The Truth About American Rednecks
Posted on 12.19.09 by Danny Glover @ 12:22 pm

Frank Borelli, the editor-in-chief of New American Truth, fits the redneck stereotype. He was born and raised in Appalachia and subsisted in part on the food that his family, including a mother who dropped out of high school in the ninth grade, farmed and hunted.

But he knows there is far more to rednecks than the stereotype and is proud to be one:

As I was raised, I was taught that there was nothing derogatory about the term “redneck.” In my family’s experience the term was simply used to refer to hard-working farmers who literally did have red necks because of the time spent working under the sun. Those same farmers were usually quite polite, respectful, and if not well-educated, at least not ignorant or simple.

Sure, there are some uneducated and simple people who are farmers. There are also uneducated and simple people who are secretaries, mechanics, security guards and politicians. That doesn’t mean that all of them are simple or uneducated.

Rednecks — those polite, hard-working folks who earn their living working with their hands under the sun — would be more likely to stop and assist a stranded motorist with a flat tire or overheated car than other folks. Those rednecks know what true hospitality is because they value their home and the family in it more than a great many folks who value their home based on equity or market value. Rednecks might tend toward larger families because they consider every child a blessing delivered by God — and another set of hands to eventually work the farm when they’re old enough.

Well said. And Borelli has much more to say on the topic. Read the whole essay.


Filed under: Hatin' On Rednecks and Rednecks
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Elitist Of The Week
Posted on 12.04.09 by Danny Glover @ 3:08 pm

And the award goes to … the redneck hater behind Questions Of A Biracial Girl, who doesn’t have a clue what it means to be a redneck. By her definition, a redneck:

  • Can only live in the South or Midwest. Wrong. We are everywhere.
  • Must tote a Confederate flag and behave like a hillbilly. Wrong again at least about the Confederate flag. We do like to have some hillbilly fun now and then, but just because elitists don’t like our brand of entertainment doesn’t make it evil.
  • Is “immoral and slutty.” Sorry, those attributes have nothing to do with redneckedness. Obviously Biracial Girl doesn’t follow the news out of Hollywood, New York and Washington.
  • Is “not smart one bit.” I guess that’s why we get invited to testify before Congress about education policy.
  • Have no “class.” You mean like the cultural elites who make fools of themselves on reality television?

We rednecks do have embarrassments among us, but they do not define us. And we refuse to let ignorant elitists like Biracial Girl define us, either.


Filed under: Hatin' On Rednecks and Rednecks
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Kissin’ Cousins
Posted on 11.29.09 by Danny Glover @ 11:25 pm

As a child, I liked to torment one of my cousins by chasing her while singing the chorus to the Elvis Presley song “Kissin’ Cousins”: “We’ll kiss all night. I’ll squeeze her tight. But we’re kissin’ cousins ‘n that’s what makes it all right — All right, all right, all right.”

We were first cousins, rather than distant cousins like the boy and girl in the song, so we fit perfectly the stereotype people have of rednecks. But the truth is, I never knew any redneck cousins, in my home state of West Virginia or elsewhere, who married or had children out of wedlock. It was taboo, and besides, we were way too enlightened.

That was then, and this is now. Kissin’ cousins apparently are so not taboo in the 21st century that they merit coverage in The New York Times — and not in a let’s-make-fun-of-rednecks tone:

While many people have a story about a secret cousin crush or kiss, most Americans find the idea of cousins marrying and having children disturbing or even repulsive. The cartoonish image of hillbilly cousins giving birth to cross-eyed, deformed and mentally disabled children has endured in the national psyche. But even in the United States — one of the few countries in the world where such unions are illegal — marriage between first cousins may be slowly emerging from the shadows.

Although it is still a long way from being widely accepted, in recent years cousin marriage has been drawing increased attention, as researchers study the potential health risks to children of cousins. And the couples themselves have begun to connect online, largely through a Web site called Cousincouples.com, which bills itself as “the world’s primary resource for romantic relationships among cousins,” and is trying to build support for overturning laws prohibiting cousin marriage.

For the most part, scientists studying the phenomenon worldwide are finding evidence that the risk of birth defects and mortality is less significant than previously thought.

I was surprised to learn that more than 10 percent of marriages in the world are between people who are second cousins or closer. But it affirms what I wrote in the essay that inspired this blog: “Rednecks rule in this wacky world we occupy, even in an arena as distinguished as the United Nations.”

And we like to kiss our cousins, too.


Filed under: Culture and Family and Hatin' On Rednecks and Human Interest and Rednecks
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Redneck Musical Moment Of The Decade
Posted on 11.26.09 by Danny Glover @ 9:33 pm

To hear Country Music Television tell it, the term “redneck” began losing its stigma a few years into the first decade of the 21st century, all thanks to a song:

“Redneck Woman,” Gretchen Wilson (2004) — Gretchen Wilson tapped into a vein of country music that no one else sensed was there. That vein was a growing sense of identity by an ignored and overlooked group of women country listeners. Redneck pride soared as a result, for women and then for men, as well. And gradually the term “redneck” itself began to shed the stigma that many people liked to attach to country fans — and to Southerners, in particular.

I disagree. Catchy music aside, “Redneck Woman” wasn’t exactly a boon to the reputation of rednecks. And if the term “redneck” had begun losing its stigma as a result of Wilson’s work in 2004, I wouldn’t have launched this blog in 2008.

We rednecks are maligned as much now as ever, perhaps even more since the rise of Sarah Palin and the angry mob across America.


Filed under: Hatin' On Rednecks and Music and People and Redneck Music and Rednecks
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James Earl Jones Is No Redneck
Posted on 11.24.09 by Danny Glover @ 7:58 pm

I love James Earl Jones as an actor, but when it comes to understanding the state of being redneck, he doesn’t have a clue.

Jones, best known as the voice of Darth Vader in Star Wars and for his roles in the television mini-series Roots and movies like Field Of Dreams, will be playing the role of Big Daddy in London’s production of the play “Cat On A Hot Tin Roof.” He talked to The Guardian about the role and the decision to have a black family as the focal point of the play:

To argue that Big Daddy is written as a “redneck”, a rough and generally rural white southerner, is spurious, as far as Jones is concerned.

“I am a redneck, too. I am a Mississippi farm person. I can be foul-mouthed, I can be inarticulate. It’s just that my neck doesn’t get red. I’ve always felt that I understood Big Daddy more than the average northern-American Caucasian actor.”

Get a clue, Darth Vader. Foul-mouthed and inarticulate does not a redneck make, and certainly not an enlightened redneck. You’re thinking like Rod Dreher and confusing us with “white trash.”


Filed under: Entertainment and Hatin' On Rednecks and People
Comments: 1 Comment

Rednecks Are The Backbone Of America
Posted on 11.05.09 by Danny Glover @ 5:40 pm

So says Barbara Henderson at the religious Web site Prophezine. Here’s a partial list of what it means to be a redneck from her article:

  • Redneck is really just a general term for a group of fine hardworking people. Generally speaking, rednecks have a tremendous sense of humor. They can take a joke, even when it is on them. That is one of the reasons the “You might be a redneck if …” jokes go over so well. Rednecks love to laugh. They know laughter is a strong medicine.
  • Rednecks prefer to look at the world through laughter instead of through self pity.
  • Rednecks do not live within the boundaries of perpetual victimhood.
  • Rednecks are risk-takers, preferring to think outside the box of “socially acceptable behavior.”
    Rednecks have a very strong sense of right and wrong, based on the Biblical definitions of right and wrong.

I have a running list of my own thoughts in the entry “What Is An Enlightened Redneck?

The category “Hatin’ On Rednecks” is another place to go for my reactions to redneck hate in America. It includes a recent rebuttal to an essay by Dallas Morning News writer Rod Dreher.


Filed under: An Enlightened Redneck ... and Hatin' On Rednecks and Rednecks
Comments: 1 Comment

Redneck Shame
Posted on 10.24.09 by Danny Glover @ 6:36 pm

Conservative writer Rod Dreher of The Dallas Morning News is a redneck but doesn’t even know it — or is too ashamed and ignorant to admit it. Listen to how he describes his upbringing in a blog post titled “On Shame, Identity And The South“:

[I]t was a small town; everybody knew everybody else. One of the most admirable things about my mom and dad is that they are not and never have been snobs. They both grew up poor, and worked hard to get into the middle class. Having prospered through middle-class virtues of thrift, self-discipline and so forth, they have firm, clear ideas about morality and propriety. But they get along with everybody, and treat everyone the same. I have literally seen millionaires and rednecks both entertained at my mom and dad’s table, and they both got the same treatment; it wouldn’t occur to my folks to do any different.

That’s a great description of an enlightened redneck, and odds are good that if Dreher was observant enough to see it in his parents, he already has fulfilled his ambition of living up to their standard.

Unfortunately, Dreher also holds to the same kinds of stereotypes about rednecks as elitists. In the same article, he equated the state of being redneck with obesity, racism that in his mind can somehow be made worse by “snarling nastiness,” a “miserable lot” in life, loose and chaotic morals, vulgarity, violence, and contempt for social respectability. Oh, and being raised in the South.

Memo to Dreher: Those people aren’t rednecks; they are what we rednecks call “white trash.”

Rednecks are not, as you think, “people who live chaotic lives, dwell on grievance and resentment, and despise boring bourgeois standards of sobriety, order and respectability.” We are “independent, hard-working, hospitable and honorable people with good values,” just like Dreher’s parents.

We practice law (in not-so-fancy footwear). We testify to Congress about the importance of education. One of us ran for vice president last year.

We also know how to have a good time, whether that means hunting turkeys for honeymoon fun, “fly fishing” with bow-and-arrow or hitting the links in jeans.

And we live everywhere, not just in the South. We are “the backbone of society.”

It’s clear from his article that Dreher is looking for his “inner redneck,” but it’s just as clear from his rhetoric that he hasn’t found it yet. Once he does, he will start writing things like this: “I’ll choose those redneck characteristics I respect and seek to embody, and reject those that really aren’t redneck but rather ignorant, ill-mannered and downright disrespectful.”


Filed under: Culture and Hatin' On Rednecks and People and Rednecks
Comments: 2 Comments

Time For That Pinkie To MoveOn
Posted on 09.03.09 by Danny Glover @ 7:45 pm

President Obama’s loyal worshipers love to play the “redneck” card every time someone dares to passionately disagree with “The One.” They adopted that meme during the “tea party” protests of spring and revived it during the healthcare town halls of summer.

I wear the redneck label with pride, and I wish this country had more of us. At least we’re enlightened enough not to bite the pinkie fingers off our opponents.

The wet starbursts of spattered blood dot the gray sidewalk for a distance of about 30 feet, marking the path the victim took to his car after part of his finger was bitten off and spat into the street by a protester at a MoveOn.org healthcare vigil this evening.

The unidentified victim, who was standing with a small group of people counter-protesting MoveOn.org’s vigil on the opposite side of the street, apparently left the missing part of his finger behind and drove himself to a nearby hospital to seek treatment. The body part was quickly recovered by a fellow counter-protester and delivered to the hospital where it is presumed it will be sewn back on.

We rednecks also don’t beat our political enemies or hurl racial insults at them. And we don’t vandalize the property of our heroes in order to manufacture phony charges of hate by the other side.

Obama groupies accuse his critics of that kind of behavior all the time without any evidence. But the only confirmed reports of illegal and immoral activity in the political arena this year — the only ones you won’t hear from the mainstream media — come from the pro-Obama crowd. Who knew the “change” Obama promised meant losing a finger to a Mike Tyson wannabe?

A proverb familiar to every child comes to mind: “Every time you point a finger at someone else, three more are pointing back at you.”


Filed under: Culture and Hatin' On Rednecks and News & Politics
Comments: 3 Comments

The Confederate Flag Is Not Redneck
Posted on 07.09.09 by Danny Glover @ 6:53 pm

A reader sent this note to The Wichita Eagle:

As long as Wichita continues to exhibit a Confederate flag in its Memorial Park, it will remain an ignorant, redneck city in my mind.

Earth to Kansas: The Confederate flag is not redneck; it’s white trash. There’s a difference, and enlightened rednecks know the difference.

Wichita clearly needs more enlightenment on that score, but don’t tarnish the good name of rednecks everywhere because your city officials remain clueless.


Filed under: Culture and Hatin' On Rednecks and History
Comments: 2 Comments

Put Your Body Where Your Redneck Slur Is
Posted on 06.29.09 by Danny Glover @ 6:07 pm

You may recall that actress Janeane Garofalo made a bigoted spectacle of herself a couple of months ago when she attacked people like me as racist rednecks because we oppose the Obama administration’s out-of-control government spending. Her outburst was as wrong as it was laughable.

Fox News gave Garofalo the chance to recant her false accusations, but she refused to apologize. But the organizers of April’s “tea party” in Dallas are giving her another chance to open her mind. They have invited her to Saturday’s Independence Day tea party in the same city.

Katrina Pierson, the star of Dallas’ first event, extended the first video invitation to Garofalo about a month ago. “[C]ome on down to Texas and join us for America’s Tea Party and celebrate the declaration to which our mission is to protect and preserve.”

Now Tea Party Patriots has released a second video invitation that features not only Pierson and other grassroots activists but also Internet media celebrities like Michelle Malkin and Alfonzo Rachel. “Your bigoted statement, formed in ignorance, slandered all of us when you didn’t know any of us,” one woman says in the clip.

“We suspect that you fear having to confront the reality that we’re not racist at all,” added Rachel, a black conservative who stars in the ZoNation videos for Pajamas TV. “… And it’s not because we’re better than anybody else; it’s because we are everyone else.”

The invitation is sincere, and if Garofalo has any character at all, she will accept it and see for herself that the folks behind America’s tea parties are enlightened rednecks, not racists.


Filed under: Government and Hatin' On Rednecks and News & Politics and People and Video
Comments: 1 Comment

The Problem With Stereotypes
Posted on 05.28.09 by Danny Glover @ 6:29 pm

I spend a significant amount of time on this blog defending rednecks against bigoted and inaccurate attacks from elitists who look down their nose at the common man, and I don’t shy from using pointed rhetoric against the attackers.

If an individual reveals himself as an elitist or a bigot, it’s fair to call that person an elitist or a bigot. But I try not to jump to the conclusion that all people who share some unrelated trait in common with elitists or bigots, like where they live or how they dress, is also an elitist or bigot. That would make me guilty of the same kind of stereotyping I hate to see aimed at rednecks.

Unfortunately, rednecks are as susceptible as anyone to repeating stereotypes. That happened in Tennessee this week when the Shelbyville Times-Gazette ran a story about an international convention for “geocachers,” people who use global positioning systems for outdoor treasure hunts.

Several people who reacted to the story online ridiculed the people at the convention as hippies and geeks, and a local columnist chastised them for the stereotyping:

I don’t understand why people feel the need to ridicule something simply because it isn’t something they are interested in. I would rather chew glass than sit through a NASCAR event, but you don’t find me throwing out comments such as “beer-guzzling redneck.” Of course, that may be because I know a lot of NASCAR fans who aren’t beer-guzzling rednecks.
(more…)


Filed under: Culture and Hatin' On Rednecks and Rednecks and Technology and West Virginia
Comments: None

Defined By The Intolerant Left
Posted on 05.27.09 by Danny Glover @ 5:32 pm

Supreme Court wannabe Sonia Sotomayor once implied in a speech that she is better qualified to be a justice than any white male because of “the richness of her experiences” as a Latina woman.

That got me to thinking about how the left, as inspired by the likes of President Obama and Judge Sotomayor, defines guys (and gals) like me. Here’s a recap from quotes in the news over the past year or so:

  • I’m a “typical white person.”
  • I cling to religion, guns and so much more because I am “bitter.”
  • I’m a right-wing extremist because I don’t like a busybody government, want to protect innocent lives and oppose illegal immigration.
  • I’m a “tea-bagging redneck” because I rallied against out-of-control government spending and the inevitable higher taxes to come.
  • And I’m a narrow-minded, white male who lacks a “richness” of experience.

No doubt there are other rhetorical examples I’ve forgotten (remind me in the comments), but the point is that while liberals preach the doctrine of tolerance, they definitely do not practice it in word or in deed. They hold a huge swath of the American populace in utter contempt.

There’s no “hope” for enlightened rednecks in the age of Obama, where “identity politics” is as strong as ever.


Filed under: Culture and Hatin' On Rednecks and News & Politics and People and Religion
Comments: 1 Comment

Goobers Rule The Hockey Roost
Posted on 05.15.09 by Danny Glover @ 8:38 pm

Hockey is a game made for the stereotypical redneck, the kind who loves his sports rough-and-tumble. The players (and the fans) love to fight, and it’s not uncommon to see a few teeth missing. Just take a look at Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin.

You’d think a guy who covers sports for a living would know that and thus would know better than to single out one team as a bunch of “goobers” because they all are. Yet that’s exactly what Dan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe did this week — just before his home team, the Boston Bruins, lost to those goobers from Carolina, the Hurricanes.

Citing an alleged Hurricanes’ scoreboard boast before losing Game 6 at home that “we have won one Game 7 and we will win another, he wrote: “Swell. What a bunch of goobers. Imagine playing at your own rink and seeing a message that basically states that the game you are playing is already over.”

Luke DeCock, a sports writer in Raleigh, N.C., took the slam personally on behalf of all of us rednecks and smacked down Shaughnessy:

How novel. If the Hurricanes are in the playoffs, it must be time for redneck jokes and lazy hack jobs from people like Shaughnessy and Mitch “Moonshine and me” Albom. Shaughnessy left out Mayberry, or we would have had a winner in cliche bingo.

Even if the RBC Center’s Jumbotron crew did make a mention of Game 7 at the start of the third period — I only saw references to another miracle, although I wouldn’t put it past them (see: Mexi-cam) — it’s a pretty big leap from there to using a loaded term like “goobers.” …

Let’s put this away once and for all: terms like “goober” and “redneck,” when used by outsiders as insults, are racism disguised as elitism.

You think we’re a bunch of uneducated, tobacco-chewing hicks? You’re wrong, and we’ve heard it all before anyway. The only ignorance and laziness you expose is your own.

The Hurricanes did one better and upset the top-seeded Bruins in Game 7. Carolina will be playing the Pittsburgh Penguins in the next round.

Shaughnessy and the rest of uptight Boston can eat Goobers at the movies to pass the time instead.


Filed under: Hatin' On Rednecks and Media and News & Politics and People and Sports
Comments: None

The Punks Of Green Day
Posted on 05.15.09 by Danny Glover @ 5:27 pm

As a teenager, I loved most any music that was popular in the 1980s. I listened to a “Top 40″ radio station, which meant I heard everything from pop country and soft rock to heavy metal and rap. But punk rock is one genre that never appealed to me in the least.

That explains why, until I got my latest “redneck” news feed, I had never heard of the band Green Day and its vile 2004 hit, “American Idiot.” The lyrics, too coarse for my linking tastes, hold the average Joe in contempt and decry the “redneck agenda.” Perhaps that’s where Barack Obama got his “bitter” inspiration — well, from there and Jeremiah Wright.

“Punk” is an appropriate descriptor for a band that chose to make its mark by bashing a large swath of the population as “idiots” and “rednecks.”


Filed under: Hatin' On Rednecks and Music and People
Comments: 1 Comment

Gretchen Wilson Educates Congress
Posted on 05.06.09 by Danny Glover @ 6:37 pm

Gretchen Wilson is now an enlightened redneck. That’s what she told a House subcommittee yesterday in testimony about adult education. A school dropout, Wilson earned her general equivalency diploma last year and discussed that experience at the hearing.

Here’s what the self-proclaimed Redneck Woman“ told the panel:

I’m definitely walking around with a little more sense of pride than I’ve ever had because I’m not a part of that statistic anymore I’m able and educated now to hold jobs out there that I couldn’t have before, and I’m able to help my daughter with her homework.

It’s made huge differences, and mostly out there with my fans. What I’ve noticed most is when they come backstage and they shake my hand. … They tell me I’ve inspired them or their brother or their mother who have gone back and gotten their education. …

When you have the opportunity to help people, and you start to see what kind of good your celebrity can do, you start to focus on the things that matter to you. My trip up here today was simply to help people and help people get this good feeling I’ve got about myself.

My former colleagues at CNSNews.com interviewed Wilson after the hearing but unfortunately chose to ask softball questions about her predictions for “American Idol” and her future musical plans. They missed a great opportunity to get a proud redneck’s take on all of the hatred directed at rednecks, including the recent “tea party” bigotry of actress Janeane Garofalo and others.

Watch Wilson’s testimony courtesy of the House Education and Labor Committee:


Filed under: Government and Hatin' On Rednecks and News & Politics and People and Rednecks and Video
Comments: 1 Comment

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