the same thing. It's a daily, ongoing, grating experience of fear and resentment. As I gay man, I have some sense of what's that like. But I can "pass" if I have to.

by Rationalisto 2008-05-13 11:57AM | 0 recs
Re: Is it racial solidarity?

Alan Keyes and Al Sharpton did wonderfully in their bids for President because Blacks vote based on race. Right?

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 04:33PM | 0 recs
Sharpton had major skeletons and wasn't viable

Keyes is a wingnut.  Nobody is claiming black voters are crazy or idiotic.

by lombard 2008-05-12 04:42PM | 0 recs
Re: Sharpton had major skeletons and wasn't viable

No. They just claim that they vote their race with no evidence and despite evidence to the contrary. Hi John Edwards and Steve Cohen! Can't say that about

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 05:53PM | 0 recs
90 + plus

I'd say that's pretty good prima facie evidence.  Otherwise, you have to make the point that 90% of blacks have the same preferences and I don't think you want to say that, do you?

And as far as Steve Cohen goes, we'll see how long he stays around.  He already has black challengers who are endorsed by members of the black caucus.

John Edwards?  Don't know why you even mentioned him.

by lombard 2008-05-12 06:29PM | 0 recs
Re: 90 + plus

Or that's evidence that they've been offended by the Clinton campaign since not only don't they vote for her, they don't even LIKE her anymore.

Edwards got more Black votes than Al and Al isn't viewed all that negatively by the African-American community in general. At least not as far as I've ever seen.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 06:32PM | 0 recs
Re: 90 + plus

Yeah not so much goodwill anymore. That's one big ass bridge to burn.

by heresjohnny 2008-05-12 06:54PM | 0 recs
Re: 90 + plus

BTW, Cohen beat viable black candidates with the support of African-Americans.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 06:34PM | 0 recs
Cohen won with a split black vote

by lombard 2008-05-12 06:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Cohen won with a split black vote

He won black districts by wide margins.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 06:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Cohen won with a split black vote

He won 60% of the vote and beat the crap out of a Ford. He did it with substantial African-American support.

by heresjohnny 2008-05-12 06:54PM | 0 recs
That was in the general

where he beat a black Republican and black Independent (the Ford).  He got there in the first place from a split primary vote.  

Like I said, we'll see how long he sticks around.  Since he is the only white Congressman from a black majority district that I can remember, I don't expect it to be very long.  

by lombard 2008-05-12 07:02PM | 0 recs
kindly read the blogs from TN

... they really seem a bit annoyed at the black primary opponents. (things like "can't be bothered to show up and campaign" come to mind).

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:37AM | 0 recs
Re: That was in the general

You might be racist but his constituents don't appear to be.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-13 05:41AM | 0 recs
We shall see

Is he just a historical accident that his district's voters will fix or is he their chosen congressman for the long haul?

I just call things like I see them and, unlike most of you around here, I have historical perspectives.  If you want to call that racist, knock yourself out.

by lombard 2008-05-13 10:37AM | 0 recs
Re: That was in the general

Yeah um white guy beats black guys with help of black folks. Show me the reverse.

by heresjohnny 2008-05-13 03:45PM | 0 recs
Re: That was in the general

Yeah um white guy beats black guys with help of black folks. Show me the reverse.

by heresjohnny 2008-05-13 03:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Sharpton had major skeletons and wasn't viable

many other groups..

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 05:53PM | 0 recs
What is it with

Self-loathing whites he have the need to paint white people who support Hillary as racist?

Do you also call the massive voting block of black voters who vote for Barack racist?

by LatinoVoter 2008-05-12 10:55AM | 0 recs
Re: What is it with

No, but I will say one thing.  And I'm sure it'll be taken way out of context, and taken to mean more than I said, but I'm still going to try to make the point.

We know that most black people will vote for a white person.  They KEEP doing it, historically.  I cannot think of any historical example of black people actually SAYING (as some anecdotal examples from West Virginia in the press have actually done overtly) that they won't vote for a white person.

So we have empirical data for that side of the equation.

We have less empirical data for certain geographical groupings of whites.  I will say this, though.  Everybody I know who's worth listening to said that Harold Ford ran about the best Senate campaign period in 2006.  He did it in a great year for the Democrats.

He lost by three points to a white guy in Tennessee.  Does that mean that white people are racists?  No.  Does that mean that most white people are racists?  No.  Does that mean that even a decent plurality of Tennessee white people are racists?  No.

It does indicate, however, that some small percentage of white Tennesseans are somewhat more reluctant to vote for a black person when other factors can be reasonably eliminated.  Again, he ran an amazing campaign in a great year, yet he lost by three points.

I'm NOT calling Tennessee racist.  I've been there, I've got good friends from there.  But I am saying that not every state is as open-minded as every other.  There are regional differences.

And, for the record, I can certainly say that the overwhelming majority of Clinton supporters are good and moral people who haven't a racist bone in their bodies.  That doesn't mean that Appalachia is some bastion of post-racial identity.  I've been there.  It isn't.  It ain't exactly Deliverance either, but to pretend that the people there have no meaningful differences from, say, Seattle, is reductionist idiocy.

by Reaper0Bot0 2008-05-12 11:15AM | 0 recs
Of course blacks will vote for whites heavily...

...when no viable black contender is available or, in the case of someone like Michael Steele, the black candidate is of the wrong party (although he still did get a significant portion of black voters).

There are numerous examples of black politicians being elected in majority white jurisdictions but there are preciously few examples of the reverse. One current example, Steven Cohen, was elected because two black candidates split the black vote in the general election.  He is doing everything to hold on to his seat but he has primary opponents endorsed by members of the black caucus and I'd say his chances of being ousted are pretty fair.

I'll probably get troll rated or hidden for this comment because uncomfortable facts don't last long around here.

by lombard 2008-05-12 11:41AM | 0 recs
Well

I don't take your cited facts as trolls.

You did, however, assiduously avoid my example of former-Congressman Ford.

by Reaper0Bot0 2008-05-12 12:05PM | 0 recs
I like Harold Ford a great deal

And I hope he gets another shot at national prominence.

It must be said that he did get 41% of the white vote in TN, not all that awful considering historical circumstances.  Ford did stumble at the end, though, when he got into Corker's face in a parking lot while Corker was walking to a press conference.  I saw it shortly after it happened and I thought, "what a stupid move for someone who has run a tough but intelligent campaign."  Ford was also hurt by his unpopular family and all of its problems.  The fact that the black mayor of Memphis only grudgingly endorsed Ford late in the campaign while speaking very favorably of Bob Corker (both were friendly as TN mayors) probably was duly noted by voters as well.

by lombard 2008-05-12 12:12PM | 0 recs
Re: I like Harold Ford a great deal

The Ford family trial was the biggest factor in his loss. In East TN Ford did better than anybody expected. My county (Blount) voted 68% for Bush but only 58% for Corker. Same was true elsewhere in East TN.  He did well in Middle TN too. But in West TN he didn't run the numbers up the way he needed to. It was the Ford trial that did it; it was even covered around Knoxville (we have our own corruption issues...)

by elrod 2008-05-12 12:22PM | 0 recs
Unexpectedly low West TN numbers

were also noted in earlier polls.  I saw a Survey USA poll about a month or two before the election showing lower than majority but surprisingly decent numbers from East TN, good numbers in Middle TN, and perhaps slim majority, but surprisingly weak (lower than Middle TN if I remember correctly) numbers from West TN.  Apparently, where the Ford family was best known, his numbers were depressed below expectations.

by lombard 2008-05-12 12:33PM | 0 recs
that was just kooky...

but his comment afterward was priceless -- to his campaign staff, who were "wtf?"

"nobody talks like that about my family"

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:39AM | 0 recs
By the way, Corker received about 8%

of the black vote.  Apparently, blacks were somewhat "reluctant" to vote for Corker even more "reluctant" than the  59% of whites who were "reluctant" to vote for Ford.

Don't get me wrong.  I really like Harold Ford and wished he would have won.  I certainly would have traded his win for Whitehouse's win over Chafee.

by lombard 2008-05-12 07:08PM | 0 recs
I woudln't have.

RI was a sure bet. Ford won us Virginia and Montana.

Yay for the money sinks!

(we seem to be winning the money sink races this time around. )

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:40AM | 0 recs
They aren't ALL racist...

but it isn't self-hating to say that some are. It's called reality, and traveling through West Virginia (beautiful place) is something that will remind you of cold hard truth.

Now whether you stop and have a beer or not...

Have a scene from Appalachia:
Amish man in a bar playing pool with a man in a cowboy hat.

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:30PM | 0 recs
Re: They aren't ALL racist...

You won't find that, if you do it is a once in a lifetime thing.  Having lived in Appalachia for a long time and frequented many bars, I have never come close to seeing that.

by Scotch 2008-05-12 01:39PM | 0 recs
I liked the WV Amish line

by lombard 2008-05-12 07:09PM | 0 recs
That's from pennsylvania

where I do imagine there are more Amish. ;-)

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:14AM | 0 recs
Clinton has roots in the region, Obama has none

Clinton lived for years in Arkansas and knows the hard scrabble lives of rural southerners in her bones.

Obama's real time political experience is in urban Chicago and he hasn't spent enough time in the senate to even begin to absorb the stories and values of the rest of the countries from his fellow senators, much less the lessons from living life in those parts.

If he had delayed his presidential run for 4 or 8 years he would have been a little more aware of what he didn't know.

But he's always been an impatient man, who didn't let on-the-job training get in the way of his ambition.

And because of a brilliant speech in 2004 at the convention, he became the new matinee idol for the democratic elite, who wanted a shiny new product for the big campaign.  

What does this say for the Democratic party, when they put image before expertise?

by spoot 2008-05-12 11:54AM | 0 recs
But...

Expertise does not trump ability.

There a ton of people in this world with experience that I wouldn't trust to mow my lawn.

Experience is a factor, but it's not the end all be all.

by PSUdan 2008-05-12 12:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Clinton has roots in the region,

She was born in Chicago and went to Wellsley.

Her time in Arkansas was spent as an attorney or as the first lady of Arkansas.  There's nothing wrong with any of that, but to say that this somehow gives her an innate understanding of Appalachia, or the "hard scrabble" lives of regular, hard-working Americans is ludicrous.  The life she has led is full of great accomplishments and incredible talent, but blue-collar it ain't, and never really was.

by Reaper0Bot0 2008-05-12 12:29PM | 0 recs
this level of denial is why
you don't get what is happening.  You have no clue how she spent her time in Arkansas and you give her no credit for the hard work she always does understanding people and their problems.
Obama in the other hand talks like a really bad sociology professor.
by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 02:02PM | 0 recs
Re: the point is

The mixed race guy from a broken family lacks empathy?

by LandStander 2008-05-12 03:06PM | 0 recs
Re: this level of denial is why

Actually we do know how she spent her time in Arkansas.

by RLMcCauley 2008-05-12 04:34PM | 0 recs
Re: this level of denial is why

Oh, yes, Hillary is absolutely the empathetic Clinton.......

Look, I actually do respect Senator Clinton.  She is one capable lady, and in many respects a good example of what you can accomplish if you fight hard, and can swallow your pride and deal with some particularly painful adversity in your life.

But that does not, absolutely does NOT change her actual biography.  She has basically zero experience as a "hard working" American as that term is meant.  She's a lawyer and a politician.  Unlike many people, I do not have a problem with either of those occupations.  That being said, they are NOT blue collar experiences.

She went to freaking Wellsley.  Look it up if you don't understand how hilarious her recent, Madonna-esque self-reinvention is.

Senator Clinton has tried to be all things to all people, and it's a bit frustrating.  It might work among those "blue collar" workers who are pretty well disposed towards Democrats, but if she tried these sorts of stunts in the general election she'd be laughed down to defeat.

She is not pro-gun.  Nothing in her life's work indicates that she has any substantive respect for gun ownership, or frankly gun owners.  You may not agree with that.  Fine.  You don't have to.  Ask some gun enthusiasts to describe Hillary Clinton.  They aren't going to say she's a friend to them on that issue.

She has assumed a persona because doing so was the only way she could compete with Senator Obama.  Is the Senator Clinton of today at all consonant with the First Lady of the 90's?  I don't mean in regards to her character.  I'm referring to the image she's crafting.

She is morphing into something she has absolutely never ever been.  She is pandering to a constituency that is available in the primary, and she wants it.

She's a terrific and capable person, but she's not the most sincere.

by Reaper0Bot0 2008-05-12 05:08PM | 0 recs
Oops, sorry not countries, country

by spoot 2008-05-12 11:55AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Fantastic diary, thanks elrod.

by LandStander 2008-05-12 12:08PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

Nice analysis Elrod.  I think you're right:  the margins we're seeing in WV and KY would be smaller had Obama made greater efforts to connect with voters in these regions.

Recc'd.

by fogiv 2008-05-12 12:33PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

I grew up in southern Ohio, directly across the Ohio River from Huntington, WV.  My wife grew up about 15 miles west of there, near Ashland, KY.  These people are the salt of the earth, but I can't imagine Obama doing well there even if he had spent a solid week in the area.  Two months ago, HRC carried the southernmost counties of Ohio with 70-80% of the vote, and West Virginia and Kentucky (the eastern part of it, anyway) won't be much different.

Racism is undoubtedly part of it, but it's probably a minor factor.  These people value the tried and true, and Obama is probably a bit too new and different for their taste.  As the diarist noted, people in this part of the country have every reason to be suspicious of outsiders.  Not only is there a long, sad history of exploitation of the people and the land (and its resources), but they are also justifiably sensitive to any hint of condescension.  (Remember the Beverly Hillbillies?  How about Deliverance?)

Most important, Obama has done poorly among less-educated working-class whites all along, and if there is a more less-educated working-class white region of the country, I don't know where it is.  West Virginia's two largest cities only have about 50,000 people each, so there is no large urban population.  Finally, the young people among whom Obama has done so well are in relatively short supply due to lack of economic opportunity.  Many young people - especially bright young people - either leave the area to attend college or leave the area after college to find work.  (I speak from experience on this point.)

by KTinOhio 2008-05-12 01:14PM | 0 recs
Also, I'm pretty sure WVU is out of session ;-)

obama has been racking up wins in college towns.

by RisingTide 2008-05-12 01:32PM | 0 recs
Obama wins the degree crowd
but loses the advanced degree crowd in all of these states.  No one bothers to find out why because people are all too busy sticking Clinton voters in unflattering boxes. Obama lost a lot more in OH than the SE corner and more of PA that the SE corner.
Here is a clue.. it is his bad educational policy.
by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 01:49PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama wins the degree crowd

Everyone is entitled to their own opionion, but not their own facts.

PA Postgraduate
Clinton - 53%
Obama - 47%

OH Postgraduate
Clinton - 42%
Obama - 53%

IN Postgraduate
Clinton - 44%
Obama - 56%

by map 2008-05-12 02:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama wins the degree crowd

TX Postgraduate
Clinton - 46%
Obama - 54%

MO Postgraduate
Clinton - 32%
Obama - 67%

WI Postgraduate
Clinton - 36%
Obama - 61%

by map 2008-05-12 02:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama wins the degree crowd

Interesting. So why is PA different? Because a higher percentage of post-graduates in PA are Jewish? But that's only partly the story because Jewish voters were 57-43 in PA - not a blowout. Why was PA different than every other state among post-grads?

by elrod 2008-05-12 06:34PM | 0 recs
Age.

PA is the third oldest state in the country (behind WV) per capita. Our elders like Clinton.

Also, PA really, really likes to see people run more than once before getting elected.

And there's the appalachia too.

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:18AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia
Great diary Elrod.  Good analysis and I think some of your points accord with the info in a diary from Carnacki earlier today.  Take a look at Obamas closing commercial for WV and you can see he understands what you are saying.  Its a super ad for this market, and really for all Appalachia.  
p.s. My own take on this is that these folks have adopted Hillary into the clan (for whatever reasons) and therefore she is the familiar and Obama is from "away".  Never a good thing with these folks. They will stay with Hillary until the end, even to their detriment.
by Demo Dan in Dayton 2008-05-12 01:33PM | 0 recs
Oh good Lord

could you be more of a patronizing ass?

by TeresaInPa 2008-05-12 01:51PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

To Who's detriment? Maybe to Obama's detriment. Without their votes say goodbye to Obama.

by steve468 2008-05-12 04:37PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

There are many areas of the Country that went significantly against Obama for a lot of reasons, but the focus on that only goes to states that are mostly white. People want to find racism as the reason because they are too lazy or uninformed on complexities of culture to really find out the real reasons.  You can't tell me there aren't large numbers of people in other large population areas deciding upon their vote based on race.  Even in the middle of large cities, there are people who find change hard and don't feel good toward outsiders. Calling racism is the easy way out for onlookers who have a bone to pick to come to a ready conclusion about why others don't like their candidate.

by Scotch 2008-05-12 01:35PM | 0 recs
Re: Everyone I know
How small is your world?  As small as it sounds?
If you wish to believe that every one voting against Obama is racist, then that reflects on you.
by Scotch 2008-05-12 02:48PM | 0 recs
Ouch!

Before Iowa, I convinced--after months of advocacy--two of my Republican colleagues to support Hillary.  I based my argument on the idea that we need the pragmatic government that a hard-working Hillary would provide.  They saw McCain as out of touch and Obama as unready.

I was personally very touched by Obama's speech on race in March and I told my colleagues that I would enthusiastically vote for Obama were he the nominee.  The two Republicans told me that they would support McCain because they believed that more than anything, country needed a steady, experienced hand at the helm.  They did not have faith in Obama to do the job.

These are two college educated professionals who come from affluent families.  And they are both in their twenties.  They will go with McCain because of the experience issue.

Please don't assume that race is the sole reason for the McCain Democrats.  That logic will aggravate a lot of the white male voters that we will need in the fall.  The last thing we need is people to think that "You are either with us or you are a racist."

by psychodrew 2008-05-12 03:44PM | 0 recs
Your loser attitude is going to kill us

if it begins to take flower in the public eye.  I don't know how many smug little purists like you I've seen crying their eyes out after losses over the years.  I can just hear you,"How could these people be so stupid as to vote for McCain?  And who are they?  I don't even associate with such people!"

by lombard 2008-05-12 04:54PM | 0 recs
got my parents-in law

to vote obama in the primary. no telling what they'll do in the general.

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:21AM | 0 recs
Yes, the uneducated, racist Clinton voters

Very unlike those color blind, high-information, and highly educated voters in such Obama bastions as East St. Louis, IL, Gary, IN, and Atlanta, GA.

by lombard 2008-05-12 04:50PM | 0 recs
Re: Everyone I know

You need new friends. None of mine are like that and color of skin has no influence. Those who don't support Obama can come up with convincing reasons just like those who do support him, those who support McCain can come up with convincing reasons that are actually reasonable (if you ignore a whole bunch of stuff). I live in mostly rural Republican territory... and NO politition comes to my town wearing a suit and tie to campaign- they know better. If you're wearing a suit and tie you better be going somewhere special on your way out of town or you're just some 'slick' salesman that nobody trusts.

by Justwords 2008-05-12 06:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

If Back can master the Appalachian accent like Hillary so thickly does, he might get a few more points.  Seriously though, did anybody hear her speech today on the McNeil NewsHour?  Whoo boy!  It is embarrassingly painful to listen to, and to appreciate the depth of pandering that this candidate will sink to.

by haystax calhoun 2008-05-12 03:22PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

D'oh! B-A-R-A-C-K, that's Barack, not Back.

by haystax calhoun 2008-05-12 03:23PM | 0 recs
I grew up in WV.

And my parents are voting for Hillary tomorrow.

The irony here is that Obama really does have an opening in these states and I don't understand why he didn't try to take advantage of it.  A lot of blue-collar workers associate President Clinton with a good economy but a lot also associate him with NAFTA and GATT.  Many feel that Democrats tossed them aside with these trade deals in the 1990s.  Why, then, should they vote for Democrats now?  My parents are supporting Hillary because they like the fact that she is specific and she seems better prepared for the job than Obama.  My relentless advocacy may have something to do with that.

My parents aren't racist and they aren't afraid of outsiders.  They will support Obama if he is the nominee because they think the GOP is going to sink the country.  As union activists, they deeply distrust Republicans.  But they don't think that either party will do anything to help the blue-collar workers.  When I called my father yesterday to make sure he was still voting for Hillary, he said that he would but it was a waste of time.  Not because the media had written her off, but because nobody would do anything anyway.

In 2000, WV, to my horror, went for Bush.  I knew it was coming, but I was still devastated.   In 1992, during the general election campaign, Gore visited a town near my home and he promised to enforce trade laws that prevented steel dumping.  In 1999 & 2000, when China, Japan, and Brazil were accused of dumping steel and US manufacturers were losing money, closing plants, and laying-off workers, Secretary of the Treasury Rubin convinced President Clinton not to do anything.  It may have been for the greater good, but the community where I lived was outraged at having been lied to.

How could you expect these people to turn around and support Vice President Gore after that?

Well, they didn't.  Bush won the state, and he went on to levy tariffs on steel imports that save the steel mills in my hometown, including my father's.  It is a very painful irony for me that the man who led us into the nightmare that is Iraq also saved my father's job.  I sometimes think about how the world would be so much better if Gore had been elected.  Yet, my father would have lost his job, his pension, and his health insurance.  My parents probably would have lost their home.  And who knows what else.

The issue in my community is not that the unions aren't around to remind people of economic issues.  The economic issues are all around them.  Closing factories and coal mines.  Children moving away.  Aging populations.  Declining infrastructure.  The Democrats blame international trade (and do nothing).  The Republicans blame environmental laws, over-regulation, and immigration.  The voters there don't trust anybody.  The don't have any reason to expect that Democrats or Republicans will do anything to improve the economy.  

When these blue-collar workers vote for Republicans, many say they are voting against their economic self interest.  Why are they so irrational?  Why are they falling for the culture wars BS?  They aren't irrational.  Based on recent history, they have no reason to expect good things from either party.  They go Republican because of social issues.

How do we get them back?  Local Democrats have been pandering for years about international trade and bringing back the jobs.  These people aren't stupid.  They didn't fall for the BS from Clinton and Obama about renegotiating NAFTA.  If we want to bring back the white, blue-collar workers, they need action and results, not more promises.  Green-collar jobs?  Universal health care?

by psychodrew 2008-05-12 03:33PM | 0 recs
It isn't irrational to be distrustful of gov't

and Obama probably sounds like he's spinning a fairy tale.

by RisingTide 2008-05-13 05:24AM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

West Virginia like all of the rust belt states that voted heavily for Hillary, is a perfect example of the troubles that Obama has with White working class voters across the country. This is one of the main reasons that he will have great difficulty in winning a GE if he gets the nomination, without WV, Ohio, Pennsylvania or Florida, he has no chance of becoming President.

by steve468 2008-05-12 04:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Thoughts on West Virginia...and Appalachia

And I recall your prediction of a week ago that Clinton would win NC and IN quite decisively.

by politicsmatters 2008-05-12 05:30PM | 0 recs
Re: The Scots Irish Voter

As a Tennessean myself, I appreciate your thoughts, Elrod, on the culture and voting patterns of the region. Great Diary, thank you. Highly recommended.

Jim Webb wrote this article in 2004 questioning why Democrats don't make more of an effort to win them as voters--and particularly why Democrats really need to do so:

The Scots-Irish are derived from a mass migration from Northern Ireland in the 1700s, when the Calvinist "Ulster Scots" decided they'd had enough of fighting Anglican England's battles against Irish Catholics. One group settled initially in New Hampshire, spilling over into modern-day Vermont and Maine. The overwhelming majority -- 95% -- migrated to the Appalachians in a series of frontier communities that stretched from Pennsylvania to northern Alabama and Georgia. They eventually became the dominant culture of the South and much of the Midwest.

True American-style democracy had its origins in this culture. Its values emanated from the Scottish Kirk, which had thrown out the top-down hierarchy of the Catholic Church and replaced it with governing councils made up of ordinary citizens. This mix of fundamentalist religion and social populism grew from a people who for 16 centuries had been tested through constant rebellions against centralized authority. The Scots who headed into the feuds of 17th-century Ulster, and then into the backlands of the American frontier, hardened further into a radicalism that proclaimed that no man had a duty to obey a government if its edicts violated his moral conscience.

Matched with this rebelliousness was a network of extended family "clans," still evident among the Scots-Irish, built on an egalitarianism that measured a person by their own code of honor, courage, loyalty and audacious leadership. Noted Scottish professor T.C. Smout said it best when he observed that these relationships were "compounded both of egalitarian and patriarchal features, full of respect for birth while being free from humility." They demanded strong leaders, but would never tolerate one who considered himself above his fellows. Andrew Jackson, the first president of Scots-Irish descent, forever changed the style of American politics, creating a movement that even today is characterized as Jacksonian democracy.

The Scots-Irish comprised a large percentage of Reagan Democrats, and contributed heavily to the "red state" votes that gave Mr. Bush the presidency in 2000. The areas with the highest Scots-Irish populations include New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, northern Florida, Mississippi, Arkansas, northern Louisiana, Missouri, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, southern Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, and parts of California, particularly Bakersfield. The "factory belt," especially around Detroit, also has a strong Scots-Irish mix.

The Scots-Irish political culture is populist and inclusive, which has caused other ethnic groups to gravitate toward it. Country music is its cultural emblem. It is family-oriented. Its members are values-based rather than economics-based: they often vote on emotional issues rather than their pocket books. Because of their heritage of "kinship," they're strangely unenvious of wealth, and measure leaders by their personal strength and values rather than economic position. They have a 2,000-year-old military tradition based on genealogy, are the dominant culture of the military and the Christian Right, and define the character of blue-collar America. They are deeply patriotic, having consistently supported every war America has fought, and intensely opposed to gun control -- an issue that probably cost Mr. Gore both his home state of Tennessee and traditionally Democratic West Virginia in 2000.

The GOP strategy is heavily directed toward keeping peace with this culture, which every four years is seduced by the siren song of guns, God, flag, opposition to abortion and success in war. By contrast, over the past generation the Democrats have consistently alienated this group, to their detriment.

The Democrats lost their affinity with the Scots-Irish during the Civil Rights era, when -- because it was the dominant culture in the South -- its "redneck" idiosyncrasies provided an easy target during their shift toward minorities as the foundation of their national electoral strategy. Their long-term problem in having done so is twofold. First, it hampers their efforts to carry almost any Southern state. And second, the Scots-Irish culture has strong impact outside the South. This is especially strong in many battleground states. It is no accident that many political observers call the central region in Pennsylvania "Northern Alabama."

Scots-Irish traditions play heavily in New Hampshire -- the only New England state that Mr. Bush carried in 2000. Large numbers of Scots-Irish settled in the southern regions of Ohio (called "Northern Kentucky"), Indiana and Illinois. They were among the principal groups to settle Missouri and Colorado. They migrated heavily to the industrial areas in Michigan, which is one reason that George Wallace, ran so strongly in that state in 1968 and 1972.

But other than with those who identify with the Christian Right, it would be wrong to think that the Republicans have their firm loyalty. For every Lee Atwater or Karl Rove who understands the Scots-Irish, there are others who privately disdain them. And sometimes not so privately -- the most vicious ethnic slur of the presidential campaign came from Charles Krauthammer, after Howard Dean suggested that the Democrats needed to reach out to the "guys with the Confederate flags on their pickup trucks." Mr. Krauthammer, who has never complained about this ethnic group when it has marched off to fight the wars he wishes upon us, wrote that Mr. Dean "wants the white trash vote . . . that's clearly what he meant," and that he was pandering to "rebel-yelling racist rednecks."

As with other ethnic groups, those inside the culture know how to read such code words, and there may come a time when the right Democratic strategist knows how to counter them in the manner that Mr. Dean contemplated. John Edwards is at his visceral best when his campaign rhetoric seems directed at doing that.

The decline in public education and the outsourcing of jobs has hit this culture hard. Diversity programs designed to assist minorities have had an unequal impact on white ethnic groups and particularly this one, whose roots are in a poverty-stricken South. Their sons and daughters serve in large numbers in a war whose validity is increasingly coming into question. In fact, the greatest realignment in modern politics would take place rather quickly if the right national leader found a way to bring the Scots-Irish and African Americans to the same table, and so to redefine a formula that has consciously set them apart for the past two centuries.

http://www.jameswebb.com/articles/wallst jrnl/scotsirishvote.htm

by Tennessean 2008-05-12 05:56PM | 0 recs
Re: The Scots Irish Voter

I have to say that I find Webb's analysis pretty unpersuasive. I'm a professional historian and I focus on the Upper South. In fact, the area I look at is precisely that identified by Webb as the Scots-Irish belt. I've also lived in Scotland and have taken a strong interest in Scots-Irish immigration to East Tennessee.

My problem with Webb's analysis is that he essentializes the Scots-Irish experience. You just cannot argue that a similar ethnic stock has maintained the same value set over hundreds of years when that ethnic groups has so freely intermingled with others. It's hard enough to generalize about a relatively close-knit group over time like Jews, but the Scots-Irish are a whole 'nother degree of complex.

by elrod 2008-05-12 06:46PM | 0 recs
Why I love Appalachia

Despite its voting preferences and its religious traditions that differ from mine, I love Appalachia. I was reminded of it again when I went out with some friends tonight for dinner and beers and heard a couple guys playing bluegrass music. The crowd - both middle and working class - was genuinely in to it. The music is as native to this region as any other - the Carter Family grew up down the road outside Kingsport (Lori's hometown...) The Stanley Brothers, Roy Acuff, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Ricky Scaggs, Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, Carl Smith, Doc Watson - all of them came from the area. Despite everything, I'm proud to call Appalachia home.

by elrod 2008-05-12 06:54PM | 0 recs

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