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ellenrr

(3,864 posts)
Mon Mar 14, 2016, 09:49 AM Mar 2016

trump and St. Louis- what makes St. Louis a different city

interesting article by a white progressive about St Louis, one of the most segregated cities in America,

about two cities actually-

The St. Louis region has been decimated over the last few decades by deindustrialization, bad trade deals, and a declining standard of living. Take my family as one example. In the early 1980’s my father, an uncle, and a grandfather all worked at Combustion Engineering in North St. Louis. The closure of that plant hit our family like a natural disaster.

When I looked at the middle-aged men in the crowd I thought of my father. He grew up near Ferguson in the industrial northern suburbs of St. Louis. The first handful of African-American students entered Riverview Gardens High School as he was graduating. The school now is virtually 100 percent African-American. After growing up with white privilege in a unionized blue-collar area of segregated St. Louis County, he entered an increasingly diverse workforce.

Racial tensions flared up at factories across St. Louis triggered by union elections and a thousand other incidents. During this same time, public schools were integrating and older white working-class communities such as Ferguson were undergoing massive demographic changes.

Then the factories and companies closed. First it was the small ones, companies you’ve never heard of. Then bigger ones like TWA, Ford and Chrysler. The companies that managed to stay open significantly cut back the number of employees—like McDonnell-Dougglas after being bought by Boeing. More recently, after decades of job losses and wage-stagnation, the housing crisis came and further exacerbated the economic downturn. It’s been followed by a heroin epidemic that has hit the St. Louis area particularly hard.

Life in America is supposed to improve from generation to generation. That’s the narrative we’re raised with. But instead of that bright American future, many St. Louisans have been left broke and short on answers in the most dangerous city in America.

Many St. Louisans have been left broke and short on answers in the most dangerous city in America.
In this former Jim Crow city—still one of the most segregated in America—African-Americans have often found themselves the scapegoat for every imaginable ill in the region. For decades, people of color have been disproportionately impacted by the deterioration of this town. And then, in the summer of 2014, an unarmed black teenager named Mike Brown was shot and killed by a police officer named Darren Wilson in Ferguson, and a movement was born.

While people around the world have been inspired by the resistance they saw in Ferguson and the commitment to justice displayed by protesters, many white St. Louisans felt differently. Rather than seeing a movement for justice in the streets, many locals instead saw the last vestiges of the white-dominated social order being ripped away. The local response was ugly. It tore apart friendships and even families.

Enter Donald Trump. Here is a candidate promising to return jobs to America, get tough on China, bomb the shit out of ISIS, round up undocumented immigrants and build the Great Wall of America. Plus he cusses like just like us! No wonder his message is music to the ears of the disgruntled white population of St. Louis. It speaks to their hearts and stokes their demons in a way that progressives wish Bernie Sanders would reach their better angels.

That’s the Trump welcome party. But there is another St. Louis—one whose African-American population erupted in protest after the police killings of Mike Brown, Kajieme Powell, and Vonderrit Myers. It’s a city with a rapidly growing Latino population. It’s a city that has become a hub for Muslim refugees, including the largest Bosnian community in America.

These two cities came together face to face on Market Street while Trump spoke inside. Pushing, shoving, shouts, and name-calling ensued. The two populations are incompatible. The future Trump fans see as championed by their fearless leader doesn’t include those who don’t look like them, love like them, pray like them or even live like them.


http://www.thenation.com/article/why-the-trump-rally-in-st-louis-was-so-different/
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trump and St. Louis- what makes St. Louis a different city (Original Post) ellenrr Mar 2016 OP
Thank you for this post! K&R! haikugal Mar 2016 #1
Thnx 4 the link Moostache Mar 2016 #2
wow... bernie is going to remake St Louis.... ellenrr Mar 2016 #3

Moostache

(9,895 posts)
2. Thnx 4 the link
Mon Mar 14, 2016, 04:57 PM
Mar 2016

As a St. Louis transplant (coming down from Chicago 23 years ago ) I have seen and lived through the coarsening of the region and all that was described. It's also why the loss of the NFL Rams recently hurt more than it should have as well.

It is a pained region, but one that also has many positives. Including the life sciences corrodor along I70 that is bringing new infustry, jobs and research to the area.

I moved here right out of college figuring I would here for one 12 month lease before heading out east or west or back to Chicagoland...that was now 23 years ago and counting. St. Louis is a beautiful place with many great people, but we need to remake ourselves and our community to address the problems.

I believe firmly that Bernie is the candidate that can best start and shape that process for all Americans, I will be voting for him tomorrow AM and to motto night I hope to be watching a very happy evening of results!!!!

ellenrr

(3,864 posts)
3. wow... bernie is going to remake St Louis....
Tue Mar 15, 2016, 06:14 AM
Mar 2016

if you want to improve St Louis, get together with your fellow citizens and do something. A president does not improve a city. A president begins the process of getting re-elected.
do like they have done in Jackson Miss. and Detroit.
People power.

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