From the support the Tea Party gets from rural areas, you would think the federal government has done nothing but take money from rural folks and give it to poor minorities in the cities. However, rural areas have long been been beneficiaries of government programs, and not just farm programs. One example got mentioned today in an
NPR interview with Simon Winchester, the author of
The Men Who United The States: America's Explorers, Inventors, Eccentrics, and Mavericks, and the Creation of One Nation, Indivisible:
There's an irony I want to mention ... I write about the bringing of
electricity to rural America and the role that the government played in
the 1930s with the Rural Electrification Administration and very moving
stories of farmers who never had electricity finally getting it. The
first place in America to get electricity courtesy of FDR was out in the
sticks, in Western Ohio — the 8th Congressional District, which is the
district today represented by John Boehner. John Boehner — I don't want
to get into a political fight here — is an archetype of "against big
government," and yet the district he represents benefited hugely from
big and wise government in the 1930s.
That's right, he's talking about my county and my rural
electric co-op:
The earliest of millions of electric
cooperative poles installed with
funds from the federal Rural
Electrification Administration was
set by Miami Rural Electric
Cooperative (now Pioneer Rural
Electric Cooperative) in Piqua, Ohio, on November 14 (1935).
There are a
number of other examples, but for some reason, rural Americans prefer the myth of self-reliance to the reality of communal support. I am afraid that idiots like
Jim Jordan,
Tim Huelskamp and
Steve King might cause the non-rural majority of the country to take actions to remind rural areas of how dependent they really are on the rest of the country. That would not be a good thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment