ridley
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i drive through lots of rural small towns in red states every day and the only buildings not on their last leg are churches, dollar general stores, and fast food restaurants and one thing they all have in common is they made progress a bad word 30 years ago.
05:11 PM - Mar 14, 2023
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Danille Elise Christensen
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In response to ridley.
Have you stopped to talk with any of the people in these towns? I think you'd find that the picture is much more complicated--and certainly different from place to place.
11:17 PM - Mar 14, 2023
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ridley
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In response to Danille Elise Christensen.
i do talk to them. i grew up with them. i'm sure it is more complicated but i'm not sure what to do except point out what i see as wrong. fox news, unbridled capitalism and organized religion.
11:35 AM - Mar 15, 2023
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Danille Elise Christensen
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In response to ridley.
I'm in Appalachia, where unbridled capitalism (e.g., extractive industries and predatory pharma) has indeed destroyed people and their environments, but is it fair to say "they" chose this? I agree that the situation is frustrating, but I don't think "us vs. them" framings are part of the solution.
11:47 AM - Mar 15, 2023
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ridley
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In response to Danille Elise Christensen.
No I absolutely agree with that. I grew up in a small town in Kentucky and while those folks didn’t choose that they keep voting for people who don’t want them to have health care, etc. It should not be an us vs them. I am the same but moved out and gained some perspective. What’s the answer?
12:45 PM - Mar 15, 2023
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Danille Elise Christensen
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No easy solutions, but I'll post some ideas. 1) Increase voter turnout/political participation. Lots of places deemed "Trump Country" actually have very low voter turnout, so just a few people carry the vote. Active voter suppression, logistical issues, and decades of disenfranchisement contribute.
In response to ridley.
06:07 PM - Mar 15, 2023
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