Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Answer is the Coming Small-Town Revival
The American Conservative ^ | Apr 30, 2021 | James Howard Kunstler

Posted on 08/04/2022 2:27:02 PM PDT by Noumenon

The post-COVID recovery will be change not restoration. We’ll be forced to rebuild where we are.


Years ago, I moved from a somewhat larger small town (pop. 30,000) in upstate New York to a smaller small town (pop. 2,500) 15 miles east in order to establish a little homestead with gardens, fruit trees, and chickens. I found this three-acre property literally on the edge of town, a five-minute walk to the center of Main Street.

If you’ve been following this column on urban design the past year, you know I’ve said we’re entering an era of stark economic contraction that will change the terms of daily life in America, and one feature of it is that the action will shift from the big cities and sprawling suburbs back to America’s small towns. The COVID-19 virus has accelerated this trend, actually drawing a sharp dividing line between “then” and “now” that historians will recognize—but that many contemporary observers are missing.

My little town was badly beaten down when I got here in 2011 and actually sank a bit lower over the years since. The last Main Street shops that sold anything not previously owned shut down. The two last suppertime restaurants folded. The tiny local newspaper ceased publication, and the DOT put a concrete barrier across the tracks of the little railroad spur line, which hadn’t run trains, anyway, since the 1980s. The several factories on the river that runs through town—a tributary of the mighty Hudson—had all shuttered in the 1970s, and only one even still stands in the form of ruins, the rest demolished, wiped off the map and out of memory. In the century and a half previous, they’d gone through iterations of making textiles—first linen, which was grown here, then cotton, which was not—and then paper products (finally, and not without irony, toilet tissue).

What’s left in the town is a phantom armature of everyday life tuned to a bygone era with all its economic and social functionality removed, like a fine old piano with all its string cut. The bones are still there in the form of buildings, but the activities, relationships, and institutions are gone. The commerce is gone, the jobs are gone, the social and economic roles have no players, the places for fraternizing and public entertainment gone, the churches nearly empty. There’s a post-1980 shopping strip on the highway leaving the west end of town. That’s where the supermarket is (it replaced a 1960s IGA closer to the center, which replaced the various greengrocers, butchers, and dry goods establishments of yore on Main Street). There’s a chain pharmacy, a Tractor Supply, a pizza shop and a Chinese take-out place out there, too. The Kmart closed in 2017 and two years later a Big Lots (overstocked merch) took its place.

The local school system may be the town’s largest employer these days; it’s also the town’s leading levier of taxes. Some people drive long distances to work in other towns, even as far as the state capital, Albany, where jobs with good pay, real medical benefits, and fat pensions still exist—though you can’t claim they produce anything of value. Quite a few people scrambled for years with marginal small home-based businesses (making art, massage, home bakeries, etc.), but the virus creamed a lot of them. It’s hard these days to find a plumber or a carpenter. A few dozen farmers hang on. There is a lively drug underground here, which some can make a living at—if they can stay off their own product—but it’s not what you’d call a plus for the common good. Federal cash supports of one sort or other account for many of the rest who live here: social security, disability, SNAP cards, plain old family welfare payments, and COVID-19 checks (for now), adding up to a quasi-zombie economy.

In short, what appears to be a town now bears no resemblance to the rich set of social and economic relationships and modes of production that existed here a hundred years ago, a local network of complex interdependencies based on local capital and local resources—with robust connections (the railroad! The Hudson River and Champlain Canal!) to other towns that operated similarly, and even linkage to some distant big city markets. The question I’m building up to is: How do we get back to anything that resembles that kind of high-functioning society?

The answer is trauma, a set of circumstances that will disrupt all the easy and dishonest work-arounds which have determined the low state of our current arrangements. You can be sure this is coming; it’s already in motion: collapsing oil production due to the insupportable costs of the shale “miracle,” the end of industrial growth as we’ve known it, the limits of borrowing from the future to pay today’s bills (i.e., debt that will never be paid back), widespread household bankruptcy and unemployment, and the consequent social disorder all that will entail.

That reality will compel us to reorganize American life, starting with how we inhabit the landscape, and you can bet that three things will drive it: the necessity to produce food locally, the need to organize the activities that support food production locally, and the need—as when starting anything—to begin at a small and manageable scale. It will happen emergently, which is to say without any committee of experts, savants, or commissars directing it, because the need will be self-evident.

For now, the broad public remains bamboozled, distracted by the terrors of COVID-19, the uproars of race-and-gender tension, the dazzle of Federal Reserve hocus-pocus, the anxiety over climate change, and, of course, the worsening struggle of so many ordinary citizens to just keep paying the bills. When you’re in a ditch, you don’t call the President of the United States. You need a handful of friends and neighbors with a come-along.

That’s how it’s going to work to bring our small towns back to life. When the chain stores choke on their broken supply chains, some attentive persons will see an advantage in figuring out how to get and sell necessities by rebuilding local networks of supply and retail. Farming will be rescued from its artificially induced senility when the trucks stop delivering pallets of frozen pizza and Captain Crunch as dependably as they used to. And then the need for many other businesses that support farming and value-added production will find willing, earnest go-getters. The river still runs through town and it runs year-round, powerfully enough to make some things, if there was a reason to, and a will, and a way. And after a while, you’ll have a fully functioning town again, built on social and economic roles that give people a reason to think that life is worth living. Wait for it.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics
KEYWORDS: rebuild; recovery; smalltown
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-51 last
To: Former Proud Canadian

Well done. Our acreage is more modest, but we are unlikely to run out of fuel for our woodstove any time soon. Like you, we also have local well-established Heutterite communities. As non-participation in the Coming Unpleasantness, we recognize that there may not be a choice when the starving and diseased remnants come boiling out of the cities in search of food, shelter and warmth. You’re going to have to harden your heart and cut them down without mercy, as any other alternatives are unthinkable.


41 posted on 08/05/2022 8:30:00 AM PDT by Noumenon (You're not voting your way out of this. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 36 | View Replies]

To: Georgia Girl 2

Good move. Urban/suburban areas are no place to be, even now. Gangs of feral blacks are already a problem.


42 posted on 08/05/2022 8:36:01 AM PDT by Noumenon (You're not voting your way out of this. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

We don’t go anywhere unarmed.


43 posted on 08/05/2022 9:11:22 AM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

Sounds like he’s in Dutchess, Greene, or Ulster Counties. It’s where tons of people move “upstate” to get out of the city. NY is actually quite nice if you could separate from the 5 burrows and chuck the liberal all Democrat government.


44 posted on 08/05/2022 9:19:51 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Georgia Girl 2

That’s right at the top of “best practices.”


45 posted on 08/05/2022 9:40:56 AM PDT by Noumenon (You're not voting your way out of this. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

I moved from Seattle to a county in south central KY, on 32 acres, 11 years ago. Third best decision I ever made. (First is accepting Jesus’ free gift, second is choosing my wife...)

And not to put too fine a point on it, if I still lived in Seattle, I’d probably be in jail over Covid. We ignored the whole thing here.


46 posted on 08/05/2022 9:45:07 AM PDT by cuban leaf (My prediction: Harris is Spiro Agnew. We'll soon see who becomes Gerald Ford, and our next prez.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: eyeamok

Galts Gulch here I come!


Heh. I call my place “Galt’s knob”. 😁


47 posted on 08/05/2022 9:46:15 AM PDT by cuban leaf (My prediction: Harris is Spiro Agnew. We'll soon see who becomes Gerald Ford, and our next prez.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

We are putting in a small gun range at one end of our property.


48 posted on 08/05/2022 1:17:31 PM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: cuban leaf

Used tomlive in the Puget sound area East side. Left in 1998. If I stayed, I’d probably be in jail for going all John Wick on antifa trash. I also refused the kill shots and the masks.


49 posted on 08/05/2022 1:58:00 PM PDT by Noumenon (You're not voting your way out of this. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: Georgia Girl 2

Ive got a big mound of dirt from the excavation of the ho,e site that’s reserved for a gun range. Another project for the list.


50 posted on 08/05/2022 2:00:10 PM PDT by Noumenon (You're not voting your way out of this. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

Yeah. I was visiting my daughter’s family out by Sand point way and we were walking down to the “fashionable” area where the old naval base was and had to weed through a bunch of old motorhomes parked on the side of the road where people were living.

I asked her if “you people” ever heard of Molotov cocktails. Fact is, if the police won’t police, SOMEONE has to do it.

But where I am, I don’t have to worry about it - and I stay out of prison.


51 posted on 08/05/2022 6:19:36 PM PDT by cuban leaf (My prediction: Harris is Spiro Agnew. We'll soon see who becomes Gerald Ford, and our next prez.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-51 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson