Beginning with a trip to Crater
Lake in 2016, followed by our eclipse trip in 2017,
and ending this spring with a road trip to Portland and Seattle, I have had a
bit of the grand tour of the state of Oregon. The combination of the trips gave
me an interesting view of a state which is deeply politically divided, and
seems in some ways to be a microcosm of the nation as a whole. I actually wrote
some of this back in 2017 after the eclipse trip, but put it aside. Our trip
this year really brought home to me the contrast, and I decided to write a bit
about it.
Oregon
has an...interesting history with race. To be blunt, Oregon has a long
history of excluding African Americans. Way back to the 1840s, Oregon had laws which
prohibited blacks from living there. Oregon
entered the union as the only “no-blacks” state. This racism eventually became
enshrined in the state constitution. While the 14th Amendment effectively
overruled it, the clause remained on the books until 1926. Oregon
didn’t acknowledge the right of blacks to vote until 1959.
It didn’t ratify the freaking 14th Amendment until...wait for it...1973, nearlt
a decade after desegregation. Furthermore, other racist language in the
constitution was not removed until...wait for it...2002. This contributed to Oregon remaining a very
lily-white state to this day. Only 2% of the population is black, and Oregon remained over 90%
white well into the 1990s. (The last couple of decades, this has shifted quite
a bit, which I suspect has made the eastern - whiter - part of the state very
uncomfortable…) Portland is by a significant
margin, the whitest large city in the US, although this too is changing.
Once you get out of the major cities, though, Oregon is painfully
white. On our eclipse trip, I was really struck by just how white it was. I think we saw a few
latinos working at service jobs, but just a handful. And I saw one black
person. One. At the eclipse viewing site. And he drove up from another state.
During my childhood (and even my adulthood), I have known
quite a few people who moved to Oregon,
typically as part of “white flight.” These days, they tend to go to Idaho, which, outside of Boise, has kind of become THE destination for
white nationalists. (It isn’t an accident that Mark Fuhrman ended up
there. Or that Doug
Wilson has his compound there.) But a few decades ago, Oregon was that destination for conservative
whites fleeing diversity.
I have come to realize that I just feel out of place a bit
in an all-white society. I have never lived in an overwhelmingly homogenous
place. The neighborhoods I grew up in were mostly minority, and Bakersfield is gloriously
diverse, with vibrant hispanic, Filipino, Korean, Sikh, Hindu, and Muslim
communities. I take for granted that I will come in contact with a wide range
of people on any given day, and they aren’t segregated into categories like Latina maid, African
American janitor, etc. I’ll sit next to a Muslim American watching a Mexican
American woman sing a Joe Walsh tune while an older Filipino couple dances.
That’s America
as I know it. So eastern Oregon
just felt, well, weird. And that is before you get to the other challenge,
which is finding food. It is hard to quantify it, but the presence of
legitimate “foreign” food makes everyone up their game. Los
Angeles isn’t just a Mecca
for foods from around the world; the genres cross pollinate and mix and
everything is just to a higher standard. A certain political figure or two may
not realize it, but a taco truck on every corner makes for a better world.
Contrast this with Portland,
which felt much more familiar. Although Portland
is pretty white for a major city, it has growing minority and immigrant
populations, and a gratifyingly broad range of culture - and food. We had an
absolutely fantastic meal at a Lebanese
restaurant, in addition to legit Banh Mi. Go to a park, and there are kids
of all ethnicities, just like in CA.
Portland
is also loudly progressive. We took a walking tour of Bevery Cleary’s
neighborhood (yes, I loved the books growing up), and literally every other
house had a Pride flag (it was Pride Month), a Black Lives Matter sign, or
other signal of pushback against the racism and hatred of Trump and the GOP.
Most common, perhaps, is a Portland
phenomenon that I love: the “In Our America” sign. I have one of these as a
sticker on my trailer.
One of the houses Beverly Clearly lived in as a kid. Note the sign...
Here is the sign. We have a sticker on our trailer. If you want one, you can get them at
Nasty Women Get Shit Done. And you should.
As a Californian, this level of political activity is a bit
foreign. Certainly San Francisco is more liberal
than Portland,
but you don’t see the same quantity of signs. And certainly not in Los Angeles either. (For
what it is worth, Seattle
is also aggressively liberal. At least now that “opposing racism, xenophobia,
and bigotry” has come to mean “liberal.”)
As I was contemplating this, I started to think that maybe
the open activism of Portland (and Seattle) has a bit to do with the way the rural parts of Oregon (and Washington)
are. In contrast to the cities, rural Oregon
has a lot in common with my part of California
(Kern County is known as the “Texas of
California” because of our oil and redneckery.) Except, because rural Oregon is blindingly
white, there isn’t the counterweight.
For example, certain wealthy farmers in my neck of the woods
have giant shrines to Trump. I mean, huge - the size of a city lot. I use the
word “shrine” intentionally, because this is very much idol worship. He is
their god.
Eastern Oregon has the same
thing. We drove by shrine after shrine after shrine. But there was a
difference. Because central CA has a large hispanic (and east and south Asian)
population, there are counterweights. Pro-immigrant signs. Anti-hate signs.
Billboards for Mexican and Indian and Thai restaurants. Spanish and Punjabi
language advertisements. Everywhere you go in California, you will be rubbing shoulders
with people of all colors and origins. It’s a beautiful thing.
Not so much in Eastern Oregon.
Instead, I saw far too many aggressively racist and xenophobic signs to go with
the Trump shrines. (This is not a coincidence.) Without the counterweight to
lend some shame to open bigots, they get to be as loud as they want.
In recent years, this division has become even more stark,
and even troubling. At the same time that Portland (and Seattle - while I don’t
know rural Washington well, I think there are similarities) has embraced social
activism, neo-Nazi groups like the Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer have chosen
Oregon as a sort of headquarters. (Possibly because of the relaxed gun
laws.)
Of interest to me in this context is the fact that law
enforcement seems increasingly sympathetic these days to openly white
supremacist ideas and groups. In the case of Portland, there
is solid evidence of completely inappropriate coordination between far right
groups and the police. Because left-leaning groups doubt that they will be
protected by police, some
are arming themselves. I don’t feel particularly great about this
development - it would be much better if the Proud Boys were treated like the
terrorist group they are, rather than coddled by sympathetic cops. But if you
don’t have that, well…I believe this state of affairs is unsustainable, and
sooner or later, there will be substantial changes in Portland. There is already significant
pushback.
These are basically my impressions from our three trips to Oregon. Obviously, I
don’t live there, and can’t have a truly complete knowledge of the local
nuances. However, I can and have observed what Oregonians themselves choose to
say about themselves. There does seem to be a deep divide, more exaggerated
than elsewhere perhaps, but similar to the divide in our country. In my view,
the divide is exacerbated by the long history of racial exclusion, leading to
large portions of the state with few non-whites. In line with human nature, we
fear and hate most those we do not know. The cosmopolitan and diverse cities
increasingly embrace diversity - racial, ethnic, national origin, and sexual
orientation and gender identity. The rural areas continue to lose their young
people, alienate minorities, and become increasingly angry and bigoted. This is
what we have seen across the country, as rural whites have taken their
legitimate grievances, and turned them into vicious hatred directed at
immigrants and non-whites.
It was an interesting experience visiting. While most places
in California (with the exception of a few
rural counties in northeastern CA that are indistinguishable from eastern Oregon - or even rural Idaho)
feel like home in some way, Oregon
was different. I could absolutely enjoy living in Portland, with its diversity and multiculturalism.
But even Eugene
was disturbingly white, at least where we were. I mean, literally, all the
people at a park concert were white - you would never see that in Bakersfield. And rural Oregon, for all its natural beauty (which is
considerable!) and outdoor opportunities, made California’s
more conservative cities (like Bakersfield)
seem like beacons of progressivism and diversity. I mean, we have our racist
asshats and horrible politicians (hello, Kevin McCarthy, hands down the
absolute worst representative I have ever had), but there are competing voices
too. We had an “unexpectedly large” protest over immigrant detentions, our
women’s march was vibrant and large, and those of us marching have seen support
from our local law enforcement. We may have more than our share of Confederate
Battle Flags flown by redneck dude-bros. But the other voices are louder and
more organized. And, um, “demographics” are changing. Because Bakersfield
(and other cities in the central valley) are affordable by California standards, young people are
moving in. And they aren’t just white either. It is easy to see Kern County
go the way of Orange
County - and turn blue.
In the case of Oregon,
one wonders what the future will hold. It seems like the cities will continue
to grow, and grow more diverse. Will the rural areas wither? Or become more and
more radicalized and racist as they lose influence and power? It will be
interesting to see. It is beyond the scope of this post to discuss the decline
of rural America
- and the ways that it is
committing suicide - but I hope to make that a future post.
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