? ? ?????? . , I T M* ?? ?PI" I I ? ?' I., OPINION The Chronicle Ernest H. Pitt Publisher Emeritus 1974-2015 617 N. Liberty Street 336-722-8624 I 41 \ www.wschronicle.com Elaine Pitt Business Manager Donna Rogers Managing Editor WALI D. PlTT Digital Manager Our Mission The Chronicle is dedicated to serving the residents of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County by giving voice to the voiceless, speaking truth to power, standing for integrity and encouraging open communication and lively debate throughout the community. This is a way village works on literacy While students and parents get ready to go back to school, members of the community are helping out. Back-to-school giveaways abound. But one member of the community is Blinking as a member of the village, trying to help raise the children. Andrew Snorton, a Wake Forest University alumnus, will celebrate his birthday this month, and he is planning a party of sorts. He is inviting the community. He will coordinate a program called "The Literacy Project" to take place on Saturday, Aug. 27, from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Malloy-Jordan East Winston Heritage Center, 1110 E. Seventh St. in Winston-Salem. Snorton says he wants to push and encourage students in grades K-12 and adults to embrace and improve their consistency with reading. n s some thing I want to do as it ties in with my birth day," which is Aug. 31, Snorton said. "I've always done a commu nity service and outreach piece when celebrat ing my birth day; this year, my focus is on the encouragement of reading, as it truly is a powerful means of learning." As part of the program, group readings will be conducted to help demonstrate and model the over all importance of reading. He asks that those who attend the program bring a book. He has a list of the kinds he would like to see. Or, people can donate a gift card from a local bookstore in an amount ranging from $8 to $31. The emphasis on books doesn't stop there. Any books that are not picked up during the book exchange will be donated to a local school or schools, library or other community-based organiza tion. (See story on page B8.) This is a novel idea to help spread readership. Snorton realizes how important it is. Who in the village will work with Snorton to help people read? What other ideas are out there to help break the chains holding back people who can't read? Reading is so fundamental that a TV drama fea tured a young criminal who killed the wrong person because he couldn't read the name of a street on a map and got the wrong address of the alleged vic tim. Reading can lead to self-esteem. Reading can open doors. Reading can lead to good jobs. Let's rebuild the village to lead children to the right address: the one that leads to success. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Train track projects improve rail transportation To The Editor: ? I recently enjoyed a unique train ride from Raleigh to Charlotte and back on the American View, an Amtrak car with a special all-glass front. The trip offered me and my fel low passengers a new perspective on the state's rail network and the improvement projects taking place in Lexington and Thomasville. Improving our freight rail service and enhancing rail safety are two important aspects of Governor McCrory's 25-Year Vision for trans portation in North Carolina, and North Carolina's rail system is hard at work on projects that accomplish both. Two of the closed crossings are in Davidson County. Another project, the Thomasville to Davidson Double Track Project, is adding four miles of second track which will let passenger trains to safely pass slower freight trains. The additional track will help reduce congestion, increase reliability and decrease travel time between Raleigh and Charlotte. The project will also improve a railroad bridge over Rich Fork Creek and construct new railroad bridges over Hamby Creek tributary and Abbotts Creek. These bridges will also prevent colli sions between trains and cars. I encourage you to visit NCByTrain.org to learn more about PIP and our state's railroad system. Robert Broome Director of Communications NCDOT Court overrules GOP majority again over maps. Where does it stop? To the Editor: The people of North Carolina have a right to vote in constitutional districts. The federal court ruled today [Aug. 11] that 28 districts in our state are in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution because race was the predominant fac tor in the draw ing of those dis tricts. O u r Republican ? ? majority contin ues to ignore the courts and pass unconstitutional laws. So much so that the court cited that this legisla ture failed to heed the guidance that could have prevented this litigation. Our citizens have again been denied their constitutional rights to vote by Republicans -this time under racially gerrymandered state legisla tive districts. Republican leadership has cost the people of the citizens of the state more than $9 million in legal fees. Where does it stop? Rep. Larry D. Hall Democratic Leader N.C. House of Representatives Note: On Aug. 11, the Fourth Circuit ordered new maps drawn for 28 districts in North Carolina. Hot Hillbilly book: White skins, black masks Bill Ttirner Guest Columnist Those who want to read an extremely rare book that speaks to the similarities between poor whites and poor blacks - especially in this white hot summer of presidential politics, where race and class fertilize the ground on which Donald Trump runs - must read "Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and a Culture in Crisis," by J. D. Vance. Vance, 34, an ex Marine who holds a Yale law degree - through a walk down memory lane paved with the dysfunc tions of his extended white working-class family, whom he calls with a com ical and witty familiarity and warped sense of loyal ty everything from "moun taineers," to "trailer trash," to "rednecks" - opens the view to the demoralized whites to and for whom Donald Trump speaks. Mr. Vance's chronicle jumps between the homeland of his "Mawmaw" and "Pawpaw" in the coalfields of Eastern Kentucky to Middletown, Ohio to where they migrated after WW II - north to find man ufacturing jobs. In the Appalachian heartland of Kentucky and West Virginia - indeed among millions of whites through out America - there is a feeling of powerlessness as their way of life, the advan tages and privileges white ness gave them, is being devastated. With their world of work shattered and their conservative world views called into question, the traditional values, norms. and behaviors of the white working class have devolved into a new code, a new set of self-destnic tive conduct. Elegy reads like Vance is writing about pigeon-holed poor black people in Central Harlem, not stereotyped poor white people in Harlan County, Kentucky or Central Appalachia. It reads like pages torn from Daniel Patrick Moynihan's 1965 dated report, "The Negro Family: The Case for National Action." Moynihan argued more than a half century ago that "the deterioration of the Negro family is thd\funda mental source of the weak ness of the Negro commu nity." Substitute the key words with deindustrializa tion and globalization and you have the tangle of pathology that affects the white working class: fami ly dysfunction, drug and alcohol addiction, crime, and intergenerational wel fare. In the Rust Belt swaths of America described by Vance, life for many work ing class whites is crum bling and disintegrating. "Where's my white privi lege?" "My white life mat ters, too!" "They're taking our jobs!" Mr. Vance does not ask what America is doing for the white working class, but rather he points out what they are doing to themselves. "Hillbilly Elegy" blathes and buries a lot of the victims of a changed America. Vance does not spend much time on the effect of the disap pearance of blue-collar i jobs and what it means to be isolated from the edu cated, elite, and effete, white American main stream. That's something poor black people have also known a lot about for a very long time. The last book about working class and impov erished white people to charge up the air to such a sizzling level was Harry Caudill's 1963-published "Night Comes to the Cumberlands." Will the government's reaction to "Hillbilly Elegy" be the same - a new War on Poverty? I certainly hope not because the War on Poverty that started in Appalachia in 1965 came up with some mirror image skirmishes for urban blacks' way out of their despair and want - Model Cities and Urban Renewal. Those agendas, plans, policies, and courses of action only masked the troubles of disadvantaged whites and blacks. We shouldn't put any more skin - of any color - in those same old poverty programs. In the end, Mr. Vance's funeral song about the white working class reads like the autobiogra phy of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas: in order make his point he badmouthed his own peo ple - blamed the victims. Dr. Bill Turner is a noted educator, writer and thinker who called Winston-Salem home for many years. Reach him at hill-turner? comcast net. 1 1 We Welcome Your Feedback Submit letters and guest columns to let ters? wschronicle .com before 5 pm. Friday for the next week's publication date. 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