¶ … Kansas? How Conservatives Won the Heart of America (2004) by Tom Frank
The book: What's the Matter with Kansas? How Conservatives Won the Heart of America (Metropolitan Books, June 1, 2004) [Hardback] by Tom Frank, was entertaining; interesting, satisfying, and affirming In What's the Matter with Kansas Frank's premise, in a nutshell, is that middle-to-low income citizens of Kansas (and by association other places in America as well) have been seduced for at least three decades (and counting; thus Frank's term "thirty-year backlash," although counting from 1968 and Richard Nixon's successful "silent majority" campaign, that actually understates the truth) by the Republican social agenda: e.g., abortion; gun control, 'family values', etc. Pithy pitches (of the conservative sort; Democrats seem to lack any knack for this) have seduced many Kansans (and others) who can ill afford to vote Republican, financially speaking, to do so anyway. The Republican key to election success (and Democratic candidates let Republican ones get away with this) is to carefully avoid any political discussion of class.
What's the Matter with Kansas? How Conservatives Won the Heart of America (2004) traces, from both the personal (i.e., see pp. 151- 160, especially) and political perspectives of its Kansas-born author, and from a political perspective especially, the historically populist state's unlikely trek down the seductively inviting red brick road of social conservatism based on anything but the economic issues and realities (pp. 13-65). As Frank suggests, so important has it been among even non-wealthy Kansans (the majority) to think themselves other than "liberal" these past few decades that they consistently vote against Democrats that would better protect their own personal and economic interests.
The real value of Frank's book for me was that it clearly explained something I have always found baffling: how and why historically so many working and middle-class Americans have regularly allowed Republican social agendas to trick them into voting against themselves and their own social class (pp. 13; 28; 67-77; 89-100). Voting "red" can only (and does) actually hurt Kansas families (and others): "those unpretentious millions of authentic Americans" (p. 13), as Frank observes. Voting Republican threatens their born or unborn babies' health care and well-being. It nudges them closure to foreclosure, on the very homes in which they store (too often even more carelessly and dangerously than they vote) their precious guns.
Within What Happened to Kansas (2004) Frank's cogent analysis of how and why so many once-middle-of-the-road Kansans (and other Americans) those "unpretentious millions of authentic Americans (p. 13) began, around the time of the 1968 presidential election, as members of then-Republican Presidential nominee Richard Nixon's "silent majority," eschewing Democrats and the party itself as flag-burning; slogan-chanting; draft-dodging; scruffy looking hippie types - lunatic fringe-type people "other" than them. Nearly 40 years later, as Frank also points out, that same Republican-masterminded first false impression, 'Democrat as other' lingers, at enormous class (working; middle) cost to those who can least afford to self-identify thus. Still, they vote with Bill Gates in order to protect a future fetus unknown to them or put a foot down about anymore illegal immigrants sneaking across borders thousands of miles away. Anything but (Heaven forbid) be a 21st century "latte liberal"! (Frank, p. 15)
The actual pejoratives used today to describe Democrats as "other" have changed, considerably. More recently for example (I am thinking of the 2004 Presidential election era perhaps the five or six before it) to be a male (i.e., east coast effete) Democrat is not so much to have the girlish "hippy" look of the 1960s, but to 'eat quiche' or 'drink white wine' (as in a [very minor] cultural classic of the 1990's with the title Real Men Don't Eat Quiche). Male Democrats are still 'other' these days because they are intellectual snobs out of touch with regular folks, e.g., John Kerry types. Real men, on the other hand, are George W. Bush types hanging out at barbecues gobbling beef ribs, huge rings of sweat beneath their blue-shirted arms.
In 1968 female Democrats used to be bra burners. Now they are Hillary-types: left-leaning, career-centric; refusing to ever make cookies or have teas.
Meanwhile the young Kansas minimum wage worker and the older struggling Kansas farmer alike (the latter of whom may even know intellectually that a Republican-dominated government will typically favor the special interests...
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