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Regarding J.D. Vance. Unlearning the Lessons of 'Hillbilly Elegy'
Americas beleaguered poor and working class have a host of problems, but the culture of irresponsibility that J.D. Vance says theyre prey to isnt one of them.BY STANLEY B. GREENBERG NOVEMBER 27, 2020
With the release of the Hillbilly Elegy movie this week on Netflix, were rereading Prospect board member Stan Greenbergs reflections on J.D. Vances 2016 best-seller. This article first appeared in the Winter 2019 issue of The American Prospect.
J.D. Vances Hillbilly Elegy has been on The New York Times best-seller list for nearly two years, and deservedly, given how improbable the authors odyssey has been. Vance grew up with a drug-addicted mom involved with an untold number of men, in a world of broken marriages, teen pregnancies, alcoholism, violence, mistrust, anger, and fatalism. He owes his life and survival to loving grandparents who taught him to value hard work and education. After he graduated high school, he went into the Marine Corps, then to Ohio State, to Yale for his law degree, and on to Silicon Valley before moving back to Columbus, Ohio, where he wrote this memoir at age 31. The book is powerfully written and poignantand for a year, I decided to give J.D. Vance a pass. It is important his story be told and respected.
The problem is that Vance is wrong about the lessons we should take from his memoir. Liberals, too, are wrong to think they can do penance and better understand the Trump voter if they read the book. And conservatives are most certainly wrong to believe that this powerful personal story confirms their belief that poverty is invariably the result of bad personal choices and immune to any governmental solutions.
https://prospect.org/culture/books/unlearning-lessons-hillbilly-elegy-nov20/
I felt this look back at Vance is relevant due to today's announcement, if the moderators believe it is too old, please let me know and I will delete it.
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Regarding J.D. Vance. Unlearning the Lessons of 'Hillbilly Elegy' (Original Post)
Passages
Jul 2024
OP
prodigitalson
(2,953 posts)1. Seems like he was up to some point in his life maybe a decent guy, maybe
or maybe he has always been a psycho
Passages
(1,430 posts)2. Well, the poverty he and his family experienced have now been criminalized
and he seems to be fine with that determination by SCOTUS.
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(116,478 posts)3. I read his book
The biggest take away I got from it is that an Ivy League degree opens the door to just about anywhere. While the standards of member institutions are high, getting a degree doesn't necessarily mean that one is smart.
Passages
(1,430 posts)4. Thanks for the input. I haven't read it.
I have to ask, is it about being smart or are we seeing his ethics, or lack thereof on display?
Lots of Yalies have become crooks. Vance seemed to identify Trump as a dangerous demagogue but now it is fine with him to be a heartbeat away from being top dog.