JD Vance's Ohio hometown struggles with how to recognize the incoming vice president

鬼百合

One day we will wake to his obituary :-)

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) — It was a month after her son's election as vice president of the United States and JD Vance 's mother wondered why the city of his birth had yet to recognize him.

“I just think it would be really nice if we could acknowledge that this is his hometown and put up some signs," Beverly Aikins told the city council in Middletown, Ohio, where she and Vance's sister still live, in early December. "He graduated from Middletown High School, comes back here frequently to visit me and take me to dinner, and I humbly request that.”


Perhaps in another historical moment, a few signs would seem like a no-brainer, but not this year and not for this person. The council was, instead, divided.

Many residents of this Midwest steel town are bursting with pride at their native son's accomplishments. But others feel lingering embarrassment over Vance's unflattering portrayal of Middletown in his best-selling memoir, “ Hillbilly Elegy ” or trepidation about Donald Trump's second White House term, or both.

The debate played out in the city's high-ceilinged council chamber, where subdued backlighting gives the room a Starship Enterprise aura. One council member suggested naming a street for Vance. Another suggested a statue of Vance's beloved Mamaw, the grandmother who raised him. A third tried to slow her colleagues down.

“I’m thinking, what’s the rush?” Jennifer Carter said. “If he gets in office and creates havoc, with him and Trump sending the people out of the country, all of the things that they have said that they wanted to do, if all of this stuff happens, we’re still saying, ‘Yay!’? I’m trying to understand.”


Colleague Steven West offered a counterpoint.

“To say, hey, there’s going to be a city where a young man had a lot of struggles, overcomes all of those and becomes vice president, and the city doesn’t recognize it — regardless of political party affiliation, you would scratch your head and go, ‘What? What’s going on?’” he said. "And that’s how polarized this country is.”
 
No one named JD Vance ever lived in Middleton, Ohio. He was born James Donald Bowman, and later his mother changed his name to James David Hamel. Hamel left Middleton after high school. Around when Hamel was 30, he decided to change his name again to JD Vance. He blames his constant name changes for no one remembering him, but I blame his inability to connect to people. Vance lacks empathy. He can superficially imitate empathy, but when people are in close contact with him, they realize there is no one there.
 
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