Why we should worry about Vance's shifting allegiances
By Michelle Goldberg / The New York Times
In Hillbilly Elegy, the 2016 memoir that made J.D. Vance a celebrity, he described constantly remaking his childhood self to fit the rotating cast of father figures his unsound mother brought into their lives. With Steve, a midlife-crisis sufferer with an earring to prove it, I pretended earrings were cool; so much so that he thought it appropriate to pierce my ear, Vance wrote. With Chip, an alcoholic police officer who saw my earring as a sign of girlieness, I had thick skin and loved police cars. With Ken, an odd man who proposed to Mom three days into their relationship, I was a kind brother to his two children.
Vances yearning for a father is a constant theme in the book, as is his willingness to rationalize the flaws of the men he looks up to. At one point, he is reunited with his biological father, who gave him up for adoption when he was in kindergarten. The women in Vances life not just his mother, but also his beloved sister, grandmother and aunt told him that his dad had been mean and abusive, but he doesnt believe it, preferring to think that there had only been a bit of pushing, some plate throwing, but nothing more.
His father was a devoted Pentecostal, and for a time Vance gave up his Black Sabbath CDs and became one, too. Im not sure if I liked the structure or if I just wanted to share in something that was important to him both, I suppose but I became a devoted convert, he wrote.
Devoted convert may be the role he inhabits most naturally. In 2016 Vance speculated that Donald Trump might be Americas Hitler. Now hes his running mate. A lot has been written trying to understand Vances ideological journey, but at least part of the story seems to be hiding in plain sight in his book. In attaching himself to the most bellicose patriarch he can find, hes reenacting a childhood pattern.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/goldberg-why-we-should-worry-about-vances-shifting-allegiances/
Vance has flipflopped more than a fish out of water.