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"The values Midland holds near to its heart are the same ones I hold near to my heart ..." - George W Bush MIDLAND, Texas - God is everywhere. The First Baptist Church. The Universalist Church. The First Presbyterian Church. The First Methodist Church. Even the Cowboy Church ("a new way to experience Jesus!").
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To have and have not...
The Midland ruling class, strictly WASP (white Anglo-Saxon Protestant), lives spread out around Golf Course Road: impeccable suburbia, manicured gardens, a flag and a sport-utility vehicle (SUV) in every home, a protected universe enveloped in blissful harmony the secular middle class in Baghdad cannot even dream of. A TV highlight is the new ad for the US Marines ("The Few. The Proud"), a mix of Iwo Jima iconography with some cool Tom Cruise-in-Mission Impossible rock climbing.
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At a filling station on the wrong side of town - with people visibly worried about the rising price of gasoline - a young black man put some things in perspective: "You should know that West Texas was the last place in the US where they were forced to admit that racial segregation was against human rights." In his book Made in Texas, Michael Lind, a researcher at the New America Foundation in Washington, writes that George W Bush grew up in West Texas and absorbed popular Texas culture as much as the world vision of the members of the WASP elite. But "all the western imagery of the Bush ranch" should not deceive anyone, he says: "Midland, Crawford and Waco are not in the Great West, but in the Deep South, the most racist and most reactionary."
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For the ruling class, life in Midland entails a job in the oil business, a marriage in the early 20s, at least four kids, a couple of SUVs and church every Sunday. Cultural life is sketchy. In early April there's a "Family Literacy Style Show" at the Petroleum Club. Early this month there was the Texas Gun and Knife Show. In mid-December there's The Nutcracker by the Midland Festival Ballet. There are a couple of mediocre art galleries. There's not a single bookshop - which may lead cynics to explain why, when he was about to invade Iraq, Bush still didn't know the difference between Sunnis and Shi'ites. A football match between the white collars of Midland and the blue collars of neighboring Odessa passes for a major cultural event, but not as much as the staggering mutual hatred. No nightclubs, no lap dancing in Midland. Roughly there's absolutely nothing to do except pray to the Lord. To have some fun, one has to drive 300 miles (about 480 kilometers) west to El Paso or 315 miles (507km) east to Austin. Moral certainty is Midland's main currency. Smiling residents are not terribly upset by the sexual-humiliation scandal at Abu Ghraib prison - as they were upset by Bill Clinton's White House oral sex, a Sodom and Gomorrah antic so despicable that the nation simply could not survive unless the sinner was expelled from his job. Baptist, Episcopal, Presbyterian Midlanders manifest "disapproval" of what happened in Iraq - and no more. Meanwhile, with the United States totally polarized on key issues concerning religion, race and marriage, George W Bush continues to use his Evangelical Christian credentials very effectively to attract voters - at least those who go to church every Sunday.
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