[For this year’s
annual post-Charlottesville-trip series, I wanted to share tributes to various
folks who were important influences during my Cville years. Leading up to this
special weekend post on a peer of mine who’s aiming to become a Cville influence
in 2019!]
On the 2019 political
campaign of a Cville peer.
As a kid growing
up in Charlottesville, I can’t say I ever gave any thought to the City Council
or its members (not surprisingly I suppose, given that I was just a kid and one
without any particular political ambitions). But in recent years, thanks
largely to the ongoing controversies
over the city’s Confederate statues, the City
Council has become a focal and famous topic of conversation and debate. Particular
Council members like Wes
Bellamy and Kristen
Szakos have become nationally known figures, linked not just to the statue
debates but also to related and equally fraught issues like insiders/outsiders,
Cville products vs. “carpetbaggers” (yes, I have seen that exact
Reconstruction-era term applied to non-Cville-born Council members like
Szakos), race and representation, personal
scandals, and more. In 2019, it’s difficult to imagine that any person with
ties to Charlottesville—those of us who no longer live there just as much as
those who do—doesn’t have some perspective on the Cville City Counil.
Having a
perspective is one thing, but running for Council is a whole ‘nother level, and
that’s what my Charlottesville High School classmate (and current Facebook
friend, in interests of full disclosure) Bellamy Brown is doing. A
former Marine and current local businessman, Brown is running as an
Independent, focusing so far on a couple of key messages: an emphasis on Cville’s
African American community, representation, and related issues (which Brown
argues both political parties have largely ignored or failed to address); and
an attempt to move beyond partisan politics and focus on practical goals and
efforts that will benefit not just particular communities like that one, but
all the city’s residents. Hopefully I’m not misrepresenting Brown’s platform,
about which he has a lot more to say in the above hyperlinked interview and
which I’m sure will continue to develop and evolve ahead of the November
5th General Election.
I’m not writing
this post either to endorse Brown’s candidacy or to oppose it; obviously this
blog has in recent years come to include contemporary politics more fully than
it did back in 2010, but that’s still a bridge significantly further than I’m
willing to go in this space. Instead, I wanted to highlight Brown’s campaign as
one more way that my
Cville cohort have become hugely influential in a number of social and
cultural arenas. Besides the authors highlighted in that Beach Reads series, my
peer group/class alone features prominent musicians and musical
artists and performers,
an up-and-coming cider brewer,
and a well-known advocate for
sustainability and post-carbon human society, among many others. If I was
influenced throughout my young life by all the figures I’ve highlighted in this
week’s series (and many more besides), as an adult I find myself influenced and
inspired instead by my peers, from my Cville cohort and from around the nation
and world. Brown’s City Council bid is one more impressive way that we’ve
become the 21st century influencers we are.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Influential
people you’d highlight?
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