Hillbilly Agent?
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The first time I ever heard of the new
young author, J.D. Vance, I was listening to National Public Radio (NPR)
sometime during the 2016 presidential campaign, and he was the subject of an
interview. The NPR interviewer seemed to
love the guy and his message. The
subject at hand was his newly published book at the time, Hillbilly Elegy:A Memoir of
a Family and Culture in Crisis. To say that the
book has received a great deal of media attention and that it has been wildly
popular is almost an understatement. As
of this writing it has received 11,692 customer reviews on Amazon, with an
average rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars. It
has also received generally favorable reviews across the mainstream political
spectrum, such as that spectrum may be.
Presented as a straightforward memoir of
the grandson of migrants from coal country in the heart of Eastern Kentucky’s
mountains, the little town of Parker, to the steel town of Middletown, Ohio, so
named because it is about halfway between Cincinnati and Dayton, the book is
also heavily political, which largely explains its popularity, either real or
ginned up. Lots of people like J.D.’s
grandparents have moved out of their home region to industrial cities in the
Rust Bowl area from the Great Depression on, and the lesson we are to draw from
the book is that J.D.’s pretty thoroughly messed up family is representative of
not just the ones who have moved, but also the ones who were left behind.
Vance represents himself at this stage of
his life as very much a conservative Republican, and that should not be very
surprising, because the message that comes across in his book is one that we
have heard from conservative Republicans for as long as I can remember. It is a message that irritated my liberal
Democratic father no end. It is that
poor down and out people are generally in that condition because of their own
many shortcomings. In a land of
opportunity such as ours, everyone should be able to make it, and those who
don’t shouldn’t be pointing the finger of blame at other people and always
expecting the government to come to their rescue.
Searching the Web I find that Vance first
attained a degree of prominence all the way back in the summer of 2013 as a
regular columnist for the conservative National
Review. (For some reason,
that part of his budding career is not mentioned on his Wikipedia page.) Considering the content of his famous
book we should not be at all surprised to see him being embraced by the National Review crowd.
In normal times, though, Vance would not
be getting the warm embrace of the left-wing NPR and others of its persuasion,
but in normal times professed liberals would not be all up and arms over the
announced withdrawal of troops from Syria and the shrinking of the U.S.
military presence in Afghanistan. It’s
all about the Trump phenomenon. The
white working class has deserted the Democratic Party, and all of a sudden the limousine liberals have discovered that the
country club and chamber of commerce folks were right all along. Poor people are just no damned good, that is
to say, poor white people are no
damned good. Books with the same
subtitle as Vance’s could be turned out by the bushel concerning the black
community in America, but as long as that group stays in its place, the authors
of such books would hardly be given the mainstream embrace that Vance has had.
We suspect that the embrace of Vance by
the NOMA (national opinion-molding apparatus) goes a bit deeper than a reaction
against Trump, though. Some clues may be
found by looking more closely at his career trajectory and at some key passages
in his book. Concerning the former, the
first thing that should catch anyone’s eye is that this newfound spokesperson
for Appalachia is a Yale product, like, say, Bill and Hillary Clinton, John
Kerry, Bob Woodward, Brett Kavanaugh, and the current Secretary of Health and Human Services,
Alex Azar,
for starters. It is a well-known fact
that there is no bigger feeder school for the CIA, and thence, the
NOMA,
than Yale. We might also be reminded
that National Review founder William
F. Buckley, Jr., was a Yale and CIA man.
How did Vance get there? Here’s the story from his book. J.D. was always a smart kid, but he didn’t do
well in school for the longest time because his home life was a wreck. His mother was a drug addict, and what his
family name ought to be was always an iffy matter because his parents split up
early in his life and his mother had a whole series of husbands and
boyfriends. Not until he was well into
high school did his grandmother take him in more or less full time and
administer quite a heavy dose of tough love, putting his nose to the
grindstone. He finally took his maternal
grandparents’ family name as his own, “Vance.”
The Few, the Proud, the Ticket to Success
With good grades and SAT scores out of
high school, he easily qualified for a good college, but he couldn’t afford
it. Upon the recommendation of a female
Marine veteran relative, he tells us, he joined the Marine Corps, where he
completed a 4-year tour. His description
of basic training at Parris Island, South Carolina, and his tour in the Marines
in general, which included time in Iraq, sounds like it might have been prepared
at Marine Recruitment Central. To hear
Vance tell it, they finished the job that his grandmother started. Not only did they further straighten him out,
but they also toughened him up physically and more or less turned him into a
real man. But then, why wouldn’t he sound like a flack for
the Marines? That was what he did for
the Marines while working for them.
Apparently, the only work that Vance did in the service after basic
training was as a specialist in public relations. One might well say that now he is just
continuing on the career path that began practically the day he left Parris
Island.
Have the Marines and its training facility
at Parris Island taking a real plunge downward since Vance’s experience there,
which would have been around 2002? Here
are a couple of recent news items about the goings on at Parris Island:
Marines: Recruit committed suicide
amid culture of hazing, abuse
Updated on: September 8, 2016 / 10:26 PM /
CBS/AP
COLUMBIA, S.C. -- A Marine
recruit committed suicide in March amid a widespread culture of hazing and
abuse in his battalion at Parris Island that could lead to punishments for as
many as 20 officers and enlisted leaders, the Marine Corps said Thursday.
Some of those 20 commanders and senior
enlisted leaders have already been fired, including the three most senior
Marines in charge of the recruit’s unit. The Marines also ordered that the rest
be temporarily relieved, according to a statement sent to The Associated Press.
Their punishments could range from administrative punishments, such as
counseling, to the most severe action of military charges and a court-martial.
That’s how the article begins. Was this just some aberration, something that
only went on in this one training battalion?
The next article appeared in early 2017:
Hazing allegations at Parris Island reported in all training
battalions
All four training battalions at Marine
Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island have been investigated for hazing during the
past three years, according to documents obtained through an open-records
request by The Island Packet and The Beaufort Gazette.
Since Jan. 1, 2014, there have been 24
hazing investigations at the depot, half of which were substantiated, according
to depot officials, though they didn’t identify them.
Such stories, in fact,
have been coming out of Parris Island periodically for as long as I can
remember, and I have been on the planet more than twice as long as Vance
has. Yes, I know, war is not beanbag,
and there has to be a certain amount of severity in basic training if you want
to produce capable and valiant battlefield combatants. But the sort of abuses described in those two
articles goes well beyond such necessity.
Vance had to have either experienced, witnessed, or gotten wind of such
goings on during his Marine Corps stint.
The point is that his writing has a tendentious quality and the memories
that he draws upon appear to this reviewer to be highly selective, chosen for
steering readers to the conclusion that he (or his handlers) wants them to
reach. Had he painted the life of his
family and his blue collar hillbilly culture with the same high gloss paint
that he obviously applied to the Marines, his book would have been very short
and very boring, and not even the full court press of publicity that our NOMA
has given it could have made it popular.
You’d hardly realize it from reading
Vance, but the United States Marine Corps does not exist for the purpose of
improving young people. My time in the
military was spent mainly in Korea during the height of the Vietnam War, but my
later friendship with Marine veteran cohorts in the North Carolina Veterans for
Peace at the University of North Carolina brought the Vietnam Marine experience
home. One friend had been a lieutenant
leading a combat platoon in Vietnam. One
night I was studying at a table in an area of the undergraduate library where
magazines were housed. The lieutenant
came over to my table with the January 27, 1969, issue of Life magazine in his hand. That was the one that had photographs of all
242 American soldiers killed in Vietnam in one week. He began to thumb through it, picking out
photographs and telling me in excruciating detail how each of the ones he had
pointed out had “bought the farm,” as a popular euphemism of the time and place
had it. He had picked out several guys
that he knew, and that was just from that one week of his Vietnam experience!
The other friend was a Navy corpsman
attached to the Marines in Vietnam. One
of his many experiences was handling graves registration at a protracted siege
that for tactical stupidity on the American’s part rivaled almost anything in
World War I. That is the Battle of Khe Sanh. One hardly
comes out of a thing like that as exactly a war lover. Some of the young Marines depicted in “Kadena, Farewell,” written from
one episode of mine while flying military space-available around the Orient
during my mid-tour leave, might well have made it to Vietnam in time to get in
on the Khe Sanh
excitement. They all looked so very
young and clueless to me.
I am also reminded of a wedding that I
attended in 2010. Marriage is generally
a safer way to move up in the world than the method that Vance used. The groom was the well-off son of some
similarly well-off parents who are among my wife’s many friends. The bride was gorgeous, a lot better looking
than the groom. She and her family are
immigrants from Ecuador, and I gathered from their dress and overall appearance
that they hardly come from that country’s upper crust. One young male member of their contingent was
almost as good looking as the bride. He
was particularly striking in his Marine dress uniform. I would say that he was tall, dark, and
handsome, but I couldn’t be sure about his height. He was confined to a wheel chair. He would have been a good one to include in
the montage of photographs that we see near the end of the video, “At What a Cost?”
The Propaganda Press’s Favorite Hillbilly
Meanwhile, one of Vance’s close associates
could well be pictured among the villains in the first part of the video. He is one of the biggest war-cheerleading
people in the country. This quote is
from the bottom of Vance’s page 220: “My education in social capital
continues. For a time, I contributed to
the website of David Frum, the journalist and opinion leader who now writes for
The Atlantic. When I was ready to commit to one DC law
firm, he suggested another firm where two of his friends from the Bush
administration had reently taken senior partnerships. One of those friends interviewed me and, when
I joined his firm, became an important mentor.”
Vance’s list of people in his
acknowledgments section is extensive. He
has apparently nailed the art of networking (what he calls accumulating “social capital”). We find Frum’s name there among a sub-list of
twelve names of “mentors and friends of incredible ability.” That list follows hard on the heels of a list
of eight. “I consider each of them more
brother than friend,” he gushes about that first bunch. “Many of these folks,” he tells us, “read
versions of the manuscript and provided critical feedback.” Just thinking of the sort of people to whom
Vance will kowtow for career advancement purposes makes me slightly nauseous.
In case the name “David Frum” does not
ring a bell with you, check out this opening sally from Alex Nichols in his
2017 article entitled, “Things are bad and
David Frum makes them worse.”
The warhawks who
drove the Republicans rightward in the early 2000s likely bear more
responsibility for Donald Trump’s ascendancy than all the Russian hackers and
“fake news” websites put together, but liberals are more than willing to let
them off the hook if they provide limp critiques of their own party as penance.
Naturally, many of them are doing just that. The neocons’ strategic retreat
from the smoldering wreckage they created was a clever gambit, in many ways
reminiscent of a classic insurance scam. Like an insurance scam, it can be
wildly successful when carried out with adequate skill and commitment — and no
one is more committed than David Frum, the George W. Bush speechwriter who
introduced America to the “axis of evil.”
CNN. MSNBC. CNBC. CBS. ABC. Newsweek.
The Daily Beast. New York Magazine. Vox. The New Yorker. NPR. The Atlantic. They all either have David Frum as an editor, grant
him bylines, or allow him to flap his enormous jowls about Trump and Russia
live on the air. In the last year, Frum has appeared 40 times on MSNBC
and 10 times on CNN to talk about Trump, a hectic schedule that often
leaves him no time to shave. If you count the networks’ websites, where Frum
writes vital commentary like “Marijuana use is too risky a choice,” the number of Frum appearances is far higher. The
Atlantic made him a senior editor in 2014, and in return, he writes them
four or five columns a week about how Trump is an affront to political decency.
While Frum is certainly given a platform disproportionate to his skill as a
writer, he isn’t terrible on a technical level. He can write a column without
including too many mixed metaphors and bizarre anecdotes, a rare skill among center-right commentators. He knows how to provide exactly what his audience
wants, whoever they may be at the time. But overall, Frum is nothing more than
a mediocre man with bad opinions, which makes it all the more puzzling how much
personal history his benefactors are willing to overlook.
And wouldn’t you know? Precisely the same supposedly liberal media
crowd who are embracing the execrable younger version of Bill Kristol, Frum,
are also gushing over our new self-appointed hillbilly spokesman, this Yalie who cut his media teeth with National Review and David Frum’s blog. It is only natural, just from his
associations, that one should be suspicious of the man. We have also suggested that this press
embrace of Vance has a lot to do with his message as well. Let’s take a closer look. The following is from pp. 191-193:
President Obama came on the scene right as
so many people in my community began to believe that the modern American
meritocracy was not built for them. We know we’re not doing well. We see it every day: in the obituaries for
teenage kids that conspicuously omit the cause of death (reading between the lines:
overdose), in the deadbeats we watch our daughters waste their time with. Barack Obama strikes at the heart of our
deeper insecurities. He is a good father
while many of us aren’t. He wears suits
to his job while we wear overalls, if we’re lucky enough to have a job at
all. His wife tells us that we shouldn’t
be feeding our children certain foods, and we hate her for it—not because we
think she’s wrong, but because we know she’s right.
Many try to blame the anger and cynicism
of working-class whites on misinformation.
Admittedly, there is an industry of conspiracy-mongers and fringe
lunatics writing about all manner of idiocy, from Obama’s alleged religious
leanings to his ancestry. But every
major news organization, even the oft-maligned Fox News, has always told the
truth about Obama’s citizenship status and religious views. The people I know are well aware of what the
major news organizations have to say about the issue; they simply don’t believe
them. Only 6 percent of American voters
believe that the media is “very trustworthy.”
To many of us, the free press—that bulwark of American democracy—is
simply full of shit.
With little trust in the press, there’s no
check on the Internet conspiracy theories that rule the digital world. Barack Obama is a foreign alien actively
trying to destroy the country.
Everything the media tells us is a lie.
Many in the white working class believe the worst about their society. Here’s a small sample of emails or messages
I’ve seen from friends and family:
· From right-wing
radio talker Alex Jones on the ten-year anniversary of 9/11, a documentary
about the “unanswered question” of the terrorist attacks, suggesting that the
U.S. government played a role in the massacre of its own people.
· From an email
chain, a story that the Obamacare legislation requires microchip implantation
in new health care patients. This story
carries extra bite because of the religious implication: Many believe that the
End Times “mark of the beast” foretold in biblical prophecy will be an
electronic device. Multiple friends
warned others about this threat via social media.
· From the popular sebsite WorldNetDaily, an editorial suggesting that the
Newtown gun massacre was engineered by the federal government to turn public
opinion on gun control measures.
· From multiple
Internet sources, suggestions that Obama will soon implement martial law in
order to secure power for a third presidential term.
The list goes on. It’s impossible to know how many people
believe one or many of these stories.
But if a third of our community questions the president’s origin—despite
all evidence to the contrary—it’s a good bet that the other conspiracies have
broader currency than we’d like. This
isn’t some libertarian mistrust of government policy, which is healthy in any
democracy. This is deep skepticism of
the very institutions of our society.
And it’s becoming more and more mainstream.
We can’t trust the evening news. We can’t trust our politicians. Our universities, the gateway to a better
life, are rigged against us. We can’t
get jobs. You can’t believe these things
and participate meaningfully in society.
Social psychologists have shown that group belief is a powerful
motivator in performance. When groups
perceive that it’s in their interest to work hard and achieve things, members
of that group outperform other similarly situated individuals. It’s obvious why: If you believe that hard
work pays off, then you work hard; if you think it’s hard to get ahead even
when you try, then why try at all?
Now are you suspicious of this climber who
went right over most of us in his vault from the working class right up to our
rotten ruling class? In my previous article, I noted that
Robert David Steele’s résumé shows that he was a Marine Corps officer and an
employee of the CIA at the same time. In
fact, if the résumé is to be believed, his nine-year CIA career both began and
ended while he was in the Marines.
Consider as well the work that Vance did for the Marines and the quote
that I am fond of using from Gregory Treverton’s
book, Covert Action:
“Propaganda is the bread and butter of covert action.”
I began my article, “How to Become a ‘Made Man’ in the Media,” this way:
A late uncle of mine who flew a
spotter plane for the Air Force during the height of the Vietnam War once told
me that during his stint there one of our “intelligence services” tried to
recruit him. He declined the offer, he
told me, but only after he had gone so far as to take a required “psychological
evaluation” for them. The experience, he
told me, appalled him. “I could tell
from the questions,” he said, “that they were looking for someone who was
immoral.”
Many years later I told that story to
a small group at a party in the Washington, DC, area. Among the group was a young man whose friends
strongly suspect of being in the CIA.
Unable to restrain himself he blurted out, “I took that test.”
The ambitious Vance, with his fixation on
building up “social capital,” strikes me as the sort who would have maxed that
test out.
So if it’s a memoir you want to read, take
my previous word for
it,
you can spend your time and money much more productively with Patrick
Knowlton’s unsung As If It Never Happened: Stories of a Young Boy’s
Secrets, Fears, Love, and Loss. It is a poignant, gripping page-turner,
and unlike Vance, Knowlton has no hidden agenda for manipulating your
thinking. There is nothing the least bit
political about the honest Knowlton’s book, either overt or covert.
As for describing and evaluating the
Southern Appalachian culture, it’s probably better not to poison your mind by
reading the biggest protracted hit piece on these people since the fraud James Dickey’s Deliverance.
On that subject, I can’t imagine how Horace Kephart’s classic Our Southern Highlanders: A Narrative of Adventure in
the Southern Appalachians and a Study of Life Among the Mountaineers could be improved
upon. Hillbilly Elegy might well be worse than nothing for that purpose.
David Martin
December 27, 2018
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