Friday, October 18, 2024

A Liberal Dose, October 17, 2024 "We Are All Doing It Together"

 


A Liberal Dose

October 17, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“We are all doing it together”

 

The purpose of this column is to be political -in fact, not only to be political, but to be politically partisan. I was asked to write it to represent the liberal, Democratic perspective, as a counterbalance to the conservative writers then appearing on this page (and others since).

But everything isn’t political, even in this pretty evenly divided country, even in the final weeks of an election campaign. Some things rise above politics.

In the last few weeks, the Southeast has been wracked by two destructive hurricanes -and not just on the coasts, as we are used to. The effects have extended far up into the mountains. Not quite as far as us here in White County, but only a couple of hours east of us. Hurricane Helene devastated East Tennessee and Western North Carolina, and parts of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida (who was then battered a few days later by Hurricane Milton).

I have a lot of connections to Cherokee, NC. My primary field of historical expertise is Cherokee history and culture… but it also extends to the personal. I have friends there. My Cherokee connections actually extend to the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma, and individual Cherokees living around the country. When I was first approached, in 2017, to participate in an interdisciplinary team at Tennessee Tech to apply for an NSF grant that involved cultural training for STEM grad students, with the goal of helping them learn to communicate with communities, learn from them, and work together with them, a Cherokee term came immediately to my mind: Gadugi. Gadugi is a sacred concept to the Cherokee people. It comes from a root word meaning “we all do it together.” In the old days, every Cherokee village had a community corn field which the whole town worked in, and which fed every family according to their needs. In more modern history, when Wilma Mankiller was secretary of state of the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma (just before she became the first female Cherokee principal chief in 1985), they got a government grant to modernize their plumbing systems -but did not receive funds to hire contractors to do it. Every able-bodied person in the Cherokee Nation took turns digging ditches until everyone was taken care of. I told my colleagues this story, and they wanted to form a partnership with the Cherokees in both NC and OK for our project, which we received permission from the tribal governments to call Gadugi. Since then we have connected several grad students working in food, energy, or water with the Cherokee people.

One group we have interacted with often on the Cherokee reservation in NC is the Living Waters Lutheran Church, whose pastor and parishioners are Cherokee and which operates a food pantry that serves the poor and needy on the reservation. Students have made many trips there over the last year or so to volunteer in the food distribution. After the hurricane I reached out to see how they were. Cherokee itself was not as badly hit as other areas- but the warehouse that supplied the pantry was in Asheville, and was destroyed, leaving them with no idea where they were going to get the food and other items to help their people. Because they were not as badly hit, most of the help was going elsewhere.

I immediately put out the call on social media and by word of mouth that we needed donations -of food, water, diapers, cleaning supplies, hygiene products, or cash to buy them -to get to Cherokee the following Wednesday, because their need was immediate. The response was overwhelming. The TTU history department agreed to be a drop-off point for campus, and the Putnam County Democratic HQ (which is open all day during election season) agreed to do the same. But it was not a political initiative or mission, they were just the drop-off point. Many conservatives I know donated.

I want to thank the 70 or so people who donated, my wife Robin (who worked for years at the East Illinois Food Bank) for helping me organize it, and my colleague Dr. Sabrina Buer, grad student Creek Anderson, and undergrad student Jonas Carter for putting in a 13-hour day loading, driving, and unloading.

As we were getting ready to head out from my house on Wednesday morning -with a van, a student’s car, and a truck -there was still some room left on the truck, and still some money left. We stopped at Sparta Wal-mart to buy more in order to fill the truck. As we were loading $1700 worth of items at the checkout, random customers who’d heard what we were doing came to our line and pressed more money into our hands. The first person to do so was my good friend John Gottlied, who used to write the other column on this page and argue with me regularly about politics. One of the first people to contribute money electronically was the new adviser to the Tennessee Tech College Republicans (I advise the College Democrats).

Pastor Russel at the pantry was overwhelmed by our generosity and kindness, and said that it was proof that natural disasters are the time for humanity, not for politics, and he was right. It may be months before their warehouse is back up, so they continue to have need. When we got there late Wednesday afternoon they had already served sixty needy families, and had enough to get through the next day, but had nothing for after that. We will be going back on the second week of November, so if you’d like to help please contact me -Putnam County Dems and TTU History office will still be accepting donations, and if there is any business or office in Sparta that is open daily that would be willing to be a drop-off point, please let me know.

I also want to direct people’s attention to ways you can help people in East Tennessee that were impacted. My friend Samantha Satterfield, of Sunseeker Outfitters here in White County, is collecting goods for another trip to East Tennessee. Samantha, a travel nurse, tells me communities out there need water and food, but also need medical supplies. She was recently in Newport and plans to get to other communities out that way. Text her at her business number, (931)319-1906 , or email her at happyhippiesam@gmail.com . You can email me at tdsmith@tntech.edu.

Lisa Russell (Pastor Jack’s wife, who runs the pantry) asked me to tell you this: “You have no idea how many families these supplies will help. You are awesome! Please thank EVERYONE who helped with all of this, we appreciate all of you!”

There is no Cherokee word for goodbye. They say dodadagohvi- “we will see each other again.”

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party, and the board of the Tennessee chapter of the American Indian Movement-Indian Territory. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

 Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE


Sunday, October 13, 2024

A Liberal Dose, October 10, 2024 "The Stormy Seas Have Followed Us"

 


A Liberal Dose

October 10, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“The Stormy Seas Have Followed Us Inland”

 

Who’d have ever expected that so much destruction and death (230 people and counting as I write this on Sunday) would visit the Smoky Mountains and surrounding areas from a hurricane hitting the coast of Florida hundreds of miles away. It is the worst flooding the region has seen in over a century. Over the last decade or so, as dramatic weather events have slowly begun to convince some die-hard climate change deniers that things really are getting bad at an accelerated pace, the percentage of Americans who recognize that coastal areas are endangered due to rising sea levels and intensified storms related to warmer air currents, and that forested mountains around the country are endangered by wildfires due to the heat and drier climate, has grown (hopefully it is not too little, too late). But no one expected this… from a hurricane at sea.

Two years ago, I was part of a team that embarked on an oral history of extreme weather in the Upper Cumberland, which also involved gathering data from government sources, especially NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). We actually were able to fill in a lot of gaps in that NOAA data for our local region. But we had to warn our student workers, when interviewing locals, to be sure to say “weather” instead of “climate”, because as soon as that latter word is introduced some people shut down because they view the discussion as politicized. “Climate” should not be a political word… but it has become one, because so many conservative politicians have made it one in recent decades. When I was a kid in the 70s, conservative and liberal politicians alike used the word climate freely, without political association, and were equally concerned about protecting it. That ship sailed some time ago, primarily due to business interests’ desire to avoid environmental regulations that would affect their profits. Those corporations, and the politicians in their pockets, have used propaganda and misdirection, and outright lies, to convince many voters that any effort to protect our earth and keep it habitable is a liberal scam worthy of contempt, to the extent a lot of people go around deliberately polluting the atmosphere around them just to show how much they enjoy “liberal tears.”

This particular climate disaster has dovetailed with another conservative tactic of the past decade: spreading the most outrageous, ridiculous conspiracy theories -without the slightest mooring to fact -as irrefutable truths, to stir up their ever-more-easily-impassioned base and distract them from the real issues. Eight years ago, according to them, Hillary Clinton (and, somehow, Tom Hanks) were running a child sex ring out of the basement of a pizza parlor (which had no basement). Four years ago, Donald Trump was going to magically reverse the results of a national election and execute liberals in the town square. Today, relief and rescue efforts have been seriously hampered by an unbelievable string of conspiracy theories (propounded by actual conservative politicians) claiming Biden and Harris were stealing disaster relief money and giving it to “illegal immigrants”, or even that liberals had somehow generated this hurricane and intentionally turned it loose onto red states in order to win the election. You really can’t summon up anything too ridiculous, fantastic, and over-the-top that millions of MAGA faithful won’t believe every word of it if only their burnt-orange demigod and his acolytes say it to them. Much as with the mythical dog-eating Haitians of Springfield, local and state Republican officials have practically begged Trump and his devotees to cut it out because they are causing chaos in their communities -and, in this case, in relief efforts.

So many of the people who spread these falsehoods do not take the time and mental energy to see the real conspiracy. The Republican Party has been commandeered by people who want to dismantle the workings of the federal government, and any confidence the public has in it, in order to make it easier for oligarchs to get their tax cuts and deregulation, to the ultimate detriment of their own willing supporters, as outlined in the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 -which these same supporters insist Trump has nothing to do with, just because he says so (despite all evidence to the contrary). It truly has reached the level of a cult -and one which endangers not just democracy but the future of the very ground we stand on.

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE

A Liberal Dose, Sept. 26, 2024 "Hopefully We Are Turning a Corner"

 



A Liberal Dose
Sept. 26, 2024
Troy D. Smith

“Hopefully we are turning a corner”

Remember a couple of weeks ago, when I outlined all the momentous political events that had unfolded in a span of only two months? Then I said things had kind of come to a standstill, with polls in a dead heat, and it felt like we were in the eye of a storm.

BUT, I then pointed out, the Harris/Trump debate was only a couple of days away at that time, and who knew what seismic shifts THAT could bring.

Well… yeah. Turns out that shook things up a good bit.

It was a doozy of a debate. It was kind of like the Biden/Trump debate, but in reverse. Trump had his keister handed to him. This time HE was the doddering old man (and, in reality, were he to be elected he would be the oldest person ever elected president in U.S. history). Harris really threw him off his game when she criticized his crowd sizes- he came unglued, as she knew he would. Next thing you know, he was following J. D. Vance down that ridiculous rabbit hole about Haitians in Ohio eating people’s pets (something Vance himself admitted, a few days later, was untrue but something he was repeating anyway).

I was cruising around Facebook during the debate, watching my conservative friends’ reactions. “Is this really the only choice we have?” said one die-hard local Republican friend of mine. Several others were complaining that Trump was killing his own chances.

In other words, they were reacting like many of my liberal friends on the night of the first debate, sent into a state of panic over Biden’s poor performance.

Of course, being Trump supporters, this did not last long. Before the debate was even over, many of them were blaming the moderators, saying they had ganged up on him and that the debate was actually three-against-one… because they “fact-checked” him (something the Trump team tried unsuccessfully to forbid in the debate rules). “Fact-check” is a polite way of saying they corrected his blatant lies. “They didn’t fact-check Harris!” they complained. Well, Harris wasn’t spreading unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about cat-eaters, or saying ridiculous things like executing babies after they are born is perfectly legal in blue states.

Trump did a fair job of controlling himself in the Biden debate, but he went off the rails in this one. While Trump’s fans quickly got over their initial panic and returned to their standard approach of pretending that what they saw with their own eyes didn’t happen, independent and swing voters were reminded of just how unstable (and yes, weird) Donald Trump is. On the night of the debate I could feel it happening, just as we could all feel it with Biden. I found myself wondering if we were witnessing the same sort of moment America saw when Joseph McCarthy was finally challenged on live television and asked, “At long last, sir, have you no decency?” and swiftly tumbled into irrelevancy (side note: Roy Cohn, McCarthy’s biggest defender, was later Trump’s mentor). We’re seeing the polls now, and Harris is pulling ahead- in general, and in several swing states. It is still very close, mind you, but the trend lines are favoring her. And you can feel the Republican panic (you can tell when the Republican Party is scared, they try to prevent even more people from voting).

And that is ultimately the difference between the present-day Democratic and Republican parties. Democrats do not hitch themselves with blind devotion to one person and march to their orders no matter what- they attach themselves to the good of their party, and beyond that to the good of the nation, and beyond that to the ideals the nation was founded on. Anyone who remains a Republican has attached themselves to a cult of personality - to one crass, blasphemous, autocratic con artist -no matter what, and no matter what the damage to their party, their country, and their ideals.

Here’s hoping Trumpism, like McCarthyism, is on its way to becoming a historic side note of a bad time in our country that we are all embarrassed by, but which we got beyond.

Troy Smith, a native of White County, is a novelist, a member of the Tennessee Democratic Party Executive Committee, and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His views do not necessarily reflect those of TTU.

Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE