I visited Trump country and I was struck by the levels of resentment from my family.
Whether it was racial, political, economic, religion, education... you name it, they were in the mindset that they were victims and put-upon my undeserving hoards seeking to take money, labor, and destroy their values.
These are poor, uneducated people living in an impoverished and declining area being propped up by the large cities' tax-base. They complain about being subject to laws handed down by the majority in larger cities who probably don't even know they exist... probably because they don't create or do anything worth noticing.
Segregation based on race, economics, and education status is rampant to the point they don't even know people with college degrees and only tolerate minorities saying "I maybe poor... but at least I am not black". While at the same time they are so resentful of (barely) more successful and educated that they self segregate and constantly proclaim "those people think their better than us" or that they must of cheated to gain their success. I couldn't get them to go to a bar or restaurant they didn't already know as "a good place for us". And this is a pretty small town.
I didn't even see black people while I was there, even though the area as 2x the national average. But on the other hand, many in my family are suspicious of anybody with a college education or job that doesn't require being dirty.
To top it off, I saw a lot of little signs that the racial resentment is starting to increase. People who I know grew up in Klan households are being more public. There are little things in everyday conversations and online that suggest that violence is right under the surface.
What do you make of this? Is it just a "scarcity mindset"?
Whether it was racial, political, economic, religion, education... you name it, they were in the mindset that they were victims and put-upon my undeserving hoards seeking to take money, labor, and destroy their values.
These are poor, uneducated people living in an impoverished and declining area being propped up by the large cities' tax-base. They complain about being subject to laws handed down by the majority in larger cities who probably don't even know they exist... probably because they don't create or do anything worth noticing.
Segregation based on race, economics, and education status is rampant to the point they don't even know people with college degrees and only tolerate minorities saying "I maybe poor... but at least I am not black". While at the same time they are so resentful of (barely) more successful and educated that they self segregate and constantly proclaim "those people think their better than us" or that they must of cheated to gain their success. I couldn't get them to go to a bar or restaurant they didn't already know as "a good place for us". And this is a pretty small town.
I didn't even see black people while I was there, even though the area as 2x the national average. But on the other hand, many in my family are suspicious of anybody with a college education or job that doesn't require being dirty.
To top it off, I saw a lot of little signs that the racial resentment is starting to increase. People who I know grew up in Klan households are being more public. There are little things in everyday conversations and online that suggest that violence is right under the surface.
What do you make of this? Is it just a "scarcity mindset"?