On my usual walk for exercise, I stopped off at the 7-11 about a mile from my house. After picking up a few packs of Lifesavers, something I can't bear to be without since quiting smoking nine years ago this month, I meandered over to the cash register to pay for the mints.
Standing in line waiting to buy a pack of Lucky Strikes, low menthol, was a robust 40th something creature with a shaved head. He was covered with tattoos from chin to toe.
"Let me get a lottery ticket,too" he told the cashier who, by the way, is from Belgrade.
His other feathered friend, with the spiked hairdo, moved closer.
"Yeah," he continued, "I'm what you call white trash," he turned rather emphatically to look at me after his announcement.
"Excuse me," I said, "were you talking to me?"
"You heard me----white trash, sister."
"Is there an "h" in the word white," I asked not without curiosity.
He laughed.
"You know," I said, "it's very upsetting to hear people refer to themselves in the pejorative."
He turned to me, and said, emphatically:
"I'm trash, and proud of it. Besides, you look like the kind who gets upset easily, sister."
He managed to get my dander up with that one, so I looked at the cashier, the gent from Belgrade who, by this time, was laughing.
"Okay," I said "you've convinced me."
He scratched out his lottery ticket, grabbed his pack of cigarettes, and headed out to a predictable pick-up truck replete with barking dog, and scattered beer cans.
"The dude was right in the first place" I told the cashier who shook his head and laughed.
What I can't figure out, for the life of me, is why anyone would be proud to be called trash? Could it be a kind of populist revolt against those who are well-schooled, refined, sophisticated, and maybe not as white as they are? Maybe not as mighty white as they are. Maybe "trash" is a euphemism for white supremacy, but what a bizarre moniker.
"We all come to look for America," said my Belgrade friend, "but nobody can find it anywhere."
About Jayne
Connections
View all »
Causes Jayne Stahl Supports
Free Speech, human rights, and abolition of the death penalty.








I Smell A Short Story...
...titled, "Looking for America."
Good post.
I'd like to track those guys down and interview them. Find out what makes 'em tick. What their family life was like.
We ignore them at our risk, Columbine and Newtown being examples.
The first elementary school shooting I'm aware of in the US took place in Stockton, California, in 1989. Here's some Wiki-background: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_School_massacre
been done...
Paul Simon wrote the song, and the story, Monty, but thanks for the compliment.
Columbine and Newton have nothing to do with these creatures. These fellas are strictly trailer park, and there are way more of them than there are folks who commit mass atrocities.
You're right about one thing. We can't ignore them because they won't allow us to. These are the folks who burn the president in effigy, go home, shave their heads, and use swastikas for toothpaste. They're growing in numbers not because they are the exception, but because they have always been a part of the twisted fabric of this country from the antebellum south to eighty miles outside of Los Angeles.
The movie "Lincoln" is a timely one indeed. We're in a civil war now, and the elements who want to disenfranchise 98% of us to keep power and money in their hands are winning, and pitting brother against brother. To think the guys I describe here are examples of the kinds of psychopaths who committed the atrocities at Columbine is to miss the central point. We are a country founded by criminal refugees, a nation of farmers who prospered at the expense of slavery, and whose heirs would like to return to the days of the confederacy. That's where their pride in being "white trash" really comes from---white supremacy. This is a cancer that strikes at the heart of this country.