Roots Run Deep…And LOUD! Rediscovering America- Days 5-6

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The first part of Day 5 was spent traversing the rest of Minnesota, across most of Wisconsin, and then on into Illinois.  The flatness of the topography persists across most of this stretch of I-90, with little of the charm that we found in the heart of the Midwest.  It is beautiful, don’t get me wrong. But, it is that relentless, unending spew of farms, moderate rolling hills, with gradual passages into green deciduous patchworks, that can actually become tedious.

And then, there is the attitude adjustment…

The fact is, Wisconsin and Illinois are both highly politicized states, where politics are a blood-sport. They care…a lot. And I mean, a lot. This is where you realize the paradox of a state that is governed mostly by a “Liberal” core in its major cities, with the rest of the very “Conservative” and widely geographically spread population in m,. the rest of the state, being angry about it to the point of making Fox News seem like NPR.

This is where the extremists find a home. Ann Coulter probably has a summer home here, where she stores her secret poison potions, and Italian designer brooms.

This was no more evident than in my mother’s “ancestral town” of Libertyville, IL, where we spent days 5-6 with my cousin Chuck.  I love the guy. He and his wife Stevie (short for Stephanie), are some of the nicest, attentive, sweet hosts you can ever meet.  But, if you are silly enough to bring up anything remotely political, (which could be as innocuous a statement as, “is it always this hot here this time of year?”) you will be instantly deluged with a torrent of political, right-wing rhetoric, which will make you step back in wonder.

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The home in which my Mother was raised, in Libertyville, IL. Beautiful… More on this later. 

I’m not going to go into the details of the almost non-stop debates that went on (we really did try not to engage).  But suffice it to say, we discovered the epicenter of the “core listening audience” for both Fox News, local talk radio, and nonstop CNBC stock market reports (they have several forms of media, tuned to different sources of the same rhetoric) all fueling a fire that already burned so intense, you often had to look away or risk being consumed.

Again…I love these two people. They are a hoot and a half. But, the circular discussions (often fueled with a wide range of celebratory cigars and alcohol), was non-stop…as in, until almost 2A, on the night before we were scheduled to leave at 7A the next morning.

And I still hadn’t convinced Chuck that the Supreme Court doesn’t write laws…only offers opinions or chooses not to hear suits or challenges to laws. Look it up. It’s part of the Constitution…and in fact, a 5-4 vote, IS UPHOLDING the Constitution. Really.

But. we had a great time.

Go figure.

Chuck kept saying, “This is so great!! I never get to have these kinds of discussions. Everybody I know agrees with me. Except for my next-door neighbor, Bill, who is even far right of the Pope!”

Chuck wasn’t kidding. I won’t tell you the first thing Bill said about the President (but it rhymes with “Hag”). Followed closely by a blanket statement on Zionist control of the world. That followed by finding out that he has had a job with the county elections board for more than 15 years. Boom! It all made sense.

What also made sense is how the wind turbines that blanket the Illinois and Wisconsin farm fields can continue to turn, without as much as breeze in the air. They are obviously fueled by hot air.

Kidding. Mostly.

windpower

Politics were everywhere. I’d hear people discussing issues and current events out loud in restaurants, grocery stores, and even the bathrooms (I told Chuck to stop following me in there).  Again…they are SERIOUS about this stuff.

EVERYONE was talking about Great Britain and the EU mess. They were watching the market drop, and working hard at trying to figure out a way to blame it on Obama.

Meanwhile…as we drove away, and across the states of Pennsylvania (another conflicted battleground state), New Jersey (another conflicted battleground state) and New York (another place where the big cities don’t remotely reflect the voters outside of the city). we listened to the amazing Mark Maron interview with President Obama, and felt inspired again.

YOU should listen to it as well… FIND IT HERE.

In fact, I’m sending this link to Chuck. He needs to hear about those who “run the country from their couch,” with an unending stream of vitriol…and how the President walks through the weeds to find hope and promise, even with the slightest “movement of the ship.”  Great Stuff.

Tomorrow… I’ll post about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as well as the Little League World Series Museum. Both amazingly fun, and inspiring places!

And remember…no matter how frustrated you become when talking politics… be nice to people from these 11 states…
California (55 votes)
Texas (38 votes)
Florida (29 votes)
New York (29 votes)
Illinois (20 votes)
Pennsylvania (20 votes)
Ohio (18 votes)
Georgia (16 votes)
Michigan (16 votes)
North Carolina (15 votes)
New Jersey (14 votes)

You can actually WIN an election, just by winning these 11 states. Now…THAT’S NUTS!!

fairholm1  FairholmGardens-Satellte

The area outlined in yellow is where the original Fairholm Gardens Nursery used to be. Today…it is a huge housing development and neighborhood park.

Here is a painting my Dad did of the original nursery, in the style of Grandma Moses…which give a good idea of how little was there, other than the greenhouse and trees in the nursery.

Fairholm-painting

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My mother’s family name still graces the street where the original greenhouse once stood.

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Libertyville is a beautiful little town, a little over 40 miles North of Chicago.

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My Aunt’s beautiful home in Grayslake, IL.

 

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Rediscovering America – Day 4 and a Word From Our Sponsors

I-90-FLAT

I am writing this entry the day after Day 4, of our epic, 29-day journey to Rediscover America.  I have to admit, that I am finding it very difficult to go into “full tourist mode,” as the things in this world that make me cranky, continue to do so.

Mostly, it is this gnawing sense that we are way off course, and most of our “leadership” don’t have a clue how to get the ship back on course. But, more on that another time.

Day 4 in a nutshell…was simply a “whole lotta driving” to get mostly nowhere….which ironically, encapsulates my feelings about the current “State of the Inequonomy.”

Yes. I made that word up. But, I think you can understand its meaning. You would pronounce it, “In-E-Konomy” as in an Inequitable Economy.  It is the kind of word you come up with when you have driven for 8 hours, eaten at a KFC, and then slept with one eye open in the “Great Deal” motel you got on Hotels.com. More on that later.

First…the Meat and Corn of Day 4.

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Day 3… Getting Some Big Head(s)

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Wow…really? Can you get any more salacious with a headline than that, especially when talking about a national monument????

I don’t think so. But, once again, it caught your attention, right? You are so easy.

Day 3 started with another of those “hey…we didn’t really plan this…but we HAVE to go!” kinds of  things that kept our heads spinning with the paradox that is this great nation of ours.

So many have nots…SO MUCH OPEN LAND…and then heartbreaking reminders about a past that almost no American can remember proudly.

Our original plan was simple enough, “keep heading East” and stop in Mt. Rushmore.

But when we stopped for coffee at a local coffee stand, we were “welcomed” by a middle-aged Native American man, who spent a full ten minutes telling us his life story, before asking for bus fare.  He was proud of his daughter who was going to college this fall…the first from his family. He was even more proud that she had helped him get his GED in the past year before she left. He then told us of the “Little Big Horn” celebration a few miles away, and that we could all “laugh and cheer when Custer got his.”

New plans made…a slight diversion, leaving us enough time to get to Mt. Rushmore before closing.

It was time very well spent.
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Some Times You Just Hafta Have the Balls to be Different – Day 2

TesticleFestival

Yes. You guessed it. I am not beyond using a provocative headline to lure you in. It works for Trump…so why not me?

I know. It seems pretty early to start talking about politics. So I won’t… much.

The fact is, in Day 2, we were mostly struck by the huge disparity in lifestyles along a single stretch of 550 miles of I-90. We saw a town that had “beaten the Government” to save itself from being lost to “progress,” and we saw loads of little towns that have found a way to exist, in spite of being mostly forgotten, while resisting the urge to “give in to a quick buck.”

And, we saw loads, and loads, and loads of huge new developments in the larger cities, driven by a new industry that is perhaps even more controversial than legalizing pot.

OK. Once again, I may be sensationalizing a bit…but, Fracking and Medical Marijuana do illicite the same visceral responses from “outsiders” who don’t see the economies that are springing up around them both.

Oh. And we passed on the Testicle Festival. Not that it didn’t sound great…but that we needed to keep moving on, and it is still more than a month and half away.

But, we DID take the course less traveled…to see parts of America that needed a bit of “Rediscovering.”  We did this on Day 2…knowing that on Day 3, we would be throwing ourselves into the mass culture tourism that is Mt. Rushmore.

We started in Spokane, and for the most part skipped the strip malls and urban sprawl along the breathtaking panoramas of I-90…following the trail of both Lewis and Clark, as well as the lesser known, Yellowstone Trail that we discovered in the most unlikely place ever…a prison.

YellowstoneTrail

All the while…listening to the final chapters of “Serial” and starting a new book-on-tape by Anna Quindlen, called “Miller’s Valley,” (no…we didn’t pick it for the name…it was a book club choice), that is ironically about a town fighting the government against its own extinction.

There are probably a few facets of the new fracking/oil mining culture that I would like to see go extinct.  But, I’ll save that for later… But first, the story of a town who almost DID go extinct, and beat back big government, by using a protective device that was made BY the government.
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