Mountain Philosopher

John deVille
Mountain Philosopher

John deVille's musings on the intersection of history, politics, philosophy, and Appalachia.

Episodes

  1. Dirt Road Revival — A Conversation with authors Senator Chloe Maxmin and Canyon Woodward

    05/07/2022

    Dirt Road Revival — A Conversation with authors Senator Chloe Maxmin and Canyon Woodward

    We all know that part of the reason for the extreme red/blue, Republican/Democrat, rural/suburban/urban divide when it comes to actual electoral results lies in the arena of values, sensibilities, traditions. Population densities, geological topographies,  and their attendant histories shape our thinking more than we usually, probably always, know. Beyond all of that is an ugly truth which the Democratic Party and progressives are loath to acknowledge. And that truth is they have almost entirely abandoned the rural voter. And when progressives speak of the rural it is speech all too often saturated with scornful, mocking disdain and derision. All too often when it comes to the rural, the Democratic Party is hellbent on the self-fulfilling prophecy that rural voters lie beyond their reach. They tell themselves that the cultural divide is too great. The utilitarian calculus is that scarce resources of canvassing time and media dollars would be better spent rallying “the base” or perhaps to just abandon the electoral field altogether. And that has left rural voters listening to only one megaphone and frequently leaving them with only one choice in the polling booth. To maintain this situation, this dynamic is to engage what pilots refer to as “augering in” — a death spiral which intensifies as the aircraft speeds towards an inevitable crash. We can see that in my home county of Macon, NC. Democrats have only two races to vote on in the upcoming May 17th primary. We have a choice in the NC Senate which has already been decided and we have a choice of who will face the likely winner of the GOP primary for the 11th Congressional District, the incumbent Madison Cawthorn. So one meaningful race for Democrats in the May 17 primary. Maine State Senator Chloe Maxmin and her campaign manager of two successful races for the Maine State Legislature, Canyon Woodward, did not just seek to reverse the augering in — they pulled the progressive plane out of the spiral. Twice. They reversed the prevailing physics. Twice. They shredded the conventional wisdom of the Democratic Party playbook twice. Senator Maxmin flipped a longstanding-Republican Maine State House seat in 2018 with the co-leadership of Canyon Woodward. They did this in their mid twenties. And then they successfully conjured lightning a second time, unseating the Maine State Senate minority leader in 2020. And now they have written a book about their journey, their strategies, and their tactics. This is a book about two rural relative youngsters connecting to their roots and their people. This is a book about deep listening. This is a book about empathy. This is a book about creativity and letting voters lead. Perhaps most of all, it’s a book about hard work. I shrank back from the second half of the book where Chloe and Canyon discuss specific tactics. Good God, the work. The 20-hour-a-day work. The long conversations. The thousands of handwritten thank you notes. And so much more. You’ll need a nap before and after this section. Chloe and Canyon have so much to teach us because they have walked the walk. YouTube Version https://youtu.be/jgousGwqsE0 Buy the book https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/691154/dirt-road-revival-by-chloe-maxmin-and-canyon-woodward/ Chloe & Canyon’s next venture Dirtroadorganizing.org Chloe & Canyon’s NYTimes Op-Ed https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/opinion/democrats-rural-america.html

    46 min
  2. Confronting racism in our daily lives, our schools, and thru local government — a conversation with Erick Mendez and Matt Wilson

    04/13/2022

    Confronting racism in our daily lives, our schools, and thru local government — a conversation with Erick Mendez and Matt Wilson

    Today I'm interviewing two 2016 Franklin High School graduates who are also graduating from Western Carolina University’s Masters in Public Administration program in a few weeks. Erick Mendez and Matt Wilson came back onto my radar after writing columns on racism for WNC publications, and I’ve included those columns in the show notes. The penetrating incisiveness of their writing, their clarity, their call to action pierced the fog of the op ed page. We discussed their time in Macon County Schools as it relates to race. We talked about their plans to possibly work in the Triad area in municipal and county government and what has shaped their respective philosophies. And then we broached the hot topic of the moment, critical race theory — if you want to jump ahead, that’s around the 27 minute marker. When I spoke to Erick and Matt, I felt good about the future. They are so sharp, reflective, caring, humble, and compassionate. The mountains can be harsh, the mountains can be loving, but in either case wisdom is always imparted if we listen. I hope you enjoy the show. Erick and Matt's columns on confronting racism https://www.nber.org/digest/sep03/employers-replies-racial-names https://www.epi.org/publication/the-color-of-law-a-forgotten-history-of-how-our-government-segregated-america/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/materials/how-red-lines-built-white-wealth-color-of-law-lesson Mapping Inequality Redlining in New Deal America

    49 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

John deVille's musings on the intersection of history, politics, philosophy, and Appalachia.

To listen to explicit episodes, sign in.

Stay up to date with this show

Sign in or sign up to follow shows, save episodes, and get the latest updates.

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada