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I grew up in a small town surrounded by family farms. My dad, an insurance adjuster who had fulfilled his goal of workplace independence by buying a small agency, would travel the countryside to visit "insureds" and, when necessary, take Polaroid photos of storm damage. On summer days, I'd go with him.
One such day 49 years ago this August, we were parked on the side of a gravel road when a jet flew overhead. "Maybe that's the president's plane," Dad said, referring to Richard Nixon, who was flying away from the nation's capital following his resignation. I realize now that a direct route from Washington to California would not have taken Nixon over southeastern Minnesota, but the hormones that kick up general doubt about the genius of one's parents had yet to kick in, and I was duly impressed. Some fictions are intoxicating to believe.
(Why am I relating this story as we approach the 49-year anniversary of Nixon's resignation, you pause to ask? Well, I wasn't going to wait for a round number. That would be predictable, as you'll discover in August 2024.)
I wasn't in touch with Washington or Watergate in 1974, at age 7, but I'm going to guess we were a Nixon household. We'd go on during my coming-of-age years to become a Ford household and a Reagan household. These are good clues.
A few years after the Nixon "flyover," in 1976, our third-grade teacher had us tape placards to our desks indicating "Ford" or "Carter." (Could such a thing still happen in a classroom?) I was astonished to find my Republican-flavored signage underrepresented. (Could such a thing still happen in rural Minnesota?) But that was because I was new to the understanding that ideas were things to be contested.
There's a reason I'm telling you this story. It's not because I live in a big city now and wish to relate a political transformation. (Although I have been, within limits, as in sync as anyone with our country's Great Sorting, in which what we believe is connected to where we live and vice versa).