• Peaceful Mayberry

    From Byker@21:1/5 to anon on Tue May 18 17:43:51 2021
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, dfw.general
    XPost: tx.general

    "anon" wrote in message news:8ibaor.50p.19.1@news.alt.net...

    It just dawned on me why Mayberry was so peaceful and quiet

    That's gone the way of Cadillac tailfins and Burma Shave signs. A lot of
    small towns are getting rude awakenings when they find out that the big-city cousins of their token black families ("Honorary Whites") are little more
    than hominids without a shred of conscience. Usually what happens is some urban Welfare slut, after losing a sprog or two to drive-bys or police, will beg a judge to let her send her delinquent gangbanger-wannabe 11-year-old to
    go live with his aunt or grandparents in Smallville, USA, where "traditional values" allegedly prevail. At first it sounds OK, but then more and more of these pint-sized psychopaths get dumped into Mayberry and soon they're
    roaming the streets in packs just like they did in the 'hood. It's easy for naïve whiggers in small, all-White towns to say, "Why can't we all get
    along?" Just wait until some big-city homies are imported and turned loose, which is just what happened in the little Texas town in the story below. I first posted this in 2001 as "Mayberry Discovers TNB":

    A bunch of Dallas yard apes go to live with grandmammy after pappy goes to
    the slammer and mammy OD's on smack. They run the streets wild, entice
    other black kids to act niggerish and turn their school into a war zone, and the White folks pretend not to notice, that is, until a prize horse is found tangled in barbed wire and beaten to death. Eight porch monkeys, aged 8 to
    14, after swimming in a pasture stock tank and harassing the cattle, started chasing this horse, which ran full-tilt into a barbed-wire fence. While it
    was tangled in the wire, the niggers beat it with sticks and finally smashed its head in with rocks.

    Nowhere in this article does it mention race (no names are mentioned because the suspects were juveniles), but the whole story is told in a chapter of "Texas Crime Chronicles" entitled "The Horse Killers." The author said the little shits had three strikes against them from the time they arrived:

    1) They came from broken homes

    2) They lived on the wrong side of the tracks

    3) They were BLACK

    That's all it took. Reading it from a TNB perspective, I'd bust out
    laughing as one example of TNB after another leaped from the page (junkie mammy, prison pappy, bible-thumping grandmammy raising her junkiebitch daughter's crotchmaggots, family members defiantly defending their Baby Crip coonlets, braying -- you guessed it -- "It beez raysizzum," etc.). The author's writing style had me busting a gut with just about every paragraph. Example: During the trial, waiting with their relatives outside the
    courtroom, were a bunch of rug rat niglets running around. They soon found
    the vending machines, which they looted in full view of everyone by
    "sticking their arms into the machines' guts and pulling out bars of candy." LOL.! Four of their horse-killing big bruthas wound up in boot camps.

    If anyone wants to read the whole story, they can find it at Amazon: http://tinyurl.com/ng6rvf8

    This is the only link I could find on this TNB masterpiece, but it pretty
    well sums up the event.... --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    9:05 PM 9/29/1995

    Notoriety thrust upon a quiet town

    Horse's killing puts Silsbee in limelight

    By RICHARD STEWART

    SILSBEE -- Civic leaders dreamed of putting this East Texas town of 6,800 on the map when home-grown weightlifter Mark Henry brings back Olympic gold
    from Atlanta next summer.

    Instead Silsbee made headlines around the world recently as the town where a group of youngsters -- ages 8 to 14 -- were charged with savagely beating a horse to death with sticks.

    "Dallas survived the assassination of John Kennedy," the Rev. Mark Smith
    told a group of about 75 upset parents at a meeting over the horse-killing incident last week. "Memphis survived the assassination of Martin Luther
    King," he said, looking into a phalanx of television cameras from big-city stations. "Silsbee will survive the death of this horse," he said, almost sighing.

    Authorities have yet to decide what will happen to the five boys and one
    girl still in custody for the Sept. 14 beating and killing of Mr. Wilson
    Boy, a 14-year-old quarterhorse owned by high school football coach Charles Woodard. They also haven't decided what will become of three others who allegedly helped chase the horse into a barbed-wire fence.

    Two of the original 11 accused in the crime are under age 10 and could not
    be held. Prosecutors are still sorting through information about the
    remaining three children to determine which may have been involved in the actual beating of the animal.

    Hardin County Sheriff H.R. "Mike" Holzapfel, who used to raise horses
    himself, said authorities have received plenty of suggestions of what should
    be done with the children. "We've heard from people from as far away as
    London, England," he said. One letter to Holzapfel from Maine suggested
    rather crudely that the children be neutered in full view of their parents.

    County Attorney David Sheffield, a former student of the horse's owner, said
    he has gotten letters from people "who want to string 'em up. They suggest
    that since this is Texas, perhaps we should just hang them."

    Because the nine accused are minors, prosecutors plan to charge at least
    some of them with delinquent behavior, specifically felony criminal
    mischief. If the young defendants were at least 15, they could possibly be certified to stand trial as adults, Sheffield said.

    Four of those in custody were already on juvenile probation for a variety of offenses, including burglary and assault, Sheffield said. Juveniles aren't usually sent to Texas Youth Commission facilities until they have gone
    through the juvenile justice system at least three times, he said.

    In this case, however, the offense was so shocking that Sheffield intends to try to have all six sent to TYC centers, boot camp programs, group homes or other programs designed to turn them away from future criminal activity.

    "Something drastic needs to happen to make them realize what they've done
    and change their lives," he said.

    Deputy Sheriff Darrell Werner, who is the lead investigator in the case,
    said the youths still being held were laughing about their actions last
    week. "They showed no remorse," he said.

    And they seemed to enjoy being hauled away from their schools in a patrol
    car, investigators said.

    Neither Werner nor any of the other officials involved in the case have any explanation for why the kids slaughtered the horse. They appeared to just
    run amok.

    The group was not a real gang, just a bunch of kids and neighbors who often played together, investigators said.

    Woodard, 53, has lived in Silsbee since he was 14 and has spent his entire 29-year coaching and teaching career at Silsbee High School. He lives on a
    farm in another part of the community. The young defendants, who attended elementary and middle schools, said they didn't know Woodard owned the
    horse.

    Investigators think the youths were chasing the horse when it slipped and skidded into a barbed-wire fence. The animal became entangled in it, and the youths started hitting the horse, knocking it down, investigators said. They either broke one of its legs or the leg broke as the horse fell down. Then
    some of the group began hitting the horse in the head and on the shoulder. Photos of the dead horse show gaping, bloody wounds in its face. An
    inch-thick stick appeared to have been shoved up one of its nostrils,
    ripping open the lower part of it.

    "This just isn't the kind of thing that happens in Silsbee," said one civic official, who refused to comment on the record for fear that her town would
    get even more bad publicity.

    Indeed, Silsbee appears to be a quiet, clean East Texas town. A group of car dealerships combine their advertising to tout Silsbee as the car trading capital of Texas.

    The town was born near the turn of the century, developing around a sawmill
    and railroad. Tracks from a big railroad yard still go through the middle of the community. Although the big sawmill closed a few years ago, a particle board plant and other active forest industries remain. It has the kind of downtown where the skyline is dominated by church steeples and pine trees
    and there is still a single-screen movie theater. Many residents commute a
    half hour south to jobs in Beaumont.

    The small, but active chamber of commerce has been collecting money for the past three years to help support weightlifter Henry, who holds national
    records in several events.

    "We've never had a YMCA, a Boy's Club or a Salvation Army anywhere in Hardin County," Smith said. A few years ago Smith founded an organization called
    Youth Young Adult Fellowship Alliance (YYAFA).

    The non-profit organization sponsored a summer food program in parks, basketball youth tournaments with area churches and is probably best known
    for a young adult choir that has entertained crowds as far away as the White House ellipse.

    At last week's meeting, Smith urged parents to back his drive to convert an
    old supermarket into a youth activity center that he envisions someday as having a gym, game rooms, a library, lunch counter and even a beauty salon.

    "I think that if this activity center had been open already, this tragedy
    would have never happened and we wouldn't be here tonight," Smith told the group. His group still needs $70,000 to open the center, he said.

    Woodard has kept quiet about his tragedy. Friends say he is saddened by the loss of a horse his family owned for 10 years. He has also suffered financially. Like many residents in rural areas, he raises cattle and horses

    as a sideline. Mr. Wilson Boy was valued at $10,000 and was not insured, investigators said.

    The story of the horse's death has traveled widely among horse lovers via everything from newspapers to the Internet. Woodard has received calls from
    all over the country. He has suggested to some callers that they urge legislators to pass tougher laws against animal abuse.

    Silsbee residents say they are amazed at how much attention the issue is getting. The Rev. Ed Cropp, a Methodist youth minister, said he recently attended a conference in Houston, near the site of a drive-by shooting. He
    said that when other ministers found out he was from Silsbee, they
    frequently commented, "You've really got a problem over there."

    Kountze lawyer Gary Butler, who represents a 10-year-old in the case said,
    "I'm representing one of these kids and I'm representing a man charged with capital murder for beating another man to death with a board. I'm getting
    all these calls about this kid and nobody cares anything about this case in which a man was killed."

    http://www.chron.com/content/chronicle/metropolitan/95/10/01/silsbee.html
    (link now dead)

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  • From MSB @21:1/5 to All on Wed May 19 00:11:41 2021
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, dfw.general
    XPost: tx.general

    There are still some "Mayberry's" ... and "race" has
    little to do with things. It's more the local "take on
    things" - often cultivated for over a century.

    Alas an influx of outsiders WILL kill a Mayberry -
    dilutes the "take on things" to a fatal degree.

    Your best chance of finding a "Mayberry" are
    now in geographically isolated and unpopular
    areas - W.V., parts of Appalachia, Arkansas,
    corners of mountain states - places Yuppies
    and thier bretheren have never heard of or WANT
    to live in.

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  • From Byker@21:1/5 to MSB on Fri May 21 11:09:07 2021
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, dfw.general
    XPost: tx.general

    "MSB" wrote in message news:2e39aglltqp1shu3ct4ujg3klacaoqineu@4ax.com...

    Your best chance of finding a "Mayberry" are
    now in geographically isolated and unpopular
    areas - W.V., parts of Appalachia, Arkansas,
    corners of mountain states - places Yuppies
    and thier bretheren have never heard of or WANT
    to live in.

    And you may not like what you find when you look close enough. Chances are
    when you find a Mayberry, underneath there's a Peyton Place, where everyone
    is held hostage to each other's gossip. Example: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    An Ongoing Feud in Victory Illustrates the Dark Side of Small-Town Life

    By MARK DAVIS

    Norman Rockwell's iconic painting "Freedom of Speech" captures the civility
    of small-town democracy. The painter said he was inspired by a Vermont town meeting — specifically a man who stood up to speak out in dissent while his neighbors looked on respectfully.

    That's not how town meetings have been going down in the Northeast Kingdom
    town of Victory, population 62, for as long as residents can remember.

    During last year's meeting, Walter Mitchell rose and sarcastically nominated his longtime rival, Jan Stanley, to serve on the selectboard.

    "I would like to nominate the most talented person in this room, they got
    all the answers. They have all the answers for years. The only thing I know smarter is my jackass, and I shot him," Mitchell, 63, said, according to meeting minutes. "That person is Jan Stanley."

    Stanley called him "rude," according to the minutes, and declined the
    insincere nomination.

    "I don't regret that statement one iota," Mitchell said during a recent interview in Victory, before hastening to add that he hadn't actually shot a donkey. "That was just a slam. I never hurt a donkey."

    The Northeast Kingdom may look sepia-toned to outsiders, but Victory has
    been torn apart by nasty personal feuds between neighbors who can't even
    recall what precipitated them. While the stakes are laughably small, the
    enmity is huge. The Essex County Sheriff's Department provides security at every Victory selectboard meeting.

    And the acrimony extends beyond the town hall. Members of rival groups have taken out no-trespassing orders against the others. The selectboard chair is convinced that a rival has tapped her phone. Several residents tell stories
    of having pets that they believe were maliciously killed. Almost everyone
    says they have received anonymous, threatening letters at one time or
    another.

    "We're screwed up, basically," former town clerk and treasurer Carol Easter said.

    In the late 1990s, the Boston Globe twice sent a reporter to Victory to document the conflict. Describing Victory as "less Norman Rockwell and more Edgar Allan Poe," the Globe reported on threatening letters, lawsuits, a pet ram that appeared to have been killed and accusations of financial
    shenanigans.

    Two recent skirmishes have intensified the feuding.

    In January, a handful of town officials revoked a tax exemption for a small humane society run by Patricia Mitchell, Walter's wife. Mitchell turned
    around and sued the town, accusing the officials of carrying out a personal vendetta against her.

    This year's town meeting was dominated by news that an independent audit of Victory's books has turned up missing records, undocumented spending and evidence of possible embezzlement from the town, which has a $500,000
    budget. A private accountant told the Victory residents gathered earlier
    this month that she had found "very significant problems" dating back
    several years. Her findings have triggered a new round of accusations and name-calling. Two law enforcement officers were on hand to help control the ensuing debate.

    Essex County Sheriff Trevor Colby said he has lost count of how many times
    his office has received complaints and requests for investigations from Victory. He laughs off most of them.

    "You're talking few people, long-term relationships, families that have been there for years," Colby said. "In small towns, they don't have a ton of supervision of employees, so it's just ripe for accusations." And with about
    25 elected or appointed town positions to fill, nearly half of Victory's residents are involved in town affairs. "The votes to change leadership are
    so close, and the accusations are so fierce," said Colby, "that there's
    times where it gets out of hand."

    Isolation Breeds Contempt

    There are no schools in Victory. No post office, stores, gas stations or churches indicate a town center. A crooked sign on the edge of town
    announces matter-of-factly, "Town of Victory."

    Most residents live on a few dirt roads scratched into Victory Hill, where modest homes provide views of New Hampshire's White Mountains. The other
    area, Gallup Mills, is six miles away and consists mostly of trailer homes, ranging from tidy to crumbling, clustered in a small valley. In between are about 20,000 acres of state-owned forest and bogs. A bumpy dirt road
    connects the two areas.

    Even by Vermont standards, it's isolated. Victory was one of the last two
    towns in Vermont to get electricity. Ambulances take 20 to 45 minutes to arrive, according to residents.

    But neither geography nor socioeconomic status can explain the feud, which everyone interviewed for this article acknowledged has been raging for about
    20 years. No one could say what started it.

    "You see how lonely it is, how out of the way it is?" asked resident Donna Bacchiochi. "The reason we moved here is we aren't social. People in Victory are like that. They don't visit each other, they don't kibitz, they don't do anything like that. It's vicious."

    There are two factions in town: One is headed by Patricia Mitchell— of
    humane society fame — and her husband, Walter, who currently serves on the selectboard. Other members of the "Mitchell Mafia," as a rival refers to
    them, include former road agent Walt Neborsky and his wife, Ruth, who used
    to be the town clerk and treasurer.

    The current town clerk and treasurer, Tracey Martel, is also considered part
    of the Mitchell group, which for years wielded the most influence in town.

    But the power has since shifted so that the other faction — selectboard
    chair Ferne Loomis, town lister Stanley, Sandra Hudson, and former town
    clerk and treasurer, Easter — now holds a majority on the selectboard.

    Not surprisingly, the Mitchell group has a plan to regain power. Its
    supporters have submitted a petition to expand the number of seats on the selectboard, from three to five, in hopes of electing two allies and recapturing the majority. If the petition passes, nearly 10 percent of Victory's registered voters would serve on the town's primary governing
    body — in Burlington, the equivalent would be 4,000 city councilors.

    Victory's residents are pretty evenly split between the two feuding
    factions. Most of them don't have jobs — the selectboard estimates that more than 80 percent of residents are collecting either retirement or disability payments. And many of those who do work are part-time builders or
    contractors. The selectboard meets at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays, which, in a typical Vermont town, would surely discourage citizen participation.

    Victory, it seems, has the opposite problem.

    Fatal Attraction Tactics

    In February, word got out around Victory that Martel was considering a run
    for town clerk and treasurer. She opened her mailbox one afternoon and found
    an anonymous letter.

    "Lady, you have been had," it read, accusing Martel's allies in town of stealing money, burning town records and embezzling from charities. It went
    on to suggest Martel was "joining the ICIS of Victory," misspelling the
    acronym for the Islamic terrorist organization, and her life was about to become "pure hell." It ended by asking Martel, who is married, if she was having sex with a former town official.

    The letter shocked Martel, who had moved from Florida to Vermont the year before.

    By Victory standards, though, it was tame.

    In 1997, Stanley, now 62, was arrested on charges of threatening to burn
    down the home of a political rival — she was placed on probation after agreeing to a plea deal, according to the Globe. Stanley says her statements were taken out of context and that she was a victim of harassment at the
    time.

    Numerous animals — innocent victims in the battle royale — have been less lucky, according to residents: The Mitchells claimed a friend's sheep was strangled several years ago, and they suspect their own dog was poisoned. Stanley said she found her pet cat dead on her porch, with its tail cut off
    and wrapped around its neck.

    Calling the Mitchells "horse thieves," she said they are solely responsible
    for the years of bitter fighting in Victory.

    "The Mitchells are the ringleaders," Stanley said. "They are very devious, hateful."

    In a letter published in this year's town report, Stanley intimated that Patricia Mitchell had misappropriated $1,000 donated by town residents two decades ago by sarcastically thanking her for recently "returning" it.
    Mitchell denied any wrongdoing.

    Stanley is one of two town listers who last year led an effort to raise the Mitchells' property taxes. Patricia Mitchell runs a small animal shelter,
    the Elizabeth H. Brown Humane Society, on a property adjacent to her
    hillside home.

    Town records indicate that both Mitchells served on the town committee that made the decision to exempt the five-acre property, which includes a barn
    for the animals and a house, from taxation. The same records indicate that
    only Walter Mitchell recused himself during the vote. In a recent interview, Patricia Mitchell claimed she did, too.

    At the end of last year, Stanley and other officials ruled that the
    Mitchells' adult son, Walter Mitchell Jr., and his family were living in the home, and that therefore it should not be exempt from taxes. The change
    would cost the Mitchells about $2,000 annually.

    The decision ignited a firestorm.

    Patricia Mitchell sued the town in Essex Superior Court, seeking to have the exemption reinstated. Without it, she said, she might have to close an operation that currently cares for 23 rabbits, 10 goats, a llama, two mini horses, a donkey, 10 chickens, two horses, two sheep and an alpaca.

    Patricia Mitchell argued that their son is a caretaker for the humane
    society and helps with the animals when she is away. Perhaps undercutting
    that argument, she also said that he pays her $700 monthly rent, which represents the largest revenue stream for the private animal sanctuary.

    Records indicate that Stanley and others sought advice from the Vermont Department of Taxes, which advised that the humane society property should remain exempt. They revoked its exemption anyway.

    In interviews, Stanley and her backers called Mitchell a "hoarder" who keeps the animals for herself.

    "Don't give me that crap, that he's the caretaker," Stanley said. "She has
    no more a humane society down there than you or me."

    "Everybody is running around, 'Poor Pat Mitchell,' because the town won't
    help her with her doggy day care," Loomis, 71, said. "They're all her pets.
    We all know it."

    Patricia Mitchell denied that allegation and said that Stanley and others
    are motivated by jealousy of her hilltop home and 200-acre property.

    "Jealousy of anybody who has anything," she explained. "They live in 'shantytown,' that's what they call it." Stanley lives in a trailer.

    While the lawsuit is still pending, Patricia Mitchell won a small victory: During recent town elections, her daughter-in-law, Katrina Mitchell, who
    lives in the contested humane society property, won election to serve as one
    of the town's listers, alongside Stanley.

    The humane society imbroglio was the talk of Victory for weeks, before it
    was overshadowed by events at town meeting.

    'Very Significant Problems'

    Nearly 50 of Victory's 62 residents packed into the one-room town hall on
    March 3. A private accountant, Bonnie Batchelder, rose to speak first. Commissioned by the selectboard to conduct a forensic audit, Batchelder had examined the town's books from 2009 to 2012 and found "very significant problems."

    Hundreds of checks, representing well more than $200,000, had been issued by town officials without invoices or written authorization, Batchelder told
    the crowd. Delinquent tax fees and penalties had been collected from some,
    but not all, residents. Several tax forms are missing. The town computer had been wiped clean, though auditors were eventually able to retrieve some
    data.

    "There's been tons of information missing," Batchelder said. "It goes on and on. No matter how big or small your town is, that's unacceptable."

    Batchelder did not name names, or get into specifics — her final report will be released later this year. Until then, she is in charge of cutting checks
    on behalf of the town. During her presentation, Batchelder did reserve
    praise for the town clerk, Easter. She said that Easter had helped to get
    the town's books into the best shape they had ever been in.

    An hour later, Victory residents voted Easter out of office — and Martel in.

    In the audience was Essex County State's Attorney Vince Illuzzi, who said he had heard rumors of financial improprieties in Victory and wanted to hear
    from Batchelder. Illuzzi acknowledged criminal charges were possible. But he said that, given the complex nature of the allegations, he was withholding judgment until the final audit is released.

    The veteran politician proved a quick study of the dynamics in Victory.

    "There's a lot of animosity between two factions in town, and it's difficult
    to draw any conclusions," Illuzzi said. "Depending on what group you talk
    to, you're perceived as being affiliated with one group or the other."

    Depending on which side you're on, the preliminary findings from the audit
    are either proof of deep-seated corruption — by someone — or evidence of the
    latest vendetta designed to make the other side look bad.

    In an interview, Walt Neborsky said he expects he and his wife will be
    targets of the audit. A contractor, Neborsky managed Victory's roads for
    more than a decade until March 2014, when he got "fed up" with constant hectoring from the Stanley faction. He quit hours before a big snowstorm, forcing the town to scramble to hire a private contractor to clear the
    roads.

    Ruth Neborsky was town clerk and treasurer for 10 years. She resigned in December 2013 after the same group accused her of moving to neighboring
    Kirby, making her ineligible to serve. "I verbally beat her up at town meeting," Stanley boasted, taking credit for Ruth Neborsky's departure.

    In the interview, Walt Neborsky said he and his wife have done nothing
    wrong. "It's bogus," he said. "We did so much for the town for free. They're trying to go after everybody. Jealousy, that's what it comes down to: more money, better cars."

    Had anything illegal happened, Neborsky said, "I think that would have hit
    the papers."

    Ruth Neborsky sounded the same note. "I will never understand hatred," she said. "I have no doubt that in 10 years I made mistakes. But as a far as any willful wrongdoing, absolutely not."

    Walter Mitchell, who is a friend of the Neborskys, has challenged the legitimacy of the audit. He and others have also questioned whether the
    $27,000 expenditure to fund it was properly authorized.

    "I wouldn't be upset if they were doing what's right for the town, but they ain't," Mitchell said. "They're doing stuff to satisfy them, not the town.
    Like this forensic audit ... I think they're spending a lot of money for nothing. I know some records disappeared, but who is to say who did it?"

    Others say the audit report will confirm their long-held suspicions.

    Sandra Hudson, one of the Mitchells' chief antagonists, welcomed a visitor
    to her well-kept trailer home on a recent afternoon.

    Her cats lounged on the sofa, while a fire burned in the woodstove. Hudson served a soup and a sandwich, laughed easily, and constantly fretted that
    her tidy home wasn't suitable for guests.

    But when she began discussing the audit, her manner abruptly changed. Her
    eyes bulged, she started to shake and her voice grew loud. The audit, she
    said, confirmed what her camp had feared for years.

    "The town isn't just corrupt, it's utterly corrupt," Hudson, 62, said. "I
    can't emphasize that enough. Money and power, that's what it's all about."

    Democracy Gone Awry

    Less than a week after Town Meeting Day, the Victory selectboard convened
    while the town was still in an uproar about the impending audit. An Essex County sheriff's deputy, who has become well-known to town residents,
    settled into the back row of folding chairs.

    For the first few minutes, Loomis, the chair of the board, and Walter
    Mitchell took pains to keep their rivalry at bay, and laced their comments
    with plenty of pleases and thank-yous.

    In an interview, Loomis said she tries to speak cautiously, because she has long been suspicious that someone from the Mitchell faction has tapped her telephone: During a selectboard meeting months ago, she said, people were
    heard discussing details of a town project that she had only shared with one person over the phone.

    The crowd sat quietly as the board deliberately went through some procedural matters to start the meeting.

    But the tranquility soon evaporated.

    Discussion turned to whether the town should move from town-meeting voice voting to secret "Australian" ballot. The anti-Mitchell side has labeled the lack of ballot voting a major "civil rights issue."

    Then someone brought up a controversy from years ago, a long-abandoned plan
    to build a new town garage. Voices grew more animated.

    Finally, the audit was mentioned.

    "The town never authorized it," Mitchell said.

    "Yes, they did," Loomis said.

    "No, they didn't," Mitchell said.

    From the audience, Stanley yelled, "It's up to the board," meaning the
    Victory selectboard.

    "I think you should vote for the town instead of your personal interests, that's what I think!" Mitchell said to Loomis.

    "This is just bullshit!" Jan Stanley yelled from the back row.

    Meanwhile, Walt Neborsky and Easter had gotten into their own spat. He dismissively waved his hand at the 70-year-old woman, telling her to "turn around."

    Loomis decided it might be time to end the meeting.

    "This is getting to be a little out of control," Loomis said. "I'm going to close it."

    "You can close it if you want," Mitchell responded. "I'm going to be here
    next time."

    The parties then clustered into their two camps and, after chatting for a
    few minutes, filed into their cars and drove off.

    Back at his home, Mitchell sat at his kitchen counter and insisted that he always tries to stay above the fray. He only speaks, he said, when it's in
    the best interests of Victory, where he's lived for more than 30 years.

    Asked if he could ever envision a time when the hostilities in town might
    end, Mitchell paused for a moment, and then looked his questioner straight
    in the eye.

    "Yeah, I do," he said. "When everybody is dead. Including me."

    https://www.sevendaysvt.com/vermont/an-ongoing-feud-illustrates-the-dark-side-of-small-town-life/Content?oid=2539615


    Also: http://www.anysubject.com/small-town-settings-cute-nostalgia-or-dark-secrets

    https://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/the-challenges-of-small-town-life/

    http://www.realclearlife.com/uncategorized/look-at-the-dark-side-of-its-a-wonderful-life/

    http://www.cracked.com/personal-experiences-2040-5-ways-rural-health-care-half-assed-dance-with-death.html

    https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/11/when-country-music-goes-to-the-dark-side-of-small-town-life/281544/

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