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The Happy Candymaker Vs. the Conventional Wisdom
Townhall.com ^ | September 11, 2018 | Salena Zito

Posted on 09/11/2018 3:45:59 AM PDT by Kaslin

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. -- Barb Myers began working with Express Employment Professionals, an Oklahoma-based employment agency, over 20 years ago, packaging toffee candy at Enstrom Candies, the gourmet chocolatier known for its quality confections and high-end retail stores across Colorado.

"It was Aug. 7 of 1990 when I started working here," she said from the plant floor in Colorado. "I was a toffee packer. It was a seasonal job, so it would last until about the 22nd of December, and then I would get laid off until about July of the next year."

Her employment cycle continued with the same pattern for years until someone from the Grand Junction candy company had to go on leave.

Myers explains: "That year I was kept on full time, got a full-time position. Our supervisor in the toffee-packing department had to take time off to have surgery, and she wasn't going to be able to come back for the year. So I was a fill-in supervisor in the department until they could see if she was going to come back."

When the full-time supervisor didn't come back, she stayed on. "That was in 1996," she says. "I did that until 2001, and then I was promoted to production manager, because our production manager at the time stepped down."

Today, she not only is the production manager but also schedules and hires new workers. She feels she has a fulfilling job that makes a difference, and she was happy to recommend summer jobs there to both of her sons.

"I love my job," she says with unabashed pride.

Myers is not alone, not by a long shot. A poll of blue-collar workers, conducted by Harris Polling and sponsored by the employment agency that first placed her in her job, found that 85 percent of America's blue-collar workers see their lives heading "in the right direction." Nearly 69 percent of them believe their localities are as well.

"We take it very seriously. We are making a product that we are very proud of," she says of the much sought-after confections. Notice she does not say, "I am."

"Our candy is the best," she says. "I mean, I'm a little prejudiced, but it's the best in the country of the toffee or the other chocolates and different variety of candy that we produce. And we make sure that everything has the best ingredients and is the best quality it can be."

She says proudly of her blue-collar job, "To me, that's very important because we have sent our toffee around the world to presidents, and to actors and actresses."

While she stays mum on specifics about her personal political beliefs, that same survey found that nearly 70 percent of her fellow blue-collar workers across the country maintain a deep distrust of elected officials.

"I have the best job a person could have," Myers says with pride. Her optimism does not spill over to American politics. "It saddens me that people are so angry and hateful about other people's opinions. I just don't even get into any of it. No matter who is president, I feel that it's my duty to pray for them, and that's all I can do."

Myers is a refutation of the common narrative that blue-collar workers do not like their jobs, lack optimism about the future of their lives and their jobs, and obsess about politics in the same way the Washington political class does. There is a legitimate reason for that. Washington, D.C., is a company town. Of course, everything will be viewed through the prism of politics, but the livelihoods in Grand Junction, Colorado, are not always determined by politics.

While not all voters are on social media, pretty much all journalists are. So if you are following what is happening in the country through social media, are you really following what is happening in the country? Or are you just repeating and regurgitating the same thing said in different ways in other reporters' reports?

Worse yet, are you letting partisans lull you into believing their views are shared by everyone who wears their team jersey? I think some people might be. Perhaps if more people were to talk to the Barb Myerses of the world, more people would know that they don't spend their lives rattling off clever hot takes about their political viewpoints and they spend more time having pride in their work, their work ethic and how they are part of something larger than a tweet.

We are constantly viewing people's lives through the prism of politics. Perhaps we should step back and view their lives through a prism outside of politics. If we start to take into account how lives and the stability of their communities are on the scale of importance in their daily lives, and how trust in politics is not, perhaps we could make better conclusions of what is really needed in this country: rebuilding trust between the working class and the ruling class.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: politics

1 posted on 09/11/2018 3:45:59 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

This would be a heart-warming story if it wasn’t for the fact that the Leftists want to put us all in concentration camps.


2 posted on 09/11/2018 3:47:46 AM PDT by Nothingburger
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To: Kaslin
Our supervisor in the toffee-packing department ....

There's a joke somewhere in there.

3 posted on 09/11/2018 3:49:20 AM PDT by Mr Ramsbotham (Laws against sodomy are honored in the breech.)
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To: Mr Ramsbotham; Kaslin; Gamecock; SaveFerris; FredZarguna; PROCON; Army Air Corps; KC_Lion
Our supervisor in the toffee-packing department ....

There's a joke somewhere in there.

Hen supervisor at a top-flight bird outfit is much more impressive (while working at the New York Yankees during the day).

But tell me this. In an article about fine candies, why display a picture of horrible-tasting chalk valentines, more suitable for use by chalk-outline guy on the homicide squad, than for consumption? Why not quality candy like Twix, the only candy with the cookie crunch?

4 posted on 09/11/2018 4:17:04 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: Larry Lucido
But tell me this. In an article about fine candies, why display a picture of horrible-tasting chalk valentines

Lazy work by lazy slob “journalists” ?

5 posted on 09/11/2018 4:30:15 AM PDT by csvset (illegitimi non carborundum)
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To: Kaslin

This article is why I hope the pubbies aren’t just going to rely on a national campaign to say look at the economy, look what we’ve done for you.

I hope they are going to be out there this fall at Octoberfests and craft festivals and walking around talking to people and telling them in person in speeches and campaign stops about what the republicans are doing. Don’t rely on facebook or tweets to tell people, do it the old fashioned way, face to face...


6 posted on 09/11/2018 5:09:16 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: Mr Ramsbotham
"South Park did it" with Tom Cruise, working in the shipping dept. of a local Colorado candy mfg, packing fudge.

The seasonal aspect of the story reminds me of Foster Grant. That company, when it made its wares in the US, did the same thing.

7 posted on 09/11/2018 5:13:31 AM PDT by Calvin Locke
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To: Kaslin

“I was a toffee packer.”

Sounds ... deviant.

Still, it’s better than packing fudge I’d guess.


8 posted on 09/11/2018 5:58:41 AM PDT by IronJack
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To: Nothingburger
"This would be a heart-warming story if it wasn’t for the fact that the Leftists want to put us all in concentration camps."

This bears repeating. Any story that omits this fact is just propaganda

9 posted on 09/11/2018 9:49:20 AM PDT by T-Bone Texan (I posit that there IS something left worth fighting for.)
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To: Kaslin

Enstrom Candies


10 posted on 09/11/2018 2:53:14 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Ain't no reaching across the aisle in Hell.)
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To: T-Bone Texan; Nothingburger; Salena Zito
"This would be a heart-warming story if it wasn’t for the fact that the Leftists want to put us all in concentration camps."

Any story that omits this fact is just propaganda

You may have missed the point. The story was an appeal to journalists and other east coast political junkies to stop thinking their point of view is the only and most important one, and for them to develop an understanding of what is important to great swaths of people across the country—people who don't much care about politics because they haven't the time—because they are working, they're enjoying it, and it's sustaining to their lives. The piece was written by the best "Studs Terkel" chronicler of the largely pro-Trump working class writing today, Salena Zito.

11 posted on 09/11/2018 3:02:17 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Ain't no reaching across the aisle in Hell.)
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To: Albion Wilde

Thanks for you comment, and be assured that I am quite aware of everything you stated.

I have read quite a lot of Ms. Zito’s writing. She’s a real reporter — and that’s about the highest praise I can give in today’s corrupt, crackpot media culture.

I was 25 years in the newspaper business, usually the token conservative in every newsroom I worked.

Today, they won’t even tolerate a token.

And this leads me back to the flaw I perceived in Ms. Zito’s story, which otherwise I found accurate and astute.

Yes, the vast majority of Americans are caring for their families, doing honest work, and generally living their lives free from political obsession.

But that doesn’t change the fact that there exists a media-driven cabal that wants to abolish the traditional family, allow no work that’s not sanctioned by the state, and expand government to the point where it controls every aspect of people’s lives.

One of the key principles of Vladimir Lenin’s political philosophy was that the people couldn’t effect change by themselves. Rather, they needed to be guided by a cadre of
professional revolutionaries.

Lenin’s theory became fact after the October Revolution of 1917. The hard-left Bolsheviks staged a coup d’état with little popular support, ousting the center-left provisional government led by Alexander Kerensky. The communists quickly consolidated their victory with a wave of deadly political repression that few ordinary Russians could have foreseen. See Sean McMeekin’s new history of the Russian Revolution for a superbly detailed account.

The message for today is that vocal and ruthless activists often have more influence on events than an inert majority.

While it’s pleasant to contemplate hard-working Americans living serenely amid the current tumult, it’s also frightening to consider that these same decent folks might get lulled into a false sense of security about what’s at stake in November.


12 posted on 09/11/2018 6:13:38 PM PDT by Nothingburger
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To: All
Enstrom Candies


13 posted on 09/11/2018 8:28:33 PM PDT by Liz ( Our side has 8 trillion bullets; the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.)
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