Christmas in Flyover Land

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

Last year, a local guy started renovating a restaurant on Main Street that has been shuttered for at least fifteen years. He’d retired from the army and started a company that made a fortune clearing landmines in faraway lands where US nation-building plans went awry. Wasn’t that a ripe business opportunity! He’s from here and loves the village and married his high school sweetheart — and would like the place to come back to life.

He’s partnered up with another guy who intends to open a bistro with a bar, a fireplace, and supposedly a boutique distillery operation in the back. That would give some people in town a reason to leave the house at 5 o’clock in the afternoon, when the day’s work is done — people like me who work alone all day. It could also give the citizens of this community a comfortable place to talk to each other about their lives and the place where we all live, and what we might do about things here. That’s called local politics.

I’ll refrain from tossing off judgments about the exterior treatment for now. Draw your own conclusions. I haven’t seen the inside and there’s butcher paper taped up on the windows while they finish in there. It looks like they’ll open early in the new year. There hasn’t been a comfortable public gathering place on Main Street in a long time. There’s a “tasting room” at a local small brewery down the block, but it’s hardly bigger than a couple of broom-closets and the New York Liquor Authority has an asinine regulation that literally forbids comfortable seating in such a designated establishment. Stools only. And only a few of those. What kind of culture does that to itself?

Ours apparently. When you get down to it, the sickness at the heart of our nation these days is the result of countless bad choices, large and small, that we’ve made collectively over decades, including the ones made by our elected officialdom. The good news is that we could potentially move in the opposite direction and start making better choices. However deficient and unappetizing you think Mr. Trump is, and how crudely unorthodox his behavior, that equation is what got enough people to vote for him. The strenuous efforts to antagonize him, disable him, and get rid of him by any means necessary — including police-state tactics, bad faith inquisitions, and outright sedition — have prevented the nation as a whole from entertaining a realistic new consensus for making better choices. In fact, it has achieved just the opposite: a near civil war, edition 2.0.

All the people of America, including the flyovers, are responsible for the sad situation we’re in: this failure to reestablish a common culture of values most people can subscribe to and use it to rebuild our towns into places worth caring about. Main Street, as it has come to be, is the physical manifestation of that failure. The businesses that used to occupy the storefronts are gone, except for second-hand stores. Nobody in 1952 would have believed this could happen. And yet, there it is: the desolation is stark and heartbreaking. Even George Bailey’s “nightmare” scene in It’s a Wonderful Life depicts the supposedly evil Pottersville as a very lively place, only programmed for old-fashioned wickedness: gin mills and streetwalkers. Watch the movie and see for yourself. Pottersville is way more appealing than 99 percent of America’s small towns today, dead as they are.

The dynamics that led to this are not hard to understand. The concentration of retail commerce in a very few gigantic corporations was a swindle that the public fell for. Enthralled like little children by the dazzle and gigantism of the big boxes, and the free parking, we allowed ourselves to be played. The excuse was “bargain shopping,” which actually meant we have sent the factories to distant lands and eliminated your jobs, and all the meaning and purpose in your lives — and cheap stuff from Asia is your consolation prize. Enjoy…

The “bones” of the village are still standing but the programming for the organism of a community is all gone: gainful employment, social roles in the life of the place, confidence in the future. For a century starting in 1850, there were at least five factories in town. They made textiles and later on, paper products and, in the end, toilet paper, ironically enough. Yes, really. They also made a lot of the sod-busting steel ploughs that opened up the Midwest, and cotton shirts, and other stuff. The people worked hard for their money, but it was pretty good money by world standards for most of those years. It allowed them to eat well, sleep in a warm house, and raise children, which is a good start for any society. The village was rich with economic and social niches, and yes, it was hierarchical, but people tended to find the niche appropriate to their abilities and aspirations — and, believe it or not, it is better to have a place in society than to have no place at all, which is the sad situation for so many today. Homelessness in America runs way deeper than just the winos and drug addicts living on the big city sidewalks.

I’ve written a ton about the bad choice of suburbanizing the USA and all its subsidiary ill-effects, and yet it’s a subject so rich that you can hardly exhaust it. It has produced an entropic wasting disease on our country so complex in symptoms that all the certified PhD economists and sociologists of the Ivy League and the land-grant diploma mills can barely diagnose the illness, or calculate the pain it has caused. Not a small part of this is the utter and abject absence of artistry expressed in the places we’ve built since 1945.

Our Main Street flaunts that boldly. The 1960-vintage post office looks like a soviet lunch-counter — or, more specifically, the box that it came in. What were they thinking? The video store looks like a muffler shop. The graceful four-story hotel that stood at the absolute center of town, and burned down in 1957, was replaced by a one-story drive-in bank. The façade re-doos of the 1970s and 80s display a mindboggling array of bad choices in claddings, colors, proportioning, and embellishment. It’s as if the entire world of aesthetics had died in the canebrakes of the Solomon Islands in 1944, and afterward nobody realized that something in America had gone missing. It’s particularly dismaying when you see the efforts that earlier generations made to instill some beauty in the things they built, with a few examples still standing for all to wonder at and dote on.

The damage done can be undone. It’s really a question of what it might take and that’s a big question because it will almost surely take a shock to the system. That shock could come as soon as the next two weeks — as not a few observers have predicted — in the form of a gross financial dislocation. The ongoing mysterious action in the “re-po” markets suggests that some kind of black hole has gaped open in the banking cosmos and is sucking literally hundreds of billions of dollars into an alternative universe. Guess we’ll have to stand by on that. The shale oil orgy is probably peaking, and the after-effects of that will be pretty harsh, but it might take a couple more years to play out. The weak leg of the stool these days seems to be our politics, the dangerous deformities of which I set forth in this blog regularly. (Some readers object to hearing about it, of course, for reasons I must regard as  peevish and specious.) Most likely, the shocks will come in combinations from banking, from the rest of the actual economy, and from these deadly “gotcha” politics.

You can see the humble beginnings of change around here, or at least an end to some of the practices and behaviors I’ve described above. The K-Mart shut down last March. It left the town without a general merchandise store — besides the Dollar Store, which sells stuff that fell off a truck somewhere in China. But the chain stores will have to go down if we’re ever going to rebuild networks of local and regional commerce and bring Main Street back to life. And you must be aware that chain stores are going down by the thousands all around the country, the so-called retail apocalypse. These things have to die for a new economic ecosystem to emerge, and it looks like the process is underway. I hope the fast food joints are next. At least we’re getting a new independent bistro in town.

The landscape around here is composed of tender hills and little hollows that precede the Green Mountains of Vermont, ten miles down the pike. Apart from its stunning beauty, it’s not bad farmland, either, and the rugged topography lends itself to small scale farming which is a good thing because that’s the coming trend. I maintain that farming will eventually become the center of the next economy here as life in the USA is compelled to downsize and re-localize. We could make a few things again, too, because a river runs through town with many hydro sites — waterfalls where small factories once stood — and that river leads to the mighty Hudson four miles downstream. The Hudson can take you around the world or deep into the interior of North America via the Erie and Champlain canals that run off the Hudson.

For the moment though, the country faces that set of convulsions I call the long emergency, with politics at center stage just now. The locals, myself included, have strung up the colored lights and set out the effigies of Santa and his reindeer. I love Christmas, the trappings, the music, and the sense that we’re obliged to bring some enchantment into our lives when the days are shortest and darkest. I doubt we can Make America Great Again in the Trump sense, but we can reanimate our nation’s life, and re-enchant our daily doings in it, and learn to care about a few things again.

I’ll be putting together my usual vain and starry-eyed Forecast 2020 the following Monday, with a regular blog in between on Friday. Merry Christmas, readers! And thank you for being here!

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
68 Comments
e.d. ott
e.d. ott
December 23, 2019 9:53 am

Back in the day, taverns were networking incubators of the American Revolution. It’s sad to see that tradition fall by the wayside as urbanization and globalization scatters people far and wide. It’s one reason I linger here, sometimes nursing a beer along the way.

CCRider
CCRider
December 23, 2019 10:01 am

I stopped voting 30 years ago because I came to view the federal government as a parasite. I don’t mean that as a metaphor. That’s all it is; a giant, ever metastasizing growth we should kill off, root and branch. Like it’s equal in nature I reckoned it would grow until it killed the host-us, and the people Kunstler is talking about here. I live very near to this town and can attest to its desperation. It’s terribly sad.

The inevitable die-off of parasite and host will be a blessing. Maybe then enough of us will stop trying to live off the rest.

anarchyst
anarchyst
December 23, 2019 10:06 am

Kunstler fails to mention “the elephant in the room”…a permanently dysfunctional black underclass that was pushed on us law-abiding whites without our consent. With the advent of “civil-rights (for some)” laws, the abolition of “freedom of association” and forced “public accommodation” laws, (but only for whites) the time was ripe for the expansion of the suburbs.

At the time, most people lived in the inner cities, but being forced to endure a declining standard of living with crime rates increasing and the imposition of “fair housing” laws, the abolition of restrictive covenants dictating who could live in a particular area, the destruction of city ethnic neighborhoods was started.

“Civil-rights (for some)” laws were always one-sided and used only against law-abiding whites. This was done on purpose, and not by accident.
Us whites have been dispossessed. The only way “out” was to establish suburbs where we could be “with our own kind”.

Cultures do not exist in a vacuum, but can easily be damaged, disrupted and even destroyed by an influx of “multiculturalism and diversity”. Let’s not forget “vibrant” cultures as well.

Kunstler KNOWS what the problem is, but will not mention it as it is his “tribe” that was behind all of the “civil-rights (for some)” chicanery. It was (and still is) the mission of those of the “tribe” to destroy the present “social order” in order to benefit themselves.

Those of us whites who lived through the “civil-rights (for some)” debacle personally witnessed the predominantly jewish-run “civil-rights (for some)” “handlers” and “freedom riders” courting and coercing their “pets” (blacks) to “demonstrate” and cause social disruption. The so-called “freedom marches” were anything but non-violent. Rapes, robberies, and other criminal acts committed by blacks and their jewish handlers were never reported, as it would have destroyed the premise of these marches.

Even then, the mainstream media conveniently turned off their cameras and recording equipment during these acts of violence. You see, even back then, they had an agenda…

Those of the “tribe” also got the federal government involved-the use of federal troops (in violation of “posse comitatus”) to do their “dirty work” for them. Forcing white citizens to “comply” at the point of (federal) bayonets was “the order of the day”.

A little-known fact is that the federal government used criminal acts of its own to break the power of the Ku Klux Klan and other white advocacy organizations by hiring mafia types to murder Ku Klux Klan leaders and to intimidate the “membership”.

Despite all of the shenanigans committed by those of the “tribe” there is still a “core” of us whites who not only witnessed the shenanigans of the “civil-rights (for some)” era, but still hold to the TRUTH about these misguided, evil, and yes, even criminal policies.

In conclusion, forcing different races to “live together” never works. It is interesting to note that those of the “tribe” (jews) NEVER permit “multiculturalism and diversity” to penetrate their closed society. You see, their mantra (for thousands of years) has been and still is “multiculturalism and diversity for thee, but not for me”…

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
December 23, 2019 11:16 am

People are still pretty much content with the current state of affairs. That could change real quickly (given sudden stimulus) in the relative blink of an eye, but that is not in the cards. The people running things (Jews? Simply rich oligarchs? Who knows? Who cares? It doesn’t matter. They run it, and it isn’t likely to change.) seem to know how to keep the machine running while they extract value from it’s machinations. Here in ‘Murica, we still have heat and a/c, plenty of soda and beer, Internet entertainment, and cheap gas at the C store. As long as that remains true, there isn’t going to be some sort of uprising, or patience with real uprisers. It is just too comfortable.

The entertainment continues along with the looting. It has been going on for a long time, and will continue for a good while yet. Not fun for the thinking man, and not pretty, but for a lot of people, this decline is as good as it gets. Give it another 100 years or so, and those green shoots might be providing some shade. Not much before then, I don’t think.

gman
gman
  Brian Reilly
December 23, 2019 12:37 pm

” Who knows? Who cares? It doesn’t matter. They run it, and it isn’t likely to change.”

so go back to sleep, right?

we know. we care. it matters. and yeah, it’s gonna change.

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
  gman
December 23, 2019 11:50 pm

gman, You know who is running things, and can do something about it? Is that an accurate take on your comment? You are right, it is going to change. It has to change, people die. It may or may not change at your behest, and that change may or may not be for the better.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 23, 2019 11:18 am

A good observation and accurate, me thinks. Why bring up race ? Several one-trick ponies seemed to have missed the whole tone. Your life must really suck.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  Anonymous
December 23, 2019 3:19 pm

Suburbs. They were the reaction of Heritage Americans to government enforced desegregation. You can’t talk about the rise of the suburbs without talking about the end of freedom of association.

flash
flash
  Hardscrabble Farmer
December 25, 2019 10:14 am

Shut up! We’re a nation of ideas and if some Bolshevik enabled ideas invade you neighborhood, disrupt, your schools, beat and rob your sons , rape your daughters and steal your car it’s because equality. If you don’t like equality, move to South Africa !

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
December 23, 2019 12:07 pm

If you want to bring back small town America and make America great again in the process you need to eliminate big government and big business. The best way to do that is if DC and NYC disappeared from the map. A couple giant meteors would do the job nicely.

gman
gman
  Trapped in Portlandia
December 23, 2019 12:39 pm

“eliminate big government and big business”

sure. and everything will cost 20 times more than it does now, for at least a generation. watch that first step, it’s a doozy ….

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
December 23, 2019 12:20 pm

Happy Hanukkah, Jim.

ottomatik
ottomatik
  Hardscrabble Farmer
December 23, 2019 5:58 pm

I could not but help notice your archetype as solution in this weeks missive…
Merry Christmas Marc.

gman
gman
December 23, 2019 12:29 pm

“The damage done can be undone.”

dunno. less than half the next generation will be white. can’t see the others wanting to restore anything, or even to maintain what’s left. they’d like it for free of course, they’d like it as welfare or loot or fenced goods, but to work for it – no. can’t have an america without americans.

gonna be gruesome.

wxtwxtr
wxtwxtr
December 23, 2019 12:56 pm

“… What kind of culture does that to itself? …”
A conquered nation?

gman
gman
  wxtwxtr
December 23, 2019 1:01 pm

no nation ever does that to itself, even by mistake. these things are always done by conquering invaders, deliberately.

The Cold Backhand of God
The Cold Backhand of God
  gman
December 23, 2019 4:24 pm

I think you’re giving intentional evil too much credit. The obvious ignorance and laziness is quite overlooked as a compounding factor.

wxtwxtr
wxtwxtr
December 23, 2019 1:18 pm

Are we about to gain more Flyover Country? And split up some of the existing?

Would be interesting to hear JHK & Admin’s comments.

nkit
nkit
December 23, 2019 2:55 pm

comment image

nkit
nkit
December 23, 2019 3:02 pm

comment image

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  nkit
December 23, 2019 3:15 pm

This happened in Boston. Guy was convicted of bank robbery and didn’t even serve a year. Why would that not be automatic grounds for deportation?

He certainly looks like he knows the score.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Hardscrabble Farmer
December 23, 2019 3:39 pm

Isn’t he the one who threatened the prosecutor in court? And you ask why he wasn’t deported. Bolshevik Masshole Judges, that’s why.

nkit
nkit
  Hardscrabble Farmer
December 23, 2019 3:42 pm

Associate Justice Lisa Grant sentenced this thug to 364 days in jail. That’s one day shy of a year. Massachusetts law states that any burglary conviction of one year or more mandates “deportation or increases the chances of immigration review.” He served nine months and was released. Grant has a history of being soft on criminal immigrants.

The blood of these two doctors is on her hands for putting politics above the law.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  nkit
December 23, 2019 5:38 pm

Bank robbery is not burglary, I have no idea how they kept him out of the Feds hands because they always handle bank robberies in the US.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  nkit
December 23, 2019 10:36 pm

do you believe that the live doctors were in favor of deporting him?
no,i doubt it either–

nkit
nkit
December 23, 2019 3:52 pm

comment image

M G
M G
December 23, 2019 4:41 pm

Nathan Hale country, right?

ottomatik
ottomatik
December 23, 2019 5:55 pm

Well played, especially like the allusion to Pottersville, we just watched it for the first time. I know, how is that possible, thank Sean at SGT for the recent recommendation. And your point of: worse than Potterville is entirely accurate, having grown up in the detritus.
All of this highlights your Long Emergency so well, it was nice to be reminded, as it has been quite some time since it has made the print.
Thank you for all of good work and Merry Christmas Jim.

yahsure
yahsure
December 23, 2019 7:10 pm

The melting pot where everyone wants to be an American and speaks English. its what I was raised on. instead, our society and media preach hate of our country.

ottomatik
ottomatik
  yahsure
December 23, 2019 7:46 pm

This is true, an anti-america has long been promulgated and the fruit is ripe.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
December 24, 2019 12:02 am

One of the few eateries in our burg (which I think is about twice the size of Jim’s) is just like the place pictured above. Food is decent and they push local brews (some from just a few miles away). Casual dining, but with 2 drinks and some split appetizers and desserts our party of five spent $50+/head last Saturday night. From 5-8 there were only two two-tops besides us, and we were there as a fluke. We haven’t been to this place in 2 years because—while the food is ok—it’s not that often that we want to just set $100 on fire.

Place was hopping for a couple years, but the “appetite”, as it were, seems to have petered out.