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V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

, S

pring

2017

14

Now What?

By Edgar H. Thompson

Last summer my wife and I went to a

local cook-off and community festival. As

I watched the people in the crowd—some

of whom were tattooed [I am not], some

of whom were obese [So am I], some of

whom were wrinkled [So am I], and some

of whom were edgy [I am sometimes]—I

thought to myself that there appeared to

be a lot of borderline, or actual, outlaws in

attendance. I don’t know that I am better

than any of these people, but I do know

that I didn’t like what I was seeing. Many

attendees didn’t seem to care for anyone else except themselves,

pushy and inconsiderate in their behavior. It was as if

it

was going

to be their way, or

it

was the highway for anyone else. I at least try

to show interest in people, who they are and what they are. I hold

doors for those behind me. I try to be kind, even when I would be

justified to call someone to account for their wrong or inept behavior,

like when they call me “young man,” an age-related put down, even

though it isn’t intended to be mean.

Here is the problem I see, or a part of it. Tom Brokaw called

my parent’s generation the “Greatest Generation” because they won

WWII. They did win the war, thank God. However, we all lost in

another way. Because the experience of the war was so terrible for

my parents’ generation, they made a commitment to insure that me

and my peers would never have to go through anything as bad as

what they had been through. As a result, my generation was spoiled.

My generation, in turn, has spoiled our children who, in turn, have

spoiled their children. We now have several generations of people

who feel that they are entitled to receive many things, when in truth

they often have not worked hard enough to receive what they are

given freely. “You mean I have to work for something? You mean

there are consequences if I don’t do what I am supposed to do? No,

No, No! Whether I work or not, I am due a check.”

I believe this collective sense of entitlement is dangerous for

Americans. I am proud that I was born in the greatest country in

the world, but I am frightened when I consider the possibilities for

the future. Thinking about these issues and the presidential race last

summer, and how our new President might deal with all of this, I

decided that if we were ever going to move forward again positively

as a nation we probably needed a new President with the vision of

Ronald Reagan and Teddy Roosevelt; the integrity and principles

of Jimmy Carter; the intellect of Barrack Obama and Bill Clinton;

the manipulative, diplomatic savvy of Richard Nixon and Henry

Kissinger; and the even-handedness of Ike Eisenhower. In other

words, we needed a Thomas Jefferson, a Franklin Delano Roosevelt,

or the Blues Brothers, Dan Aykroyd and Jim Belushi incarnate on

a Mission from God, to show us a way to get out of the mess we

were and are in. I concluded that the best way to move on in this

direction was to determine a path, a focus and put the “peddle to

the metal” to get there. Well, as a nation we did. We elected Donald

Trump. Now what?

I have to admit, as a simple voter, I have been troubled that

Congress appears to have been standing still, doing nothing. It has

never been true in our history that only one side gets what they

want. Both sides make their case, and then through negotiation and

compromise, decisions are made, and we move forward. A back-and-

forth, messy process, it is the only way meaningful and equitable

political decisions are made and progress is achieved. This is what I

learned when I read John F. Kennedy’s

Profiles in Courage

when I

was in high school, which I recommend if you have not read it.

I believe one of the reasons that President Trump was elected

was because of this legislative impasse. Our country’s leadership,

political and cultural, who live primarily in New York, Washington

D.C., and Los Angeles, thought they knew what the American people

Continued on next page

believed and wanted. Our media also thought they knew what the

American people wished for, but something went amiss. Both groups

were wrong. Donald Trump, like it or not, seemed to know things

they didn’t. Now we are all in a world where our new President is

going to try to do what he promised, and the people, who used to be

in power and still long for it, don’t know how to act or react.

Thus, my question finally is, who am I to trust as the future

becomes the present? The media that I used to go to seems to think

that the only correct world order is the same one that they have

traditionally reported on, and they cannot seem to adjust to anything

different. I sometimes wonder who these news people are anyway. Are

they news gatherers and commentators, or are they prognosticators,

mediums, or fortune tellers? I am now finding media sources I have

always trusted who seem to be misrepresenting the facts. I am finding

other media sources, ones that I didn’t trust, now making sense. I

have to watch four or five different television news casts, read the

President’s twitter, read

Rolling Stone

and

The New Yorker

—all of

this tempered by what I see on the BBC—to get a sense of what the

truth might be in these modern times. Heavens! I guess two plus two

does equal five. George Orwell had it right.

I have to ask again, now what?Who am I to trust?Who are we to

trust? I don’t have a clear answer, and I am not sure where to find one.

Herb Thompson is a Professor Emeritus of Education at Emory

& Henry College, Emory, VA. He is currently President of the

Association of Teacher Educators –Virginia.

My recent book,

The Extremes of

Virginia

, has helped to bring needed

attention to the subpar economic, health

and educational conditions in Southwest,

Southside, the Eastern Shore and other

poor and rural areas of Virginia. The

book seems to have touched a chord as,

time and again, Virginians have reacted

with disbelief that in

The Extremes

, the

poverty rate is 67 percent higher than

statewide, that suicide rates are 19 percent

higher, that much higher unemployment

is chronic, that healthcare outcomes are vastly inferior, that

educational outcomes are among the worst in the Nation, and that

deaths from illegal drugs are much more common. And it’s true:

the differences betweenVirginia’s rural, poor areas compared to the

wealthier, more developed areas are stunning and staggering. And,

even more troubling, history suggests that the future prospects of

the rural, poor areas are decidedly different—and worse— than in

Virginia’s “Urban Crescent” of Northern Virginia, Fredericksburg,

Richmond, Williamsburg and Hampton Roads.

A few examples:

In Southwest Virginia, the population is steadily declining,

as young people are forced to leave, seeking jobs, opportunity,

education, and advancement elsewhere. Far Southwest Virginia is

steadily growing older, grayer and poorer. Now, the poverty rate is

54 percent higher than Virginia as a whole.

In Southside, once the economic engine of Virginia that in the

early 1900s supported rural outposts such as Fairfax, the population

is also declining, the poverty rate is 71 percent higher, educational

achievement lags Virginia and unemployment is greater.

On the Eastern Shore, remote and for many “out of sight, out of

mind,” the same problems of declining population, a much higher

poverty rate, poorer educational attainment are joined by an opioid

death rate 83 percent higher than the statewide average.

The

Extremes

of Virginia

By Auggie Wallmeyer

V