I had an editor once, Mr. Miller, we called him
respectfully. Mr. Miller was one of the old school shot-and-a-beer
newsmen who’d come up through the ranks of reporters in the days when
almost no newsman had a journalism degree. He told me: Joe, it’s a
damned privilege to communicate to an audience of a dozen citizens,
much less thousands or millions. Honor that privilege. Write for
everyman. Don’t become a stenographer for the powerful, regardless of
their politics or party.”
I still believe that. I would no more be a stenographer for Barack
Obama than for George Bush. Whether we are on radio, TV or run a news
blog, it's humanity and a nation we’re obligated to, not the opinions
or political junkyism of groups or individuals, or political
correctness.
Especially political correctness. Political correctness by definition
excludes majorities and demonizes millions who do not see the world in
terms of social politics.
For instance, if I said on NPR that "The hebes don't vote their own
interests because they are too misled by the Israel lobby" I’d probably
be escorted out the door.
If I posted on Daily Kos that, "The darkies don't vote their own
interests because they are they are misled by the Democrats," the post
wouldn’t be up there very long.
But if I say "The rednecks don't vote their own interests because they
are misled by the gun lobby," most of liberal middle class America
agrees with me. Proof is in the sales of my book, Deer Hunting With
Jesus: Dispatches from America’s class war, and the fact that I’ve
called my own people aggravating rednecks a hundred times in interviews
without objection by the interviewer or listeners. It’s been normal
practice so long that we rednecks are somewhat immune to it and often
take a certain defiant pride in the label. I’m proud to be a redneck.
But I’ll tell you this: My name ain’t Earl.
I am an Appalachian native whose education consists primarily of a GED,
and a few college incompletes. Yet I have managed to live a couple of
decades in the middle class — as a news reporter, magazine editor and
publishing executive. I’ve lived in both worlds and still do. So I can
tell you from experience that the liberal middle class is condescending
to working class redneck culture. Which is insulting, but not a crime.
The real crime of course, is the way corporate conservatives lie to my
people, screw us blind, kill us in wars and generally keep us in a
state of economic serfdom. The good news is that a lot of lower working
class people are starting to figure that out. We should be reaching out
to them.
If we bothered to really cover redneck working class culture on the
ground, we’d be surprised to find how many progressive rednecks — what
I call leftnecks — are out there. Many are autodidacts like myself.
People whose convictions are rooted in life experience, people who
admire Naom Chomsky but revere Joe Hill.
Speaking of leftnecks, let me mention a couple of hard scrappers in the
heartland doing just what I have suggested. For instance, there’s
Bob Kincaid of Head On Radio in Beckley West Virginia
. Kincaid’s internet radio project is live and on the ground from coal
country … fighting -mountaintop removal. He’s backed up by the hard
sweating carpenter-millwrights union down there, as well as much of the
religious community. Working men get their say on Bob’s show, unguided
by the nose ring of scripted questions and for as long as it takes them
to say it.
And there’s
John Kelley in Corpus Christie, Texas
, … who has brought together the far left, centrists and conservative
local business to save wetlands. John’s little newspaper, Internet work
and tireless activism is causing local Texas red state voters to
reconsider a lot of things. “There’s no digital divide here,” John
says.
Both John Kelley and Bob Kincaid put every dollar
they have and many they don’t have behind what they do. And what they
do is fight the good fight face to face and on the ground in that real
world red state America. The one that was ceded over to Fox Network and
neo-con talk radio because it was never on the urban media radar
screen. And still isn’t. Sending a big city reporter into the heartland
for a week so just doesn’t do it.
Our urban areas are not the only places exploitation occurs, and people
of color are not the only people being exploited….just the most
obvious. I’ve always thought that we’d all be served better if our news
media centers were moved out of Washington and closer to working class
America. To Keokuk, Moline or Birmingham. Someplace undistorted by the
Washington “power buzz,” New York ambition or Los Angeles glitz.
Actually, New Orleans wouldn't be a bad choice these days.
Getting back to left-necks though, America’s media caste is put off by
the way these folks look and sound … and their unpredictable opinions —
which do not conform to standard ideology or political cortrectness. I
say give them a voice, even if it happens to make you wince, due to
your own social and political conditioning. Let a working man speak.
Tough, free thinking carpenters and truck drivers … give’em the mic.
Let’em talk. They know how to speak to their own people, and can show
us all a thing or two about how this country really works.
American media is more than happy to deal with the rural red state
"working class" as long as it remains conceptual and in the abstract.
And “out there somewhere” in “the heartland.” A place to be polled and
surveyed by Gallup to fuel the communicating class’s self-absorbed
political abstractions. Instead of daily reports on class issues – as
we said, are the true basis of all politics – the people get reports on
“the economy.” An abstraction if ever there was one.
So what we have in mainstream media … and the biggest of the
alternative media … is a societal caste of middle class disseminators,
granted entitlement to be the one voice, describing America in
political abstractions to the many. Which in itself is weirdly
authoritarian. And they maintain that entitlement as long as they
maintain fake objectivity and throw around enough data to sound
informed. And as long as they do not mention that socialism is the
fastest growing political affiliation in our hemisphere. And as long as
they never quote Chavez or Castro in context. Our entire mainstream
information format is fraudulent. For instance, every daily newspaper
in America has a business section but none has a labor section.
Beyond that, even alternative news sources get sucked along into the
back draft of meaningless mainstream media controversy at the expense
of useful exposition of truth. For example, if you really want to
inform the public in a useful way, you do not ride the Reverend Wright
story to death, commenting and counter-commenting on a story
purposefully set up to paint Barack Obama as an angry black man. (Hell,
he’s the least angry candidate and barely passes as black.) The time
and effort might better have been used to examine the common political
interests between blacks and working class whites. Instead, we got
punditry and academics being interviewed about the role hick racism
will play in Obama’s presidential campaign. Nobody mentioned that Obama
supports mountaintop removal, and that most West Virginians are not
coal miners and do not favor mountaintop removal. But what do the hicks
know? Now you can pooh pooh this all you want, but contempt for the
hicks from the sticks is especially pronounced in media and academia,
both of which are stuffed with middle class whites. Yet, there is not a
person here, regardless of politics, who does not share many, many
political interests with white hicks.
Here’s an example of common interests – skinning a buck deer and saving
the environment. If we bothered to reach the 13 million hunters, or
cover their issues, we might get the chance to inform them how the
current administration has privatized, polluted and plundered millions
of acres of oxygen and fresh water producing hunting and fishing
grounds. Instead, we interview an eco-scientist, or some guy wearing an
Indiana Jones hat who has written a book aimed at ecologically
concerned middle class urban and suburbanites. Personally, if I were
trying to stop the rape of the outdoors, I’d prefer telling millions of
armed, voting hunters how fewer licenses are being issued and at higher
fees because there is less natural area to hunt and fish.
But we don’t. So heartland hunters still think people like us want to
take away their guns, which no aware person, or even the unaware ones
running the Democrat party, even remotely wants to do these days.
It’s much the same with racism. Racism may be an issue in some parts of
West Virginia, and it sure as hell will be used as a wedge issue there.
But much of what is being called racism is simply anger at being
neglected. There's a saying in the South that goes. “If you're poor and
white, you're out of sight.” But that does not mean you are filled with
hate. As Virginia’s U.S. Senator Jim Webb said recently, if poor
working whites could get at the same table as black America you could
recharge populist American politics. He’s right. A couple of
generations have come along since the Sixties. There has been much
change. For instance, West Virginia has the highest national high
school graduation rate – 71%. Arkansas is third in the nation. And
maybe one of the best kept secrets in America is just how many rednecks
have mixed race children or nephews and nieces, etc. I have two myself.
But pundits and media sanctioned authorities, both black and white,
still dine out on broad Sixties era stereotypes.
Same goes for gays. Rednecks are supposed to be militantly anti-gay. I
can tell you that few rednecks I know of are militantly anti-gay. They
simply do not give a shit. I’m sure the feeling is mutual.
Immigration is different matter. White working Americans I know are
dead set against it. Personally, I’d like to see all of Latin America
swamp this country and completely crash the place and its institutions.
I’m one of those evil socialist types who think America should be
brought down to a second or third world level like most of the rest of
the planet. I live in a poor Central American village half the year and
eat iguanas and cow’s foot soup. It ain’t all that bad.
But for working class Americans the truth is that illegal immigration
is one of the factors bringing back indentured servitude in this
country. You may call this observation xenophobic. But it’s not your
job that is being taken away for pennies on the dollar. You don’t lay
bricks, cut meat, or fix cars ... Xenophobia doesn’t mean crap to my
neighbor, Smoke, who now does carpentry work – when he can find it —
for ten bucks an hour. He used to make fifteen.
As I said earlier, much of working class America sees media people as
removed, urbane, and too politically correct to grasp the very real
effects things like immigration have on their lives. There is some
truth in this. But political correctness and middle class sensibilities
are no crime – just extremely limited. Unfortunately though, many
working class folks also have the wrong impression that we cherish the
ethnic, racial and gender issue constituency more than we do the 90
million working class people in the America. Last time I looked, our
republic was still one nation that included the hardest laboring class.
All 90 million of them. Let’s crack the politically correct mold for
once and for all. We can start by honestly addressing the issue of
class in America, including the white working class.
And just what is working class?
Well, working class is not being able to choose what kind of work you
do … when you work … how much you get paid, when you take a vacation …
whether you have benefits … or when you take a walk because the man
doesn’t need you anymore. The majority of Americans work under exactly
those conditions. Or worse.
The truth us that about 65% of the American work force is working
class, not middle class. It has nothing to do with how much they earn.
It’s about power over their own daily lives.
But more importantly, most of working class America cannot see or hear
any of us from where they live and work in life. The way they got to
that place was through simple neglect of the laboring class … mostly
governmental neglect. When a government neglects the needs of a group
or class, it is because it knows it can get away with it. Otherwise
known as a screwjob. Reagan screwed them. Clinton screwed them. Both
Bush administrations screwed them. Democratic or Republican majorities
in Congress didn’t matter. They’ve been neglected by our government for
the past 36 years.
Yet that was made possible through media neglect. Ignoring unprofitable
or less visible Americans, self interest, careerism, preening before
affinity groups … it occurs in all media, large or small, whether it be
CBS, Fox Network, Huffington Post or Daily Kos. It’s disheartening.
But I find it particularly disheartening in the Internet media. We
compete with each other for demographics, niche markets and traffic
just as the networks compete for ratings. In too many cases it simply
creates personality cults in cyberspace, … choosing wit over wisdom, …
celebrity lust being what it is in America. It’s built into our system.
And that’s a shame too.
I can remember when the emergence of the Internet was heralded as
opportunity for global referendums on things like where the world’s
wheat would be distributed. We have become so cynical that we would now
laugh at the idea. Or so disappointed as to cry over it. Yet, for all
its faults, I still believe the Internet is the most promising
instrument of truth available to us right now.
Now here’s where the audience starts throwing the rotten tomatoes at
me: When it comes to oppression and neglect, we need more voices than
just the women's studies professors and the gay-rights activists. Sure,
they have a just cause. But there is a larger issue. We have
established a vast white underclass in America that looks to be a
permanent fixture of the new global corporate order of things. And
besides, it doesn’t matter if a gay man has a marriage license hanging
in his cubicle if that cubicle is located in a corporate totalist
state, a spiritual and moral gulag built upon a purposefully created
and managed economic serfdom. So let’s concentrate on broadening our
service base. And let rural and working class Midwesterners and
Southerners know that, while we may not be Coors Light drinkers and
never caught a catfish or tuned up an engine, we don’t hate people who
do. And that we care about their problems too.
It is very uncomfortable for some of us to cross class lines to
communicate with poorly educated folks who are obese, live in modular
homes, or ride ATVs across wilderness because they do not know any
better because public education has crashed and information sources are
chiefly propaganda ... creating citizens whose politics include torture
if their president says it does.
It is also uncomfortable for middle class people in media, even the
most idealistic ones, to take serious risks. Especially when they are
safely occupied among their own kind, even if their kind is only 20% of
the American public these days. Yet, there is a battle going on for
America’s soul. We can no longer afford to remain inside the politics
of the comfort zone.
It's not as if we do not know what laboring America is about. Many
among the middle class employed in media, … both liberal and
conservative … had grandparents who farmed the Midwestern plains,
sweated in hellish factories or pushed handcarts in places like New
York City. Today, their middle class grandchildren … often unknowingly
… they take a snide attitude toward and rural and working class values,
tastes and lifestyles.
I myself spend a bit of time in the liberal comfort zone. I travel to
America’s cities for media events, I eat sushi, and talk with
Clinton-Obama worshiping lawyers, academics and publishers over
martinis. And we discuss why the white rural working class so often
votes against its own interests, when it comes to politics in real
world America. I always wonder exactly where that is located. The real
world, I mean.
Here’s a fact about real world America: Bowling alleys outnumber sushi
bars more than three to one in this country. In fact, if you go over to
the Bowl and Lounge in Columbia Heights, a few miles from here … you
can get batter fried walleye, slaw and fries for six bucks. And over at
Elsie’s on Marshall Street there’s beer and gravy fries and heavy metal
bowling on Sundays. There are no sushi bars in bowling alleys. One
man’s hell is another’s comfort zone.
And so, still I ask (and who am I to ask anything?): How many of us are
willing to leave our comfort zone? Speak out for the rednecks and the
poor working whites about their bad health and broken futures? And why
their elderly parents rot in nursing homes owned by ex-car dealers … Or
the dynamics of hopelessness that drives the meth epidemic among
working class whites? It’s every bit as destructive as the black crack
epidemic. Again, how many of us are willing to leave the comfort zone?
You tell me.
A couple of weeks ago this conference was described to me as the
biggest alternative media schmoozerama of the year. Thankfully, it is
also a lot more than that. For all our human faults, each of us holds
some piece of the truth in the face of a mountain range of national
lies. And we are here together in one spot because the truth means
something to us.
Let me close with another thing Mister Miller told me. He said
“Journalism is just a trade, a craft in service of the truth. And the
truth is not a job or a profession — it’s a calling.”
That call is louder than ever. We can hear it across a deformed set of
national priorities, such as the obscene war in Iraq ... across race
lines and gender lines. We have answered those calls. And if we make an
effort, we can hear it across class lines, and answer that call too.
No matter who is elected, West Virginia will be flattened by
mountaintop removal. For instance, back in April when Obama was being
escorted by the coal barons Rockerfeller and Hall in West Virginia, he
promised to make West Virginia “The Saudi Arabia of the United States.”
Translation: Stepping up mountaintop removal. Hillary’s position is
that “coal is here to stay,” and says she is “strongly in favor” of
auctioning 100%” of pollution permits to the highest bidder.
Consider this statement:
“Everybody
is a patsy for the new corporate order of information — the
well-coiffed talking head, the brain dead audience, even the world’s
heroes and outlaws themselves. All play out their parts as good guys or
bad guys or attractive puppets in a light show of images that pass for
vital news. American culture is deformed, and by extension, its media
are equally deformed."
I wrote that in 1976. I was 30.
Now I’m 61 years old and it’s still true today, as far as I am
concerned. And it will remain true until we reinvent our media system
completely. Our system is like an old beater car that should have been
junked a long time ago, but everybody keeps insisting a new paint job
and set of tires, or some new regulation, will do the trick. The
problem is that it’s the only ride in town and it’s owned by the same
forces that own congress, the banks and everything else that has any
value whatsoever, whether it be bonds, real estate or broadcasting. The
airwaves are a common. Cyberspace is a common. And as such they should
be owned exclusively and entirely by the people – not corporations. All
it would take to do that is a complete reversal of American capitalism.
Anything else is a holding action or token change. Unfortunately, most
of us working in the business have internalized the corporate/state
process so thoroughly they do not even know we are conditioned
creatures of a larger machine.
Now we are all here in the name of Media reform. But media,
particularly the most important form and the one that really counts,
television, is non-reformable under its corporate driven structure.
With damned few exceptions, nothing of significance in the mainstream
news is what it appears to be. This is not as much the result of
conspiracy, mind you, but rather that the people working in the
business have internalized the corporate/state process so thoroughly
they do not even know they are conditioned creatures of a larger
machine.
Working class liberation leaders are beginning to evolve from the sons
and daughters of Baptist truck drivers or 55-year old Wal-Mart greeters
with varicose veins and no health insurance. I get emails from hundreds
of them.
Working class liberation's future leadership is out there right now,
stocking the shelves of the supermarkets tonight, buffing the floors of
the nation's universities and banks, checking on the calf-cow pairs in
the late season snows of Montana, and likely as not they are gun
owning, non-drinking Christians doing solitary jobs with lots of time
to think. And they experience things like loneliness, modern
alienation, and an inner emptiness within that now quaint concept
called the soul. Which drives so many of them to the last place that
even addresses the souls of people such as themselves —
fundamentalist churches.
Sushi sushi bars in US — 2067 (Aramark foods)
Bowling centers in US — 7,134 (Bowling Center Management)
USMC camouflage bowling bag $15
3 million in certified bowling leagues
24 million regular bowlers. 70 million bowl at least once a year.
There are more Americans concerned with gravity shift and mass bias in
bowling balls than there are Americans concerned with Nori seaweed
sushi wrapping.
Our urban areas are not the only places exploitation occurs, and people
of color are not the only people being exploited….just the most
obvious. I’ve always thought that we’d all be served better if our news
media centers were moved out of Washington and closer to working class
America. To Keokuk, Moline or Birmingham. Someplace undistorted by the
Washington “power buzz,” New York ambition or Los Angeles glitz.
Actually, New Orleans wouldn't be a bad choice these days.
The highest rate of graduation among African-American students was 71%
in West Virginia, followed by Massachusetts, Arkansas, and New Jersey.
Graduation rate for combined students in New York City was 38.4%
The highest rate of graduation among Latino students was 82% in Montana, followed by Louisiana, Maryland, and Hawaii.
Jay P. Greene, Ph. D.
Senior Fellow, The Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
Research Associate