The TV was on Book TV and I was basically ignoring it. UNTIL, I heard the speaker make a statement to this effect, ‘Our society as a whole is moving dangerously close to the same type of thinking we see in the South.’
That got my attention, my ears perked up. I even left the computer for a moment and went over to another chair in the room to listen to what this guy was saying.
Richard Florida, a professor of some sort, was lecturing on his book, ‘The Flight of The Creative’.
He made statements like, ‘Conservatives are frieghtened of creative people.’ ‘Creative people need to come together to educate the conservatives and the southerners to broaden their minds.’ ‘Conservatism equals fearful.’ etc.
By Golly Gezz. We sure are ignorant.
Being from the South, I have known that for a very long time. There are two incidents that stick out from my childhood that were light-bulb moments when I realized that we, as Southerners, were different than the rest of the nation. And, more importantly, that we were inferior.
The first time was when I was 7 or 8 years old. My father had taken us on a trip ‘up north’. We were in Pennsylvania on a beach and I remember my father had given us some money to buy a coke from a vender there. I went up to the vender and ordered a ‘coke’. He acted like he couldn’t understand me. I repeated myself. He still couldn’t understand. I said it again. He said I didn’t talk right. I remember feeling humiliated and confused.
I went to my father crying. My father went to the vender and said something (I don’t know what). The vender got all red-faced and mad looking and I got my coke. My father told me the guy couldn’t understand perfectly good English and it wasn’t my fault. He told me that guy didn’t talk right, not me.
The other time was in an English class in elementary school. I remember the teacher was teaching us to diagram sentences. She was a stickler for doing it correctly and for speaking properly. We all moaned and groaned when she told us to do it again and again until we did it correctly.
One day, she explained.
She told us that Northern schools were better than Southern schools. She told us that Northerners think they are smarter and better than us. She told us that we must speak properly and learn and be well educated because it was up to us to not be the sterotype we were painted to be.
I remember her little talk to us well. It was the first time I understood that we were different and inferior to our northern brothers.
I have seen proof of this repeatedly throughout my life, especially as an adult. It would take a book to write all the incidents and nuances down.
Mr. Richard Florida of the Creative Class is not the first to use Southern synonymously with ignorant, backward, racist, close-minded, stupid and/or well, NON-creative.
For the record, I have an education (higher education), I come from a family of well educated people, I have all my teeth, I wear shoes, and we have inside toilets.
So there.

Must be all those Southern presidents we had, like Carter and Clinton.
LOL!!
Very funny Norma!
That is SO true. Of course, the media constantly perpetuates this idea. Whenever there is some news making event that takes place in the south they always find a person with the most profound ‘twang’ in their speech, murders the english language and DOESN’T have all their teeth.
There are many of us here in the Southern part of the country who can put more than two words together in a sentence and who can speak intelligently and have a full set of teeth.
We southerners need to unite and show the world that we be smart and we’uns don’t much like being made fun of.
I heard that, Jane! It’s off the chain, if’n u no whut I meen.

Ain’t that the truth.
Whew… sounds like someone needs a higher education in diversity training. I teach people ( believe or not)how to get along with each other and to understand and appreciate differences. Mr. Richard Florida of the Creative would have flunked the class.
Thank you Empress and Eastern Gal. He apparently appreciates diversity as long as it isn’t Southern or Middle American or Non-Creative or …. well the list goes on and on!
How did I miss this post yesterday?! I lived in Chicago for two years and was appalled at how some people acted when they heard my southern accent. Apparently, it is okay to openly mock a southern accent while few would dare make fun of people from other areas of the country. Truly -bank tellers, grocery store clerks, even a pest control inspector - they all felt perfectly entitled to comment negatively about my accent.
I got over my anger, though, because I realized that it was an indication that their talk of diversity and tolerance was just that - talk. Plus, it demonstrated their ignorance of the truth.
Carol - what is ‘the truth’? lol