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Voices from the Road – Part V

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Today’s Voices from the Road group includes a war wounded ex-Green Beret, a coffee shop waitress, two fencing contractors
(one of them named Rooster), plus an ambitious high school student….and more. I found them at various towns along the way as I retraced my steps between Butte, MT to Cedar City, Utah. In Melrose, MT, I interrupted some guys (and a dog) putting up a barbed-wire fence.
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In Blackfoot, ID, I talked to a sixteen-year-old
on her way to the East Idaho State Fair.blackfoot-2.gif

I continued to use the same question:
(“If you could ask American politicians—Dem and Repub alike—to work on solving one problem facing our country, what problem would you choose?”)

Other than asking people to expand on what they were saying,
I continue to choose not to ask follow-up questions. I’m more interested in their gut-level personal priorities. It’s been fascinating to find how eager everyone is to talk.

In Idaho, I also asked about a half-dozen people what they thought of Craig’s situation, and whether he ought to go or stay. Most seemed embarrassed by the guy, although there was disagreement about whether he should resign or not.

In between, I listened to a lot of AM radio, which I usually avoid. This meant I was treated to multiple playings of Larry Craig’s cell phone call to his attorney, which was mistakenly left on somebody else’s voice mail,…and other ennobling fare. After hours of listening to this stuff, I feel confident about giving the undisputed Troglodyte of the Day Award to Michael Medved for saying: If immigrants want to succeed in this country, they need to embrace the core values of the British civilization—which is where this country came from. (Uh, Michael, honey, sit down and let me tell you a story. Once upon a time there was this quirky little event they called the Boston Tea Party…..)

One more odd note: This day’s interviewing process
was slightly disrupted by…… tornado warnings (!!!) While I was driving through Idaho, I found myself in the midst of some hard driving rain and some truly peculiar wind. I was wondering what the hell I’d run into (and trying to keep my car from levitating itself into a ditch) when the Emergency Broadcast System began screeching over the radio, and it turned out I was smack in the middle of whatever they were warning about. Fortunately the tornado never did touch down, so I was spared any Oz-like experiences. But, what with the weird wind and the radio screeches, I got a bit distracted from my interviewing task for 200 miles or so.

On the other hand, by Utah, there was a rainbow.

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Okay, here are today’s voices:


Debbie is 49, a waitress from Butte, MT and a widow. She said.
I’d like to see them do something about all the animals that are killed every year. And all the homeless. And I’d like to see them get their butt’s down and help those people in New Orleans who were in Katrina, because they’re still living in terrible conditions. Also, health care. I work for minimum wage so I can’t afford insurance. And I have a few conditions, which means nobody wants to insure you. I had some heart symptoms recently and I had to have two tests for my heart, which put me 3000 in debt. But what was I supposed to do? We take all this money and put it into this war, and we don’t take care of our American people. Sometimes I think that the politicians view a lot of us as expendable.
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(Debbie didn’t want to show her face.)

Jay is 55, an ex-Green Beret, a retired, disabled veteran, from Melrose, MT. He said: We need to take care of the United States first. Take care of all of us, that means health insurance. I fought in every war from Viet Nam until 1986—Lebanon, Afghanistan. I got blown up in Afghanistan. I seen all these other places. And they needed help. But we need to get our country right first. We need to take care of the home front first. Our country’s goin’ to hell.
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Lee, 47, lives and works as a bartender and gas station attendant in Melrose, MT
. He said: Oil. We need to get over our dependence on foreign oil and start looking into other resources.
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Mary, 40, lives in Blackfoot and is a cashier. She said:
I think poverty, which is coupled with education. And that goes a long with the minimum wage, which is grossly low. A lot of Americans need to have the opportunity to get a good education, so that they can better themselves and get out of poverty. It’s sad when both a husband and a wife are working full time and their income still falls below the poverty line.
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Theresa, 16, a junior at Blackfoot High School who wants to be a pediatric plastic surgeon. She said:
Starvation. People not getting enough to eat because their parents don’t have the money for it.
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Jesse, 39, a fencing contractor from Dillon, MT. He said:
One thing I heard them talking about on the radio the other day, is the exploitation of children, child pornography. I’d like to see better monitoring of that kind of stuff. It’s scary. They were saying it’s a 40 billion dollar business. And I wish the two parties could get along. It seems to be all about what’s good for their party, not what’s good for the country.
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Rooster is also a fencing contractor, also from Dillon, MT. He said:
Iraq. I think we need to stop sending so much money to Iraq. And use some of that money for our own people. I’d like to think they’re doing something good over there. It’d make me feel better. But, it’s really hard to know.

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Alright, that’s it for now. Some more topical posts later tonight when I get to LA.

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P.S. – R.I.P, Luciano Pavarotti.
We will miss your lush, gorgeous, and brilliantly accessible tenor voice.

17 Comments

  • What I see is a lot of the same “needs” that have become talking points of the Democrats and that are spoon-fed to Americans by the compliant and liberal media. The “ideas” of these regular Americans are not their own but just regurgitation of what they swallow.

    Debbie, New Orleans is the job of the state and city. The federal government just provides assistance. If they don’t want a repeat, don’t build in a swamp. (Anywhere else they would call New Orleans a “wet land” and block construction to save obscure frogs and mosquitoes.)

    Lee is right about oil, but, rather than look other places, why don’t we drill where we already know it is but have been blocked by absolutely phony environmental claims?

    Mary said, “It’s sad when both a husband and a wife are working full time and their income still falls below the poverty line.” It sure is, and whose fault is that? However, consider that those in “poverty” have their own houses and a lot of supplemental government help to put them over the top.

    I agree with Jesse on chld pornography. How sick can people get to destroy the normal lives of kids?

    Rooster said, “I’d like to think they’re doing something good over there (Iraq). It’d make me feel better. But, it’s really hard to know.” Thank the liberal press again who would not report anything good out of Iraq if it helped the Republicans. It’s not your fault, Rooster.

    It’s amazing all the people that Celeste finds in bars. Interstate 15 must be lined with them.

  • Woody, all that there is on the radio out here is conservative talk show hosts (O’Reilly, Medved, Ingram, Hannity), Christian stations, classic rock, country and, near to large city’s, NPR. Much as I’d like to hope so, somehow, I don’t see most of the people I talked to as big All Things Considered fans.

    There are simply a lot of people working hard, having a tough time, and feeling lied to by their government. For instance, the fence guys were both conservatives and both wanted out of Iraq.

    BTW, whenever possible I got off the interstate and went deeper into the small towns along the way. But it’s true, Montana, at a least, is a drinkin’ shootin’ state, and not one bit sorry about it.

  • Celeste made a good point about the radio offerings there in the heartland – I’ve driven that area before and the radio is as she said it is (though she missed Coast-to-Coast with George Noury – check it out).

    That said, I don’t know where the liberal media lurks that is spoon-feeding these folks their steady high-carb diet of liberal myths.

  • Rebel Girl: I don’t know where the liberal media lurks

    Try the news from ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, the NY Times, …and, oh yes, NPR. Why is it so hard for liberals to see or admit liberal bias in the news? Here’s a start to find more: http://www.newsbusters.org/

    Celeste, I’m a conservative and I want out of Iraq. No one has a disagreement on that. The questions are what are the facts from there (which the news doesn’t give us) and what’s the best way out (for which the Democrats never offer to tell share their changing plan)? Give me ten minutes with those guys and they’ll be agreeing with me.

    Celeste, admit it. Isn’t Laura Ingraham great?

  • Thanks Rebel Girl for recommending “CoastToCoastAM”, which is one of the few radio show which I tune into regularly. One needs to take everything on it with a skeptical mind, but I enjoy the long format interviews and questions from the audience.

    You regularly get a 3-hour interview with minimal commercial interruptions with scientists, writers, priests, etc.

    Recent Show Titles:

    War, Drugs & Terrorism
    The Shadow Realm
    Strange Work Stories
    Megaliths, Energy & Agriculture
    Artificial Intelligence & The Singularity
    Betty and Barney Hill
    HAARP Update (super secret weapon?)
    Modern Day Vampires
    Light, Consciousness & Connectedness
    Ghost Trains & Railroad Folklore
    Remote Viewing Bin Laden
    Earth Changes & Craft Propulsion
    Natural (Medical) Solutions
    Tapeworm Economy & Black Budgets
    Space, Mars & the Moon
    Cayce, Atlantis & Underwater Evidence
    Consciousness, Cells & Evolution
    Developing Time Travel
    NDEs (Near Death Experiences)
    Quantum Computing & Intelligent Design
    Ancient Knowledge & Technology
    Voting Machines, Pat Tillman & Astrology

  • Did Rooster decline to give you his age, or did you just forget to ask? I was struck by the fact that all the others apparently gave this to a perfect stranger. If anyone asked me, I’d reply, “What’s your BMI? How much do you weigh? Do you know your IQ?” Point being, age is such a one-dimensional way to peg a person. Does Michelle Pfeiffer being 50-ish have anything to do with the people you interview being the same age? These people all look so old and out of shape. All I can think when I see their ages is, how fast these people, who all gripe about the things that drive Woody nuts, AGE. Maybe if they weren’t so negative and worked out, did that yoga they probably make fun of, they’d be better off. I’d like to see journalists stop embarrassing people by putting their ages out there for all to see. “Gee, I thought you were 10 or even 15 years younger!” is not the desired response…

    Try asking them if they do yoga and how much they weight, might make for an “interesting” response. (Be sure to duck.)

  • If immigrants want to succeed in this country, they need to embrace the core values of the British civilization.

    *******************************************

    I guess the immigrants better kill the current people occupying North America and then move the remaining survivors into reservations in the middle of no where. Luckily for me I am going to start a gambling establishment immediately, to make some money.

  • Maggie ……..
    These people all look so old and out of shape. All I can think when I see their ages is, how fast these people, who all gripe about the things that drive Woody nuts, AGE. Maybe if they weren’t so negative and worked out, did that yoga they probably make fun of, they’d be better off. I’d like to see journalists stop embarrassing people by putting their ages out there for all to see. “Gee, I thought you were 10 or even 15 years younger!” is not the desired response…

    ************************************

    This reminds me of an old guy I used to work with years ago, he played basketball in his 60’s and thought he was in good shape for his age. Even after he had a heart-attack on the basketball court, luckily we had an army-medic teammate who revived him.

    I have never met anyone (especially CA. women) who believes they look older than their age.

    But luckily for me I really look 10 years younger. 😉

  • uh, I didn’t mean to exactly RECOMMEND Coast to Coast AM. I mean, I listen – but probably not the way it is intended…

    and Woody: I don’t have TV which is why I responded in terms of radio.

  • Maggie, the reason I don’t have Rooster’s age is that I somehow didn’t manage to press the RECORD button hard enough when I interviewed him so had no recording of his answer, thus had to reconstruct it from memory. (It was originally quite a bit longer.) His age also bit the the dust without the recording. I think he said he was in his early 40’s but I couldn’t really remember.

    As to why I asked people their ages: its an old journalism habit. Editors require it whenever possible so, except in situations where I know it will be bothersome to people (say, with actresses), I ask out of habit. And if people don’t want to tell me, they don’t, and I don’t insist.

  • Rebel Girl, I think that Coast to Coast AM is hilarious. Art Bell, when he worked, was a great traveling companion who kept me in stitches and kept me awake on late night trips.

    Although you don’t have a television, I suspect that you can read and ingest a lot of the garbage from liberal journalists. You can read their distortions from the Associated Press, Time, Newsweek, Mother Jones, the Nation, and The New Republic, just as examples. From radio, NPR can give you the daily dose of Democratic dogma–supported by the taxpayers.

  • Celeste, I know that Editors like to get a victim’s, er, subject’s age (do they really “require” it?), but I have made it a point to challenge them on this and have actually had some luck with a couple of situations I won’t single out. (In these cases, there is usually a photo letting people make their own guess — more appropriate.)

    Do you notice that journalists never put their ages in their own articles, when it might be more relevant to the story? Have you ever seen one sign sign off with “Joe Shmoe, age 48, contributed to this story?” In fact, I’d like to know more about some of them: are they young newbies, or old hands?

    If you look at the bios of the L A Times columnists, for example, especially but not exclusively the women, they very carefully AVOID anything that might make you pin down their ages: only a very, very rare male might give his date of graduation or when he started his career by date, and usually only if he’s relatively young. (Something he may grow to regret!)

    Some of the women might refer to themselves as vaguely middle-aged, but in general, their photos make them look as attractive as possible, not always an easy thing to do! Can you imagine if every time Patt Morrison was mentioned, she was pinned with her age, or even the tag, “Morrison, who declines to give her age, but appears to be — ” (I won’t put one here although I’ve met her in person and have my own opinion.)

    Time to think outside of this trap for the victims, er, subjects of their reportage. Asking journalists THEIR age or weight or BMI usually catches them off guard enough.

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