I Know Why Rural Populations Are Vulnerable To The Lies Of Tyrants

<p>Igrew up in an&nbsp;<a href="https://www.rampagelaw.com/blog/2021/11/what-is-the-difference-between-a-town-being-incorporated-or-unincorporated/" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">unincorporated</a>&nbsp;town in Northern Wisconsin. My school district served many small communities within a large geographical area. Every morning we took a 45 minute bus ride to a metropolis of 2,000 people. It was the nearest town with facilities that came the closest to meeting the state&rsquo;s basic educational standards.</p> <p>I grew up surrounded by wilderness and dairy farms. Our nearest neighbor was several miles away.</p> <p>I&rsquo;m often confused when people talk about &ldquo;rural life&rdquo; because the social dialogue never matches up with my lived experience. What I&rsquo;ve come to realize is that almost all discussions of the &ldquo;rural mindset&rdquo; are either fabricated or they&rsquo;re made up of commonly believed but baseless assumptions.</p> <p>The simple fact is that I know what American rural life is like and most people don&rsquo;t. I was raised in the reddest of the red. There&rsquo;s a chasm of difference between an unincorporated town and a town of 10,000 or 50,000 people. &ldquo;<a href="https://medium.com/afrosapiophile/does-listening-to-country-music-radicalize-people-4bd16d7d06cf" rel="noopener">Stadium</a>&rdquo; country music singers don&rsquo;t know what country life is like. Almost everything in their songs is wrong. Media personalities have no clue. Politicians don&rsquo;t know because none of them have ever been there.</p> <p>But I know, and I also know we aren&rsquo;t going to make progress as a society until we make an honest effort to correct the wrongs that nobody wants to see.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/ellemeno/i-know-why-rural-populations-are-vulnerable-to-the-lies-of-tyrants-867ec1ac8f8c"><strong>Website&nbsp;</strong></a></p>