• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Democracy Chronicles

Towards better democracy everywhere.

  • AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
  • WORLD DEMOCRACY
  • POLITICAL ART
  • more
    • election technology
    • money politics
    • political dissidents
    • THIRD PARTY
      • third party central
      • green party
      • justice party
      • libertarian party
    • voting methods
  • DC INFO
    • author central
    • about
    • advertise with DC
    • contact
    • privacy policy
Home | DC AUTHORS | The New York Times Stereotypes Southerners, Again

The New York Times Stereotypes Southerners, Again

June 7, 2018 by Jenny Oak Tree 6 Comments

Facebook20LinkedInPinTweetShares20
New York Times Stereotypes Southerners
The American South – link

I am writing this in response to the New York Times Article “No One Really Understands the South” op-ed. As a 20+ year veteran of the south, I have some thoughts. While the author talks quite a bit about the structure of the Democratic Party in the South, her answer leaves out the majority of the reason why any Southern stays in the South. Southern Hospitality, communitarian identities, and genuine connections with neighbors are a few reasons I stay in the South.

Most Northerners have this idea of the South that is very different than the way of the South. It’s this idea that we live in a town without running water, power lines, and cell phone lines. Yet, somehow Doug Jones got elected by GOTV efforts that included 15,000 phone calls. Ev’ry body got a phone, now.

While the author sticks to the political structure of the Democratic Party, and the haunting reality of being black in the South, it is not a full picture. Like many things in life, there are nuances and new history being written, monuments built, and identities being empowered.

New York Times Stereotypes Southerners
Old wounds – link

The Democratic Party has no stronghold here in Alabama, yet it is capable of being a purple state. Georgia has created an effort to look at its changing demographics through nonprofit and census work to start an effort to turn that state blue. That is also possible.

It is without merit to say anything is impossible. And the South isn’t as backwards as one assumes. There are millennials with a passion for social justice, black women who are working corporate jobs, and white blue collars in rural Alabama working in factories. You and I, New Yorkers, are not living in different realities. My reality may include a neighbor’s Southern drawl and kind demeanor while you may have a cussing neighbor who shouts at her dog in the middle of the night. I don’t know, I don’t live there.

The reality of being black in the South is also the reality of being black up North. Racism is easier to spot down here because it’s not subtle. While up North, it may be possible to be racist and have no one know. The argument I’ve always gone with is Southerners live their racism, Northerners love the collective, hate the individual.

But, the reality of the South is one full of families, friends, neighbors, and colleagues who work tirelessly to help each other. People go out of their way for each other. No one is to busy to help a friend. I’m not saying we live in Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood, but it’s a familiar world of slow paced small talk injected with college sports. Please see beyond the political and into the personal. If politics is about people, then it’s about more than living alongside people who agree with you but living alongside people who disagree with you but give you insight into their hearts and minds. Let’s do more of that.

Facebook20LinkedInPinTweetShares20

Filed Under: DC Authors Tagged With: African-American Voting Rights, Journalism and Free Speech, Minority Voting Rights, Racism and Prejudice, Republicans

Some highlighted Democracy Chronicles topics

Africa American Corruption American Local Elections American State Elections Asia Capitalism and Big Business Celebrity Politics China Democracy Charity Democracy Protests Democrats Dictatorships Education Election History Election Methods Election Security Election Transparency Europe Internet and Democracy Journalism and Free Speech Middle East Minority Voting Rights Money Politics New York City and State Elections Political Artwork Political Dissidents Political Lobbying Redistricting Republicans Russia Socialism and Labor Social Media and Democracy South America Spying and Privacy Supreme Court Third Party Voter Access Voter ID Voter Registration Voter Suppression Voter Turnout Voting Technology Women Voting Rights Worldwide Worldwide Corruption

About Jenny Oak Tree

Jenny Oak Tree writes for Democracy Chronicles from the state of Alabama. Checkout the rest of our international team of authors as well. Together, they help cover free and fair elections on every continent with a focus on election reform in the United States.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. David Anderson says

    June 12, 2018 at 10:24 am

    Nice retort to the Times piece. Liberals like myself jump en mass on the heads of racists and sexists yet in the same breath perpetuate stereotypes of Southerners as… well… you know.
    That said, there are legitimate cultural differences which recently have been analysed through the lens of southern “honor culture” and explain some gaps in our understanding.
    Great article.
    D.A.
    NYC

    Reply
  2. gaoshan says

    June 13, 2018 at 8:18 pm

    After college I moved from Ohio to South Georgia and got to experience Southern Hospitality first hand on many occasions. Most memorable was pulling into a Georgia gas station with my U-Haul and having the clerk ask if I was a Yankee or a “Damn Yankee”. I said that I didn’t understand and she explained that a Yankee is there to visit, a damn Yankee to stay.

    Then there was the time a taxi driver told me he wanted to “get me one of them” in reference to my Chinese wife. He said this in front of her. Or the lady who told me you really can’t trust “those people”, again about my wife. Never mind the door knocking religious zealots or the insane levels of public religious expression. Also heard a lot of angry ranting about rude northerners from southerners who didn’t seem aware of their own shortcomings in that area. Southern Hospitality, it turns out, is essentially a superficial politeness, if you are “one of them”

    After a decade we left the South for good so guess I wasn’t a damn Yankee after all.

    Reply
  3. Jenny Oak Tree says

    June 13, 2018 at 8:57 pm

    While I understand what you’re saying, adrian, democratic policies wont suddenly make people not racist, xenophobic, or anti-Semitic. Only education can. And that means meeting people like you and me, adrian. I’m sorry they treated your wife that way, but it’s not everyone. And most certainly, if you feel safer in nyc, I understand. However, democratic policies dont change the character of people. Only exposure to different people does that.

    Reply
    • Adrian Tawfik says

      June 15, 2018 at 1:42 am

      oh sorry. that wasnt from me jenny. i dont have a wife. haha. i posted someone else’s comment for them. I guess i did it wrong!

      Reply
      • Jenny Oak Tree says

        June 15, 2018 at 9:57 am

        Ok. No problem.

        Reply
  4. Meade Skelton says

    September 14, 2021 at 6:23 pm

    I would say Florida and Texas are not really the South. Virginia is somewhat Southern, but once you get north of Stafford County it mainly just becomes an extension of Washington, D.C.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

democracy chronicles newsletter

democracy around the web

  • CPJ files declaration in support of detained journalist Mario Guevara 
    Source: Committee to Protect Journalists Published on: 7 months ago
  • “Musk must face lawsuit brought by voters he convinced to sign petition in $1 million-a-day election giveaway, judge says”
    Source: Election Law Blog Published on: 7 months ago
  • “Appeals court throws out massive civil fraud penalty against President Donald Trump”
    Source: Election Law Blog Published on: 7 months ago
  • “Adams Adviser Suspended From Campaign After Giving Cash to Reporter”
    Source: Election Law Blog Published on: 7 months ago
  • “Obama applauds Newsom’s California redistricting plan as ‘responsible’ as Texas GOP pushes new maps”
    Source: Election Law Blog Published on: 7 months ago