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question everything

(47,476 posts)
Sun Jun 11, 2017, 05:01 PM Jun 2017

Fiestas and Apple Orchards: Small-Town Life Before Trump

Cross posting from editorial & other articles https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016186940

Trump has had a difficult time getting much of his agenda off the ground. But one thing I’ve already seen change under his administration: Immigration law is being enforced more aggressively. Out in rural Pennsylvania, in a county Donald Trump carried with 66% of the vote, this is already having a devastating effect on the economy and culture.

I live in York Springs, a no-stoplight town near Gettysburg, in the middle of what’s known as the South Mountain Fruit Belt. Adams County grows more apples than any other in Pennsylvania and is fourth-highest producer in the nation.. Many people came to Adams County as seasonal apple pickers, and orchards need tending year round, so they stayed. Some became orchard managers, and some started businesses: hair salons and restaurants, grocery stores and landscaping companies.

(snip)

Beautiful as it is, York Springs is the sort of place people leave after they finish high school. When I moved here in 2012, real estate was cheap and abandoned houses dotted the back roads. The town was aging and dying, though Mexican newcomers were already bringing green shoots. Over the past five years I’ve seen a steady renewal. Townspeople have fixed up many old houses and are raising families.

There has been a little tension, but York Springs in recent years has developed a vibrant, intersectional culture, insofar as that’s possible in such a sparsely populated place. Almost anyone might hire Renta Fiestas for a party. There was, until recently, even street life of sorts popping up: a Mexican food truck, children playing fútbol, the occasional interethnic teen couple holding hands at Griest Park.

Now, however, York Springs has become a target for immigration enforcement. Statistics by locality are hard to come by, but an attorney speaking at a community forum last month at the Adams County Agricultural Center said there were at least 15 actions in York Springs during February and March, with many more since, including street arrests and traffic stops that have resulted in detentions. People are held at the prison in the city of York, 25 miles down the road, and the phrase “they took her to York” has become the expression for someone who’s been taken into the immigration system.

This is separating families, and people are living in fear. Children aren’t playing out in the yard any longer. Parents are afraid to leave their homes even to walk their children to the bus, according to immigrants who spoke at the forum. The food truck is gone, and it’s been a while since I heard Mexican pop music.

This stringent enforcement of immigration law is destroying a rich, new rural culture. It’s likely to destroy the economy, too. The orchards generate over $500 million a year, and, one way or another, most of the jobs. But the local growers, many of whom have been operating the family orchards for generations, worry they won’t have enough manpower this fall to harvest the crop.

Sure, a lot of the white folk out here voted for Mr. Trump. Even then, many of them had reservations specifically about his immigration stance. I heard them expressed by Trump supporters in line to vote at the Latimore Township building. Now as we spiral into a local depression that is personal, cultural and economic, a lot of them are going to regret voting for him anyway.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/fiestas-and-apple-orchards-small-town-life-before-trump-1497037405

Crispin Sartwell teaches at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pa.

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Fiestas and Apple Orchards: Small-Town Life Before Trump (Original Post) question everything Jun 2017 OP
William Penn created the Commonweath-what a joke it is bronxiteforever Jun 2017 #1
"Sure, a lot of the white folk out here voted for Mr. Trump...." SAY NO MORE. WinkyDink Jun 2017 #2

bronxiteforever

(9,287 posts)
1. William Penn created the Commonweath-what a joke it is
Sun Jun 11, 2017, 05:18 PM
Jun 2017

Pa GOP or our Pa Nazi Party is about to pass numerous bills to cause more pain to the immigrant communities. They are horrible horrible people.

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