Volodymyr Zelensky offended JD Vance’s Hillbilly sense of honour

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
In a time when no one shuts up about their “trauma”, reading Vance plainly discuss a childhood that truly qualifies as traumatic, while drawing lessons from it and emerging stronger, is a model of American stoicism. Vance’s sympathetic but honest portrayal of his origins shows he’s proud of his culture, yet has been able to overcome its limiting aspects.

Vance’s father was out of the picture for much of his life. His mother was afflicted by drug addiction and poor relationships. The strongest figures in young JD’s life were his maternal grandparents, Mamaw and Papaw. Mamaw was a singular Appalachian matriarch: profane, tough as nails, armed to the teeth, and ready to go through hell for her family.

Hillbillies are known to be fiercely loyal to family and suspicious of strangers. Their inhospitable mountains, foothills, valleys, and “hollers” (hollows), once peopled, were not then re-settled by later waves of migrants like the rest of the United States.

As Vance describes it, in hillbilly culture, no perceived slight to family honour is easily let go.

 
In fairness, while his grandparents did come from Appalachia, they moved away before Vance was born, and Vance never lived in Appalachia. He is not a hillbilly.
 
In fairness, while his grandparents did come from Appalachia, they moved away before Vance was born, and Vance never lived in Appalachia. He is not a hillbilly.
He spent summers there and parts of Ohio is pure hillbilly
 
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