27 thoughts on “Rise and Clean Your Own House, Starting with Eric Porterfield

  1. Holy cow, is he talking about Milo’s thing?

    On Wednesday, he used the anti-gay slur “f—-t” in a committee meeting, within the context of quoting the name of a speaking tour that uses the term in its title.

    Obviously that’s hardly the most important thing about the story, but still it’s a weird little detail.Report

    1. Milo came to West Virginia University, targeted a popular faculty member during his talk, and acted like every bit the jackass that he is. The resulting scandal was a bit of thing around here, and although Porterfield is from the other end of the state, the idea that he would be familiar with what happened isn’t outside the realm of possibility, as this whole thing made the news when it happened.Report

    2. Yes, that’s what he was referring to. He was trying to use that to make a point about how “the LGBTQ” bullies even other gay people as further evidence that they are the modern KKK. More likely, it was just an excuse to use his favorite slur.Report

  2. It is worth noting, perhaps, that Porterfield’s blindness is the result of an altercation more than a decade ago. That altercation has not been explained further, at least so far as I can find.Report

    1. yeah, was about to same thing when I read this portion

      Remember that pattern: instigate, make a scene, claim victimhood afterwards. You will see it again.

      Because a very likely scenario is that Porterfield started a bar fight but someone else finished it, and now Porterfield is blind.

      That scenario also covers the rest of the deadly sins missing from Portfield’s TV interview.Report

    1. Yes I think he’s pretty much a secret held by West Virginians and select writers. I grew up in Virginia and moved to Toronto when I was thirty and soon after a great poet there said “Hey, since you love writing and you’re from the other Virginia, you will love this book.”Report

  3. I try to understand West Virignia/rural pride in general but my blue, coastal city self always runs into issues.

    The urban v. rural divide is as old as the Untied States itself. It perhaps even goes back to the Colonial days. Part of the fight between Hamilton and Jefferson was about the future of the United States and whether it should be based on cities, commerce, and manufacturing or whether it should be Jefferson’s pastoral paradise. There has always been a strong current in the United States that rural Americans are more real, more authentic, more sincere, and more moral than their city-dwelling counterparts.

    There is of course a huge amount of anti-other, anti-immigrant, and anti-minority rhetoric behind these views. Even liberals can get them though, when I was taking the bar, there was a woman from another law school there. She went to law school at Hastings (another law school in SF) and wanted to be a public defender but she was from rural Texas and referred to country people as “real people.” I held my tongue but wanted to challenge her.

    I know that there are liberals in rural areas, minorities in rural areas, and LBGT people in rural areas but I have a hard time giving rural residents any benefit of good-faith over continued claims of being “more real.” What does that mean? I’m a suburban and a city guy but I don’t feel less real for it.

    Guys like this don’t help me develop warm fuzzies for the country/rural areas.Report

        1. You didn’t.

          I just know that if those people tried moving into my neighborhood, I’d resent it and tell them that they’d have to leave their backwards cultures where they came from and they’d best assimilate if they wanted to fit in.Report

          1. This exchange has not been the _most_ intelligent thread ever. Nor have the two sub threads been the _most_ fun ever. But, it has been intelligent, and the sub text was fun. What really stands out to me as a non West-by-God person is that intelligent and civil discourse is alive and well in Princeton, West Virginia. My critical wall building neighbor-of-sorts would do well to note this.Report

Comments are closed.