Is This What’s Wrong In Our Society?
Vaughn
Vaughn C. Hardacker here: On September 10, 2020, Heidi Carter, owner of Bogan Books in Fort Kent, ME, and I did a virtual book launch from her store. After the event, I asked her if she had come across any good books. She immediately recommended MILL TOWN by Kerri Arsenault.
Ms Arsenault grew up in Rumford/Mexico, Maine on the banks of the Androscoggin River (at one time labeled as the most polluted river in the country) in what WCVB’s news series Chronicle called Cancer Valley–this particular episode was considered too controversial and never aired in Maine. The early part of the book deals with the Boise Cascade paper mill in Rumsford and dioxin. Dioxin is a by product of the bleaching process that is used to make our paper white.
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MILL TOWN by Kerri Arsenault
Dioxin or polychlorinated dibenzodioxin (PCDD) is the generic term for a group of seventy-five related chemical compounds and is an unintended by-product of the paper-making process. It is classified as a persistent organic pollutant, becauseit is persistent in the environment, they bioaccumulate in the body and in the food chain, and they are toxic. The book, a work of non-fiction reads scarier than something penned by Stephen King. If you are interested in Maine’s environmental issues and the love / hate relationship with paper manufacturing, I highly recommend this book.
Now, what does all this have to do with the title of this blog? In the latter portion of the book, she talks about life in a small town and how the various residents view each other. To illustrate this I will quote from page 254:
“I look over at a group of boys throwing pens at each other. To me, they look like all teenage kids: a little sloppy, misunderstood, too big or too small for their clothes. Pimply and raw. But there’s a code, she’s (Ms Arsenault is writing about a conversation with a friend who is the high school principal) implying in the off-brand sneakers or in the slightly unfresh T-shirts worn on repeat that someone points out. These codes create an imaginary line between who’s on the inside and who’s on the outside track. The more fortunate kids, they glide confidently across the linoleum floor as if the very air around them is oiled.
“People tend to comment on differences (no-name clothes, poverty) rather than sameness (boys, teenagers, all receiving free lunch, all friends), which mirrored something I had been seeing everywhere–in classrooms, boardrooms, living rooms: even though we are generally alike in our desire to be fed, clothed, housed, loved, we zero in on differences–in political parties and at dinner parties–perpetuating a cycle of divisiveness that does nobody any good.” (above italics are my italics, not hers)
When I read this I stopped dead! In two paragraphs Ms Arsenault sees what many people never see. Look at our system of government, education systems, and even our personal lives. What is the current state of governmental grid-lock but our so-called leaders emphasizing each other’s differences. As she so aptly calls: “a cycle of divisiveness that does nobody any good.”
Maybe this portion of MILL TOWN should be required reading for any person running for office at every level of government. I think that this hit home with me because as a teenager and eldest son of an alcoholic my self-esteem had been battered for my entire childhood. I grew up in an atmosphere where my mother sat at the kitchen table, drinking beer, and smoking cigarettes firm in the belief that all of the neighbors (especially those known to abstain from drinking alcohol) were looking down on her. In grammar school this wasn’t a big deal (or so I thought) but when I entered Junior High School where some genius felt it was best if students were aligned according to their ability to learn; we were segregated into six divisions with one being the smart kids and six being those who who work the counter at a fast food restaurant for the rest of their life. My dysfunctional background led me to believe that everyone in level one was looking down on me, a member of level two. As time went along I would be socialized to only associate with members one level above and one below mine, all others would be excluded. People have a tendency to congregate along social lines whether that be based on a financial basis or, as in the case of Caribou Junior High School, intellectual level. Coming from this type of background I have worked my entire life to overcome my tendency to make judgemental decisions when I first meet someone. I key in on our differences. I’m not out of the woods yet, but I’m only seventy-three, I still have time.
The next time that you watch the television news look for those people who key in on differences, not common areas. Where would we be if those geniuses (and I use that word facetiously) would stop the ridiculous bickering because the other party presents something beneficial to all. Our congressional people are possibly the worst example of this. When the Affordable Care Act was passed the Speaker of the House was criticized for signing it before she had read it. He comment: “We had to pass the bill to know what is in it.” That baffled me . . . what if hidden in that bill was a clause declaring war on Canada? Recently, that same person criticized the opposition party for passing a budget before she had time to read it. . . This form of hypocrisy is seen every day from our political leaders. If you read my last post dealing with the role of Universities in the Nazi suppression of all writing not in line with their beliefs. How should we classify a university who refuses to allow a speaker with political views they don’t agree with to speak? Or a professor who encourages (orders?) his or her students to protest against an ideal or belief contrary to theirs? How many of these become infiltrated by people with an agenda and become violent.
I have always believed that you cannot legislate social change, it can only be true change if it occurs through unbiased education and our young people are taught to respect the beliefs and ideas of others and at least be intelligent to think about the similarities between theirs and ours.
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