Ohio U.S. Sen. JD Vance. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal. Republish photo only with original article.)
Donald Trump announced Monday Ohio junior U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance as his running mate in the 2024 Election, and I have some concerns.
Like J.D. Vance, I am also 39 years old; I also grew up in a struggling old industrial city in Ohio; I have also lost countless people close to me to the scourge of drug addiction; and I have also spent a lot of time in Appalachia — although my time was spent as a reporter in the Ohio foothills of Appalachia covering poverty, education, crime, courts, transportation, health care, business, and labor for nearly a decade.
Where does one begin? Perhaps 2016 when Vance first launched into the national spotlight with his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.” The memoir part of the book I found interesting and sad and heartbreaking on the level of all the other stories I have witnessed, heard, and reported on about childhood traumas passed down in families struggling with poverty.
Then there was the other part of his book, the diagnosis and prescription part, that I couldn’t understand or relate to: A certain seething contempt and scorn for the people of Appalachia and the Ohio “rust belt,” as though their struggles were the result of deep personal character flaws and a lack of bootstrapping, and not predictable consequences wrought by growing up poor in a region wracked by exploitation, stuck in cycles of generational poverty, and mired in the kind of desperation that accompanies these things.
Most reporters drift toward certain topics of personal interest, and mine has always been the hardships of those in poverty and all its attendant ills. You see, “poverty” is not its own specific beat; it’s a topic wrapped up in the largest resource, funding and hence achievement gaps in education; it’s tied to the lack of reliable transportation to get to work, or job interviews; it’s weighted down by a lack of access to primary and preventative health care, and even internet access; it’s connected to childhood trauma, and hunger, and the long-term denial of regular meals and nutritious food; it’s burdened by increasing costs and regressive taxes: A greater and greater percentage of income goes toward rent, utilities, groceries, toiletries.
I’ve met grandmothers providing kinship care to their grandchildren who’ve had to look at a couple boxes of mac and cheese and hot dogs, a loaf of bread and PB&J, as food for the week. I’ve met mothers working two jobs having to face a high electric bill but not having enough leftover for shampoo and deodorant. Imagine the bullying at school that leads to, and then think about how that bullying is just one more additional hardship — like not ever having your parent or parents around because they’re working two jobs, and you have to take care of younger siblings from the time you turn nine because child care is unaffordable.
The generally crushing existence of all of it year after year, decade after decade, a lifetime of one blow after another; one trauma after another; one setback after another; one car breakdown, one broken bone or disease racking up medical debt, one layoff sending the family hurtling toward crisis and bankruptcy, just imagine it, and you begin to see how poverty perpetuates itself by breaking everyone in it down, and leaving the vast majority without a shot to break the cycle. And of course the susceptibility to addiction is high. Anything to fade away from the nightmare for a few hours. So that begets all its own problems and cycles and traumas from there. I learned all about it in the courtrooms and at the addiction treatment centers.
So here is where I take issue. While I covered poverty in Appalachia, these are the cycles and problems of poverty at-large, wherever you find it, in the cities or in the country hills, regardless of race, creed, or religion, throughout the country. This is not some cultural problem with Appalachia or the so-called “rust belt” — which is an insulting term, by the way, as is “Hillbilly.” This is what poverty is like anywhere in America. All that and much more.
Appalachia itself is charming and noble. The “Hey Buddy” drawl and geniality of so many people is downright charismatic. A lot of folks are a helluva lot of fun to go four-wheeling with or to visit with over a draft at the local hole-in-the-wall. There’s genuine warmth and a good-times attitude. There’s an authentic kindness and lack of pretension. Then you learn the history of the coal mines and the breaker boys and the company towns and the union-busting and the Battle of Blair Mountain, and the Matewon Massacre, and you begin to understand what the region has been through and where it is now.
The rural Ohio I know is full of strong, caring, resilient, community-minded people. I can say the same for the cities. Sometimes I get asked where I look for hope, and I always say that it’s not the politicians; it’s the thousands of good-hearted people working so hard every day to help their communities, in cities, towns and villages across Ohio. In my work as a reporter, I’ve been lucky enough to meet a whole heckuva lot of them.
So after all my years of reporting their stories, some things seem pretty obvious to me as far as what can be done to help these communities, and giving tax cuts to billionaires just isn’t one of them. But that’s what Donald Trump is promising.
Neither is saddling them with the regressive financial burden of 10% tariffs, which amounts to a $1,700 tax on Americans and will increase inflation that falls heaviest on those in poverty. That?is another Trump promise. Replacing income taxes with tariffs, as Trump has also suggested, would send millions of families in poverty hurtling toward ruin, not only paying much higher sales taxes and other fees to try to still fund the government, but seeing vast swaths of support systems removed from under their feet. Costs going up would also forestall interest rates coming down. Devaluation of the dollar, as they propose, would also jack up inflation rates. Trump has also proposed cutting corporate tax rates from 21% to 15%, after already cutting them from 35% to 21% in 2017.
Defunding the U.S. Department of Education as Trump has proposed would cut $18 billion a year for Title I high-poverty schools, cut $15 billion a year for special education, and cut $28 billion a year for Pell Grants. That would have a devastating impact on these communities.
What these communities need is lots of funding and support to overcome the poverty achievement gap in education with best practices: early childhood education, before school programming with a full breakfast for those who need it; full universal lunch during school hours; and after school programs with dinner availability and options ranging from athletics to music and the arts to media production to outdoor activities. We need full, well-rounded education; and trauma-informed training for all public-facing teachers and workers; and connected, wraparound support systems for families.
We shouldn’t be cutting our education budgets, commoditizing and privatizing education as billionaires are planning to do under Trump, and leaving whole communities out in the rain to perpetuate the cycles. We should realize, to paraphrase Frederick Douglass, that it’s easier to give a child education, hope, and opportunity than it is to fix a broken man.
We should be making our public schools palaces of such learning, hope and opportunity, that keep children away from potentially toxic or negligent home environments for as long as possible; that give them three square, nutritious meals a day if that’s what some need; that provide them with good adult role models and mentorship, and allow them the opportunity to explore a variety of interests to find their individual passions to pursue, and a pathway toward a fulfilling, stable career and adulthood.
On Wednesday night, J.D. Vance made his pitch to the “working man” in his vice presidential acceptance speech. Stood up next to the actual Trump agenda, I just don’t know what he’s talking about. That’s my concern. Nothing in the Trump agenda tangibly promises to help the families J.D. and I know so well. Quite the opposite. Meanwhile, as far as the heart-wrenching menace of drug addition, J.D. has already prioritized defunding Ukraine over fighting fentanyl.
I have many other concerns, such as his extreme moral and intellectual flexibility that raises serious questions about his ethics and candor; and his advocacy for abandoning Ukraine to the ravages of Putin; and his playing footsie with a neo-monarchist named Curtis Yarvin; and his comments that the radical right should seize institutions and ignore the courts; and his joining the ticket of a convicted felon — also adjudicated guilty of sexual assault and business fraud — who conspired to overturn the results of a free and fair election and rob millions of Americans of their votes, and instigated a violent mob attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021 to disrupt constitutional business and the peaceful transfer of power.
I am concerned that J.D. has said he would’ve went along with the plot to create a constitutional crisis by overstepping his authority as vice president and overthrowing the election results.
In short, I have grave questions about J.D. Vance’s judgment and trustworthiness, and I do not understand his apparent desire to overthrow the post-WWII Pax Americana in favor of some sort of nationalistic isolationism where autocrats rum amok, with a reactionary domestic agenda that dismantles programs for people in poverty and will only exacerbate and perpetuate their plight and exploitation, while Trump and the five dozen billionaires supporting him get even more filthy, stinking rich.
This commentary is republished from the Ohio Capital Journal?which, like the Kentucky Lantern, is part of the nonprofit States Newsroom network.
]]>1951: Alastair Sim (1900 - 1976) as Scrooge in the film of the same name, adapted from Charles Dickens' novel 'A Christmas Carol', directed by Brian Desmond Hurst and produced by Renown Pictures. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Since the stone age, winter festivals have bestowed their warming glow of fire and light and bountiful feast in nearly every culture of human civilization drudging through the cold, dark, biting months surrounding the solstice.
Using the stars and sun as a guide for monitoring the seasons, humans through history sowed their crops, stocked food reserves, bred their livestock, and held last feasts before the setting of the deep winter, with celebrations often placed on the solstice itself — the shortest day of the year before they begin to grow longer again. The winter solstice this year fell Wednesday, Dec. 21.
In our time, in the Western world, Christmas has become the primary heir to many of these traditions, manifested in a holiday punch stirred out of the advent of Christianity, the pagan celebrations of ancient Scandinavia, Germany and Rome, and the feasts and solstice celebrations of our earliest civilizations.
In the early 19th Century, however, Christmas began to flounder into a more minor holiday.
But in 1843, 31-year-old English author and journalist Charles Dickens, a prodigy who had already gained fame and acclaim with “The Pickwick Papers” and “Oliver Twist,” would write his holiday classic, “A Christmas Carol,” in just six weeks.
The novella was released Dec. 19, 1843 and sold out by Christmas Eve. It has never been out of print since.
Dickens’ work reinvigorated the holiday, its festivities, and Christmas celebrations in Victorian England and 19th Century America, reverberating in kind down to our own celebrations today.
Over the last 179 years, “A Christmas Carol” has been adapted countless times for every form of media and performance known.
The tale’s profound moral teaching stands to timelessly warm our striving hearts, and to warn us all against ignorance, hatred, bigotry, greed, selfishness, and the exploitation of others.
Dickens called it his “sledge hammer blow … on behalf of The Poor Man’s Child.”
In neolithic Europe, both Stonehenge in England (constructed in stages from 3000 B.C.E. to 1500 B.C.E.) and Newgrange in Ireland (3200 B.C.E.) were built to align with the sun on solstices.
In what is now modern Iran, the “Yalda Night” festival has been celebrated marking the solstice since the ancient Persian King Darius the Great, entering their official calendar in 502 B.C.E.
In Southeast Asia, Makar Sankranti, noted for its flying of kites, is a festival of the solstice that falls in January, marks the end of harvesting, and celebrates the days beginning to grow longer again. It dates back to about 400 B.C.E.
In East Asia, the solstice, marked as the Dongzhi Festival under their solar calendar, the “extreme of winter” is a feast celebration dating back to the Han Dynasty of 206 B.C.E.
“Yuletide” carols being sung by a choir are in reference to Yule, a Germanic pagan tradition including singing, feasting, drinking, and sacrifice. Its name is related to a time of year and its roots difficult to trace, but by the 9th Century it had become associated with Christmas, and by the 10th Century essentially synonymous with it, merged by Norway’s King Haakon the Good.
The ancient Romans celebrated their most popular festival Saturnalia in honor of their god Saturn, originally on Dec. 17 but eventually extended to a full week of revelry.
And in ancient Judea, Hanukkah in December, while not tied to the solstice, began by commemorating the Second Temple in Jerusalem being rededicated in the Second Century B.C.E. after Jewish rebels known as the Maccabees repelled the forces of Syrian King Antiochus Epiphanes, whose soldiers had overtaken and desecrated the Temple. Hanukkah celebrates perseverance, but like other wintertime festivals through history, it is also a celebration of light and community.
In 274 C.E., Roman Emperor Aurelian set a feast in honor of the god Sol Invictus, “The Unconquered Sun,” on Dec. 25, which marked the solstice on the Julian calendar.
While the relationship of that celebration and Christmas is debated, rather than appropriation, some Christian theologians make an a priori argument of the world’s creation aligning with the spring equinox, pegging Jesus’ conception, or “incarnation,” as March 25, celebrated today as the Christian Feast of the Annunciation.
That date was the original determination of Christian traveler and historian Sextus Julius Africanus in 221 C.E., in Christianity’s first known attempt at chronology, only passages of which survive. Thus the birth of Jesus nine months later would fall on Dec. 25, the Julian winter solstice, which became the date marker in the Christian tradition.
The church of Rome began celebrating Christmas in 336 C.E. during the reign of Constantine, who made Christianity the religion of the empire.
Over the ensuing centuries, various pagan and Christian traditions from different areas were merged into the Christmastime traditions we know today: The incorporation of mistletoe from pagan traditions in Scandinavia; The candle lights and feasts and festivities of Roman Saturnalia; The decorations in holly and other evergreens of both the Romans and the ancient Celts; The charity and benevolence of St. Nicholas — Nicholas of Myra, a Christian bishop of Greek decent from the ancient city of Myra in what’s now Turkey, who lived from 270 C.E. to 343 C.E.; And the Christmas tree, dating back to at least 1419, when a Germanic guild in Freiburg put up a tree decorated with apples, flour-paste wafers, tinsel, and gingerbread.
Amid the First English Civil War, and the overthrow and later execution of King Charles I, Oliver Cromwell banned Christmas in 1644, forbidding carols and festival get-togethers.
English protestant puritans of that time not only rejected the ornate and opulent Roman Catholic cathedrals and pageantry, but also any lavish celebrations such as those seen at Christmas, in favor of more austere and modest houses of worship and observations.
Some very early Christian puritans even rejected celebrations of Jesus and martyrs’ birthdays outright, insisting instead that the date of their martyrdom stands as their true birth.
Christmas was reinstated in England with the restoration of King Charles II, a cousin of the extravagantly Catholic “Sun King” Louis XIV in France. Charles II converted to Catholicism on his deathbed.
Within three decades, during Great Britain’s Georgian Era (1714 to 1837), Christmas celebrations started running from St. Nicholas Day on Dec. 6 to the 12th Day of Christmas, Jan. 6.
These are the celebrations recounted by British author Jane Austen (1775 to 1817), who mentions Christmas in all six of her completed novels.
The day after Christmas, St. Stephen’s Day, became known as the occasion for charitable giving and “Christmas boxes” from employer to employee, coming to be called Boxing Day.
But as the Georgian Era ended and the Victorian Era began, the Christmas season was giving way to the Industrial Age, and celebrations became shortened to fit the needs of industry.
The spirit of Christmas was being relegated to a minor holiday under the smokestacks of industrial profit.
This was a time of debtors’ prisons, workhouses, the torturous treadmill, and the Poor Law.
When Charles Dickens was 12 years old, his father was thrown into debtors’ prison, with Dickens himself forced to labor pasting labels to shoe polish containers 10 hours a day at Warren’s Blacking factory.
The six shillings he earned each week went to his family’s debts and for his own lodgings.
Dickens drew on his own life and workhouse experience previously in his hit novel, “Oliver Twist,” in 1838.
He would do so again after educating himself in the spring of 1843 about the ongoing abuses in child labor and of the poor at the time.
Dickens is said to have originally conceived of writing a pamphlet — a widely distributed printed argument against these horrors, and a call toward humanity’s better nature.
But by October 1843, Dickens leaned into his considerable creative genius to produce a work of fiction instead.
Under excruciating deadline, in less than two months, crying and laughing to himself in its creation, punctuated by long strolls through the streets of London, Dickens would write and publish, “A Christmas Carol,” complete with a gold stamped cover and illustrations by John Leech. Dickens spared no expense, and set a low, affordable price, thereby costing himself in profit.
He vowed it would “strike a sledge hammer blow … on behalf of the Poor Man’s Child.”
“I have endeavored in this Ghostly little book, to raise the Ghost of an Idea,” Dickens wrote in his introduction, “which shall not put my readers out of humour with themselves, with each other, with the season, or with me. May it haunt their houses pleasantly, and no one wish to lay it. Their faithful Friend and Servant, C.D.”
And so we find out, bit by bit, what that Ghost of an Idea may be.
After establishing the veracity of the death of Ebenezer Scrooge’s business partner Jacob Marley, Dickens introduces the character Scrooge in unforgettable fashion:
“Oh! But he was a tight-fisted hand at the grindstone, Scrooge! a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous, old sinner! Hard and sharp as flint … secret and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster … External heat and cold had little influence on Scrooge. No warmth could warm, no wintery weather chill him. No wind that blew was bitterer than he.”
The book divulges at scant references Scrooge’s business to be in some form of banking or commodity speculation and exchange, and definitely in money-lending, as illustrated in a key passage later.
During the character’s introductory scene, he famously calls Christmas a “Humbug,” displays contempt to his nephew for the idea of romantic love, and when asked to contribute to charitable giving for the “poor and destitute, who suffer greatly at the present time,” Scrooge barks that they should go to the prisons, workhouses, and treadmill.
The theme of so many rejoicing in abundance while so many others suffer acutely is repeated throughout the work, and is one to which we ought pay heed today, alongside all the rest.
In the voice of nephew Fred, we hear what Dickens for the rest of his life described as his Carol Philosophy, that the holidays are “a good time: a kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant time: the only time I know of in the long calendar of the year, when men and women seem by one consent to open their shut-up hearts freely, and to think of other people below them as if they really were fellow-passengers to the grave, and not another race of creatures bound on other journeys.”
When Scrooge is later visited by the Ghost of Marley, shackled and tormented, Marley’s lament is one of regret and self-flagellation.
“Oh! captive, bound, and double-ironed, not to know, that … this earth must pass into eternity before the good of which it is susceptible is all developed… Not to know that no space of regret can make amends for one life’s opportunity mis-used! Yet such was I! Oh! such was I!
“At this time of the rolling year I suffer most. Why did I walk through crowds of fellow-beings with my eyes turned down, and never raise them to that blessed Star which led the Wise Men to a poor abode!”
As Marley exits, Scrooge becomes sensible of “confused noises in the air; incoherent sounds of lamentation and regret; wailings inexpressibly sorrowful and self-accusatory.”
He observes the air outside filled with phantoms, including one who “cried piteously at being unable to assist a wretched woman with an infant, whom it saw below.”
In case it could possibly be missed, Dickens puts a fine tip on his point: “The misery with them all was, clearly, that they sought to interfere, for good, in human matters, and had lost the power forever.”
During his visit from the Ghost of Christmas Past, Scrooge is first exposed to the loneliness and alienation of his childhood, his refuge in adventure books, and the frailty and big heart of his adoring and now-deceased sister.
Scrooge is next exposed to his former employer Old Fezziwig, and after an intellectual challenge by the spirit, concedes it wasn’t wealth or spending that gave value to Fezziwig: “It isn’t that, Spirit. He has the power to render us happy or unhappy; to make our service light or burdensome; a pleasure or a toil. … The happiness he gives, is quite as great as if it cost a fortune.”
This causes Scrooge to reflect on his mistreatment of his own clerk, Bob Cratchit, whose family Dickens based on his own. Like Bob’s other son, Peter Cratchit, Dickens had to pawn family possessions to pay their bills and debts.
Scrooge is next brought to the cancelling of his engagement by his fiancé Belle, who explains that his love of her has been replaced by a golden idol. Young Scrooge retorts, “This is the even-handed dealing of the world! There is nothing on which it is so hard as poverty.”
Belle points out that Scrooge’s nobler aspirations have fallen off as the master one — personal gain — has engrossed him.
Young Scrooge characterizes this as wisdom on his part, but then seems to admit that he would not seek out to win Belle’s affection in his new mindset of weighing things by personal gain. She parts wishing him happiness in the life he’s chosen.
A final scene shows Belle happily married and celebrating Christmas joyfully with her children. Her husband tells her he saw Scrooge earlier that afternoon: “His partner lies upon the point of death, I hear; and there he sat alone. Quite alone in the world.”
At this, Scrooge flies into a temper, and attempts to snuff out the light of Christmas Past, though he could not extinguish the light completely as it streamed out “in an unbroken flood upon the ground.”
The jolly, feasting giant of Christmas Present appears next, giving Scrooge tour of poulterer’s and grocers’ shops, the bustling city, and people of all stripes, sprinkling tidings of Christmas cheer from his glowing torch, to the poor family’s dinner table most “because it needs it most.”
Scrooge challenges the spirit in an accusation about blighting the poor — as shops and government offices that could serve them close on the sabbath — arguing, “It has been done in your name, or at least in that of your family.”
Indignant, Christmas Present’s response reveals Dickens’ assessment of anything done in the name of religion, but not in its spirit:
“There are some upon this earth of yours who lay claim to know us, and who do their deeds of passion, pride, ill-will, hatred, envy, bigotry, and selfishness in our name, who are as strange to us and all our kith and kin, as if they had never lived.
“Remember that, and charge their doings on themselves, not us.”
In a subsequent visit to the Cratchit home, it’s made clear the family’s joy suffers no dependence on wealth or personal gain, but is instead upheld in their love for one another.
When asked about the prospects of survival for Tiny Tim, the spirit relishes the opportunity to rub Scrooge’s face in his own words, another key inflection point:
“What then? If he be like to die, he had better do it, and decrease the surplus population,” he told Scrooge, “who became overcome with penitence and grief.”
“Man, if man you be in heart… forbear that wicked cant until you have discovered What the surplus is, and Where it is. Will you decide what men shall live, and what men shall die?
“It may be, that in the sight of Heaven, you are more worthless and less fit to live than millions like this poor man’s child.”
Sledgehammer dropped, in a fearsome blow.
The Ghost of Christmas Present proceeds to show Scrooge miners singing carols amid their arduous toils, and sailors over dark and unknowable waters, singing all the same.
Scrooge becomes joyous himself with mirth amid the parlor games at the party of his nephew Fred.
From there, “Much they saw, and far they went, and many homes they visited, but always with a happy end.”
They saw sick beds; those in struggle waiting patient with greater hope; those in poverty exuding a richness of spirit; and anywhere where “vain man in his little brief authority” had not shut the door to the spirit of the season, the Ghost left his blessing.
Before departing, at Scrooge’s behest, the spirit unfurls his robe to reveal two children “wretched, abject, frightful, hideous, miserable.”
They are the clutchings of humankind, the girl, “Want,” and the boy, “Ignorance.”
“Beware them both, and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom.”
“Have they no refuge or resource?” cried Scrooge.
“Are there no prisons?” said the spirit. “Are there no workhouses?”
The Ghost of Christmas Future returns to the theme of Scrooge’s loneliness and alienation from the warmth of humanity and humanitarianism.
Scrooge is introduced to a series of characters indifferent to the death of an unnamed man.
After not having the power to unveil the corpse itself, Scrooge asks to see some emotion connected with the death.
He is shown a couple who had taken a loan from the deceased whose hearts become filled with a thankfulness at his passing.
Deflated, Scrooge asks to see tenderness connected with death, and is shown the Cratchit family mourning Tiny Tim.
Having failed in his desperate hope to see a future version of himself repented, Scrooge is eventually led to his gravestone where he pleads that it not be too late for him:
“I will honour Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future. The Spirits of all Three shall strive within me. I will not shut out the lessons that they teach. Oh, tell me I may sponge away the writing on this stone!”
Dickens’ warning mustn’t be missed here that Scrooge is feeling this torment of regret at what he thinks are his final moments alive.
When the Spirit dissolves into Scrooge’s bedpost and curtains, and Scrooge finds himself not dead, he joyously sets about redeeming himself.
In gestures to the Cratchits, charity, and his nephew Fred, Scrooge throws himself into his newfound appreciation for the value of a life truly well-lived, in service to others in a spirit of community, generosity, and love.
“Scrooge was better than his word. He did it all, and infinitely more; and to Tiny Tim, who did NOT die, he was a second father. He became as good a friend, as good a master, and as good a man, as the good old city knew, or any other good old city, town, or borough, in the good old world.”
The notion that we might strive in spirit to our most kind, generous, loving, and noble selves, lest life be wasted and end in agonizing regret, is a haunting Ghost of an Idea indeed that ought to still give us all pause to self-reflect.
Dickens gives the “Poor Man’s Child” his walk-off: As Tiny Tim observed, “God Bless us, everyone.”
Indeed may blessings be upon us all and may we all count our blessings. And in humble gratitude for our fortune, may we extend our blessings to others, especially others less fortunate.
We breathe. Our hearts beat, and the lights of life warm us. We hold timeless love within ourselves, and in the hearts of others.
And we all have this precious, extraordinary opportunity to help along our fellow travelers, to practice kindness, love, joy, understanding, community, charity, and generosity of life and spirit, while we last on this good Earth.
May we never squander it.
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