Wisconsin
Related: About this forumIn places like Hudson, Wisconsin, right-wing voters see an America under attack
A word Hope is stitched onto a throw pillow in the little hilltop farmhouse. Photographs of children and grandchildren speckle the walls. In the kitchen, an envelope is decorated with a hand-drawn heart. Happy Birthday, My Love, it reads. Out front, past a pair of century-old cottonwoods, the neighbors cornfields reach into the distance. John Kraft loves this place. He loves the quiet and the space. He loves that you can drive for miles without passing another car. But out there? Out beyond the cornfields, to the little western Wisconsin towns turning into commuter suburbs, and to the cities growing ever larger?
Out there, he says, is a country that many Americans wouldnt recognize. Its a dark place, dangerous, where freedom is under attack by a tyrannical government, few officials can be trusted and clans of neighbors might someday have to band together to protect one another. Its a country where the most basic beliefs in faith, family, liberty are threatened.
And its not just about politics anymore. Its no longer left versus right, Democrat versus Republican, says Kraft, a software architect and data analyst. Its straight-up good versus evil. He knows how he sounds. Hes felt the contempt of people who see him as a fanatic, a conspiracy theorist.
But hes a hero in a growing right-wing conservative movement that has rocketed to prominence here in St. Croix County. Just a couple of years ago, their talk of Marxism, government crackdowns and secret plans to destroy family values would have put them at the far fringes of the Republican Party. But not anymore. Today, despite midterm elections that failed to see the sweeping Republican victories that many had predicted, they remain a cornerstone of the conservative electoral base. Across the country, victories went to candidates who believe in QAnon and candidates who believe the separation of church and state is a fallacy. In Wisconsin, Sen. Ron Johnson, who dabbles in conspiracy theories and pseudoscience, was reelected crushing his opponent in St. Croix County.
More paranoia: https://madison.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/in-places-like-hudson-wisconsin-right-wing-voters-see-an-america-under-attack/article_748ba6ea-9beb-5ecb-837e-8642fb56eacd.html
OAITW r.2.0
(28,485 posts)where insulated thinking thrives because they don't trust anyone "from away".
33taw
(2,887 posts)Hudson is a fairly wealthy and very white suburb of the Twin Cities.
Jimbo S
(3,019 posts)Can't remember where the other guy interviewed lived.
Blue Owl
(54,840 posts)Maybe their MyPillows are putting these thoughts in their heads!
Thomas Hurt
(13,929 posts)DBoon
(23,121 posts)Wingus Dingus
(8,408 posts)"All of this can be hard to see, hidden behind the throw pillows and the gently rolling hills. But spend some time in this corner of Wisconsin. Have a drink or two in the small-town bars. Sit with parents cheering kids at the county rodeo. Attend Sunday services.
Try to see America through their eyes."
As if Democrats and Independents don't socialize in favorite bars and diners, or attend sports and music events for their kids, or attend services. They're once again adopting the MAGA framework of GOP voters being wholesome "real Murkins" vs. the Democratic urban and suburban freaks and criminals and elites.
sybylla
(8,655 posts)Thanks. It's so freaking stupid and frustrating.