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question everything

(48,815 posts)
Sat Jan 22, 2022, 12:00 AM Jan 2022

How Minnesota Went From Tom Sawyer to Huck Finn - WSJ op-ed

I wrote an August 1973 cover story for Time magazine that praised Minnesota as “the state that works.” The cover photograph showed Gov. Wendell Anderson, dressed in a plaid flannel shirt, grinning and holding up a northern pike that he had just caught in one of Minnesota’s 12,000 lakes. The story began with this archaic rhapsody: “It is a state where a residual American secret still seems to operate. Some of the nation’s more agreeable qualities are evident there: courtesy and fairness, honesty, a capacity for innovation, hard work, intellectual adventure and responsibility. . . . Minnesotans are remarkably civil; their crime rate is the third lowest in the nation (after Iowa and Maine).”

Almost 50 years later, I received an email from an old friend who lives in Minneapolis. He began: “Another report from the hinterland. The people of Minneapolis now share online updates of carjackings and other crimes. It would be difficult to exaggerate the extent of violent crime throughout the city. Everyone now knows someone who’s a victim. This will be a huge issue in this year’s elections.” More than 650 people were shot in the city last year; 95 died—just short of the city’s record. There were more than 2,000 robberies. According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, carjackings in the city rose 537% from November 2019 to November 2020, and then rose another 40% in the 10 months after that.

What happened? Minnesota once enjoyed a high degree of social cohesion rooted in the traditions of previous waves of immigrants. But as the region has grown and become more diverse, the Twin Cities in particular developed most of the problems that bedevil much of the rest of urban America (crime, unemployment, drugs and so on). The reasons for this are complicated and widely debated. In any case, Minnesota now ranks among the worst states in the country when it comes to racial inequality.

(snip)

The great crisis came amid the pandemic. George Floyd died in a gutter outside Cup Foods under Derek Chauvin’s knee. There was endless video of that and all that followed. The summer of 2020 followed. Black Lives Matter emerged. The progressive mayor of Minneapolis abandoned a police precinct and allowed the mob to loot and burn it. George Floyd was declared a saint. Mr. Chauvin, damned as the devil who murdered the saint, was cast into prison. Minneapolis cops left the force in droves and the ones who remained stood down, reluctant to risk any new incident.

(snip)

The difference between my 1973 story and the news reports of 2022 amounts to the difference, as it were, between Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. Tom gives you the boyish, innocent, sun-shot rendering of Hannibal, Mo., in the middle of the 19th century. Huck’s story is the version of America that includes poverty, murder, alcoholism, child abuse, race prejudice, blood feud and imbecility. Minneapolis today looks a little more like the Huckleberry Finn version, although without Huck’s humor or his rascal charm.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/minnesota-went-huck-finn-derek-chauvin-george-floyd-black-lives-matter-riots-shooting-crime-11642800141 (subscription)

====

Obviously biased, but, no doubt, will be talked about.

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
How Minnesota Went From Tom Sawyer to Huck Finn - WSJ op-ed (Original Post) question everything Jan 2022 OP
'Urban America' code for black. Mankato sight of cbabe Jan 2022 #1
Oh, yeah, it was paradise in 1973... for white people. n/t TygrBright Jan 2022 #2
Blaming crime on diversity iemanja Jan 2022 #3
I always blamed that Time article "The Good Life in Minnesota" dflprincess Jan 2022 #4
Carjacking is a real problem. You don't need Nexdoor, the strib is full of this question everything Jan 2022 #6
Minnesota has a long history of racial inequality geardaddy Jan 2022 #5
And a reply from Mankato question everything Feb 2022 #7
I hardly recognize my home state anymore usajumpedtheshark Mar 2022 #8

cbabe

(4,166 posts)
1. 'Urban America' code for black. Mankato sight of
Sat Jan 22, 2022, 12:14 AM
Jan 2022

largest mass hanging in US where 38 Dakota men were lynched in 1862.

Writer seems to be yearning for fairy tale white past that never was.

iemanja

(54,793 posts)
3. Blaming crime on diversity
Sat Jan 22, 2022, 01:59 AM
Jan 2022

Is an ugly lie. The city was diverse long before the crime wave. Fuck these people and their nostalgia for slavery— because that is what the author laments the loss of in their reference to Tom Sawyer.

dflprincess

(28,475 posts)
4. I always blamed that Time article "The Good Life in Minnesota"
Sat Jan 22, 2022, 10:53 PM
Jan 2022

for attacting all sorts of riff-raff to the state who want the "good life" but whine about paying the taxes to keep it good (and by riff-raff I mean conservatives).

Has crime increased? Yes. But sites like Nextdoor make it seem worse. There is stuff that goes on in my little corner of Minnesota that I would never have heard about if it wasn't for the internet. There has always been vandalism, there has always been thefts, and now we can hear about every incident making it seem worse than it is.

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question everything

(48,815 posts)
6. Carjacking is a real problem. You don't need Nexdoor, the strib is full of this
Mon Jan 24, 2022, 01:55 PM
Jan 2022

2 teens charged in alleged metrowide carjacking wave

For nearly two weeks in January, authorities say, Kashawn Wertman and Nautica Argue terrorized several dozen vehicle owners during a carjacking spree in 15 cities over three metro counties.

Carrying guns, the two committed the crimes in driveways, motel parking lots, at schools and day cares and against food delivery workers, according to felony criminal complaints filed Friday in Hennepin County.

Argue, 19, and Wertman, 18, were arrested Tuesday in St. Paul after fleeing from sheriff's deputies in a stolen Audi.

Wertman told police he got the car from a friend and didn't know it was stolen. He then told the officer they should be out arresting murderers and not car thieves, the complaint said.

https://www.startribune.com/police-bust-2-teens-alleged-large-carjacking-ring/600138340/

geardaddy

(25,346 posts)
5. Minnesota has a long history of racial inequality
Mon Jan 24, 2022, 12:58 PM
Jan 2022

Minneapolis is and has been one of the most racially segregated cities in the country for a loooong time.

question everything

(48,815 posts)
7. And a reply from Mankato
Mon Feb 14, 2022, 10:41 PM
Feb 2022

In a letter published today in the WSJ:

Lance Morrow’s “How Minnesota Went From Tom Sawyer to Huck Finn” (Cross Country, Jan. 22) and subsequent letters (Feb. 5) paint the state of Minnesota with a broad brush based on a one-sided view of Minneapolis and St. Paul. Minnesota is very large, about the size of the U.K. While events in the Twin Cities make national news, there is so much more to our state than Mr. Morrow implies.

Living about 80 miles southwest of the Twin Cities, I find that Mr. Morrow’s 1973 description of Minnesota is still accurate: “courtesy and fairness, honesty, a capacity for innovation, hard work, intellectual adventure, and responsibility . . . remarkably civil.”

Minnesota’s violent crime rate is still lower than the national average. Gov. Tim Walz, a longtime member of my church, still wears plaid flannel shirts, goes fishing and visits with farmers. He is also hardworking and “remarkably civil.”

To blame our state’s challenges on the “white elites” and “the left” is too simplistic. Minnesota is not alone in experiencing a trying time during this pandemic. The country is still floundering in the aftermath of the former golfer-in-chief, who taught us that boorishness, disrespect and name-calling were acceptable forms of public discourse. I invite Mr. Morrow to visit our beautiful state and experience our signature “Minnesota nice” with an open mind.

Nancy Armbruster

Mankato, Minn.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/minnesota-is-still-nice-11644770251 (subscription)

usajumpedtheshark

(673 posts)
8. I hardly recognize my home state anymore
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 10:17 AM
Mar 2022

I was born in the '60s and left the state in 1982 to attend college. I haven't been able to make sense of what has been happening there since they decided it would be a great idea to have a professional wrestler as a governor.

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