Posted on 06/16/2018 11:46:50 PM PDT by Hojczyk
On a blustery afternoon in April, I filed into a van along with 10 students from Harvard. We had just spent the last two days in Chicopee, Mass., where we had chatted with the police chief and his force, the mayor and his staff, small-business owners, waitresses and firemen about their struggles living in small-town America.
The undergrads were buzzing with their impressions. Chicopee is about 90 miles west of their prestigious university in Cambridge, but when it comes to shared experience, it might as well have been 1,000 light years away.
As they settled in, I looked at them.
So, I said, who do you think most of the people you just got to know voted for president?
None of the students had an answer. It hadnt come up in their conversations and they didnt know I had privately asked each person who theyd voted for.
So, I let a minute pass and told them.
Nearly every one of them voted for Trump.
My students looked stunned, at first. But then a recognition crossed their faces.
We were only a few days into a new course I had developed with Harvards Institute of Politics, called the Main Street Project, where students are immersed in small-town America. Even though these kids had almost all been raised in the United States, our journey sometimes felt like an anthropology course, as though they were seeing the rest of the country for the first time. And this was their opening lesson.
I have been a national political journalist for nearly 15 years. Whenever and wherever I travel in this country, I abide by a few simple rules: No planes, no interstates and no hotels.
And definitely no chain restaurants.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Good article...why the MSM missed the election...
Let them stay at a Motel 6 and take them to the local walmart if they want to see the regular folks. A bed and breakfast is generally not a microcosm of the locals.
I would fail the course before I stayed in a motel 6.
Soooo, you don’t like “slumming it,” do you? LOL
Same here.
Me either nowadays
And at sixty and beat up I only fly first class....six five 235
Ill fly southeast for shirt junkets
Thats it
I figure Ive paid my dues....
Ill splurge on fancy hotels in cities
On the road Im happy with Home2Suites or Best Western
Spring Hill suites is ok too and Drury Inn
I wont stay Motel 6 or Red Roof or Kinights Inn or Super 8 or Days Inn or Best Value unless there are no rooms
C7
Great minds yet again
What a bunch of lamo punks. These kids will crawl back into their bubble, assume a fetal position and suck their thumbs for the rest of their lives.
In one regard, I fully understand why Mao hated ivory-tower intellectuals, mocked them, and made them objects of scorn during his Cultural Revolution.
The irony is that the guy who did figure it all out is a billionaire New York City real estate developer.
Trump is, like FDR, born into wealth but able to relate to the common man.
We, on the other hand, don’t need an antrhopology course or to give the National Geographic Safari treatment to leftist bubbles, it’s shoved in our faces daily via every single media outlet. We know for a fact that leftist urbanites are narrow-minded and don’t have a clue about anyone who is not like themselves, because they’ve segregated themselves. They only believe the best of people just like them, and they only think the worst of “those people.” It’s just like Jim Crow, only they’re the Klansmen and the Bull Connors now, and they hate the majority of the people of their own country. But we’re the biased ignorant ones, or so they believe. I’m beginning to understand how bloody revolutions became inevitable, in France and elsewhere. They’re really insufferable but oh so smugly certain that they know what’s best for people they despise.
Most of these elites have never done a hard days work ever. I would have been more impressed if theyd have gone out to Ted Nugents place or spent two weeks on a working ranch or farm
There plenty of good Motel 6
Most of these kids have never done a hard days work in their short lives
I could tell you stories about Motel 6.
The pity is they were clean, safe motels — at one time.
Now, three stars is my minimum.
Bless your heart.
Exactly wrong.
Motel 6 is a corporate thing that views the local folks in terms of charts and graphs at some HQ far removed. Same for Walmart.
A bed and breakfast, in contrast, is a small business actually run by locals. HQ is the breakfast table! If you truly want to understand what's going on in that neck of the woods, the bed and breakfast proprietors are an ideal starting point.
Sure but at least they leave the light on for ya.
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