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These Harvard Kids Got the Lesson of Their Lives in the Heartland
Townhall.com ^ | June 26, 2018 | Salena Zito

Posted on 06/26/2018 6:31:30 AM PDT by Kaslin

On a blustery afternoon in April, I filed into a van along with 10 students from Harvard University. We had just spent the last two days in Chicopee, Massachusetts, 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.

We were only a few days into a new project I had developed with the Harvard Institute of Politics called the Main Street and Back Roads of America: A Journalism Workshop, where students were 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.

The reason is simple: Planes fly over and interstates swiftly pass by what's really happening in the suburbs, towns and exurbs of this nation. Staying in a hotel doesn't give me the same connection I can get staying in a bed-and-breakfast where the first person I meet is a businessperson who runs the place and knows all the neighborhood secrets. The same is true of going to locally owned restaurants versus chain restaurants.

Also, you have to spend time in a community to really report on it. Parachuting in for a few hours to interview the locals can lead to flawed evaluations. When you are short on time, your instincts can get blurred and you can gravitate toward the shiny objects, the oddball people and conditions that make the most noise, instead of having a broader focus on the bigger, fuller picture.

Those simple rules are what intrigued students at the Harvard Institute of Politics, or IOP, after hearing me speak at a Pizza and Politics event on the school campus last fall.

Days after my speech, two IOP directors said the students wanted to learn more from me. I told them the best course would be a total immersion into the less-populated parts of the country, no different from the way I approach my daily job.

Chris Kuang, a 20-year-old rising junior from Winchester, Massachusetts, and Sam Kessler, a 21-year-old rising senior from Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, led the charge, recruiting 18 other students for the class, which began in February.

Because Kuang is chair of the Harvard Political Union, the nation's oldest collegiate debating society, and Kessler is president of the Harvard Political Review, they were both hungry to learn what shapes people's voting habits -- particularly after the 2016 election, when Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton in an upset almost no one predicted.

"The best way to blow apart a stereotype is to challenge it," Kuang, an applied math and economics major, told me.

So, before we started traveling, we held several workshops to discuss their ideas about the "other" America.

Nearly all of them said they didn't know what life was like outside the coastal cities and states. Only one student, 20-year-old Henna Hundal, had grown up in a rural environment -- an almond farm in Turlock, California -- while Kessler, a computer science major, was the only member of the class who had ever fired a gun. The students ranged in age from 19 to 21, with an equal number of girls and boys and a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds. The majority of them hailed from cities and suburbs in blue states along the East and West coasts. One was from Wales.

They admitted they had been fed a steady diet of stereotypes about small towns and their folk: "Backward," "no longer useful," "uneducated or undereducated" and "angry and filled with a trace of bigotry" were all phrases that came up.

And so, we embarked on our journey. For the next few weeks, I would conduct three classes in rural and industrial towns in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Most of the trips were a two- to four-night stay, getting from place to place in a van and sleeping in locally owned B&Bs.

While no one got college credit or earned a grade, the students all passed my most important test: They had taken a walk down Main Street and made a lot more friends than judgments. They had learned that in order to understand a country's politics, you first have to understand its people. That means getting out of your bubble and spending time away from people like you. If you don't, Kuang said, "you lose the ability to spark the evolution needed to bridge the country's divide."

The students even came up with a better name for the project. They called it #IOPening -- a hashtag blending their eye-opening experiences with the acronym for their institute.

In our final week, the class attended Mass at St. Stanislaus, a Polish church in the Strip District of downtown Pittsburgh. Before then, only two of my students had set foot in a Catholic church.

At the end of Mass, an older gentleman came up to me and said how nice it was to see young people dressed up and going to church. When I told him they were students from Harvard, he beamed and said: "I have been reading for years that college kids these days are thin-skinned -- what's that word ... ? Snowbirds, snowflakes, anyways ... that they have no easiness with meeting someone new or trying something different or won't be open to opposing opinions."

He smiled as he gave my kids an approving thumbs-up and said, "Don't you just love when a stereotype is blown up right in front of you?"


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: brats; education; harvard; midmest
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1 posted on 06/26/2018 6:31:30 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Given their level of ignorance, you’d think they’d been dropped off with some lost tribe on the Amazon.


2 posted on 06/26/2018 6:34:00 AM PDT by rightwingcrazy
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To: Kaslin

Chicopee—too funny.

They would not have Holyoke so amusing. :-(


3 posted on 06/26/2018 6:36:14 AM PDT by cgbg (Hidden behind the social justice warrior mask is corruption and sexual deviance.)
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To: Kaslin

The fact that the author considers Chicopee, Massachusetts, as “heartland” is in of itself ... telling.

Spend a month in rural Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas or Nebraska. Oh heck, any rural area at lease a 100 miles from either the coast or a NFL city.


4 posted on 06/26/2018 6:38:45 AM PDT by taxcontrol (Stupid should hurt)
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To: Kaslin
I worked for decades at a very,very famous hospital which hired many,*many* Harvard grads..along with grads from other "elite" schools.

Among the young physicians who were Harvard grads you could easily tell them apart from grads of other schools because they could talk for hours about the uvula but were absolutely clueless if you handed them a pop-up umbrella.

5 posted on 06/26/2018 6:40:43 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (You Say "White Privilege"...I Say "Protestant Work Ethic")
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To: Kaslin
Chicopee? It used to a predominantly Polish Catholic Blue Collar town, with Huge HS Football players, and A+ rated banks and Credit Unions. Today, not so much from what I hear.

They should have sent them to Taylor or Inkster MI for a larger contrast ( poor no-white ) and then to Holland MI, White and very conservative, both real fly over country.

The Harvard Endowment has the money to send them anywhere to really get their eyes opened, I could name a lot more towns that they never heard of. They should take them to fracking country, Steel Mills, a Stamping, Casting or Forging facility, an Auto Assy Line, ( especially the Tier manufacturers ). How about the Farmers in the Central Valley starving for water caused by Obama and Kalapornia politico's. How about talking to Coal Miners, or Miners up In the "UP" as the UP might be opening up to being really productive again ( 8th largest economy in the world if politician's get the hell out of the way )

6 posted on 06/26/2018 6:43:17 AM PDT by taildragger ("Do you hear the people Singing? Singing the Song of Angry Men!"i)
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To: Kaslin

It would be nice to know what these kids will say about the experience in 10 years. My bet is it will be along the lines of “I’ve met deplorables. They weren’t bad people, but I’m glad I went to Harvard and don’t need to interact with them”.


7 posted on 06/26/2018 6:44:50 AM PDT by LostPassword
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To: Kaslin

Oh BTW, Selena Zito is a must read and or follow. Great interviews via podcast with her and John Bachelor. She is one of the few that told the world, don’t be so sure this Trump Presidential run, he really might surprise you, she saw it, no one listened.


8 posted on 06/26/2018 6:46:04 AM PDT by taildragger ("Do you hear the people Singing? Singing the Song of Angry Men!"i)
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To: cgbg
"They would not have (found) Holyoke so amusing. :-("

Or how it got it's nickname "Holysmoke" back in the day. They might love the restored magnificent Victorian Homes however, that some have lovingly done over....

9 posted on 06/26/2018 6:47:54 AM PDT by taildragger ("Do you hear the people Singing? Singing the Song of Angry Men!"i)
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To: Kaslin

> “...you have to spend time in a community to really report on it. Parachuting in for a few hours to interview the locals can lead to flawed evaluations. When you are short on time, your instincts can get blurred and you can gravitate toward the shiny objects, the oddball people and conditions that make the most noise, instead of having a broader focus on the bigger, fuller picture.”

Wow, an intelligent reporter, such a rare sighting. I thought they were hiding under rocks if not extinct.

And I note the omission of an Oxford comma, tsk tsk shame-shame. Tells me this reporter is an old fogey.


10 posted on 06/26/2018 6:49:11 AM PDT by Hostage (Article V)
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To: Kaslin

That last line was ‘too pat’......................


11 posted on 06/26/2018 6:49:50 AM PDT by Red Badger (When Obama and VJ go to prison for treason, will Roseanne get her show back?...)
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To: taildragger
Miners up In the "UP" as the UP might be opening up to being really productive again ( 8th largest economy in the world if politician's get the hell out of the way )

Lawn sign seen near Houghton last year: "Stop the whining and start the mining!"
12 posted on 06/26/2018 6:50:07 AM PDT by farming pharmer
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To: taildragger
How about the Farmers in the Central Valley starving for water caused by Obama and Kalapornia politico's.

Perhaps, these students could spend a few weeks learning about Harvard's agricultural investments in Shandon and New Cuyama, CA.

13 posted on 06/26/2018 6:50:45 AM PDT by ptsal ( Get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please. - M. Twain)
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To: ptsal

Tell me more Ptsal


14 posted on 06/26/2018 6:53:55 AM PDT by taildragger ("Do you hear the people Singing? Singing the Song of Angry Men!"i)
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To: taxcontrol

LOL! Kinda what I was thinking but to give credit, there are lots of rural places a stones throw from some of the YUGE lib populaiton centers. But the attitudes these kids have been ingrained with is what keeps a lot of them from venturing out past the last street light. Like “our” ignorance is contagious or communicable.


15 posted on 06/26/2018 6:54:39 AM PDT by rktman (Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
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To: rightwingcrazy

It sounds to me like these kids may have learned a few things. There is a lot happening in America apart from college campuses and or the coastal liberal enclaves.

But in a way it is sad, that we are telling these supposedly educated Elite college kids from Harvard, that they need to study America, as if most of America is some isolated out of the way place , full of people who are like foreign people to them.


16 posted on 06/26/2018 7:01:15 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: taxcontrol

Well, you might be surprised. Less than 150 miles from NYC, farmers are walking out to the barn and getting on their tractors.


17 posted on 06/26/2018 7:05:49 AM PDT by proxy_user
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To: Gay State Conservative

The elite are mostly iyis...they run in the same circles...


18 posted on 06/26/2018 7:20:14 AM PDT by Hojczyk
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To: taildragger

I believe Chicopee has a military base? Air Force? Or is it now closed?


19 posted on 06/26/2018 7:27:46 AM PDT by rudy45
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To: taxcontrol

There are many small towns within an hour or two from the cities on the coasts with real people. Given that this was the first experiment undertaken by Harvard and Zito, I think this is a truly hopeful beginning.

Salena Zito is a funny, bright and insightful reporter. She “gets” America.


20 posted on 06/26/2018 7:29:47 AM PDT by SE Mom (Screaming Eagle mom)
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