I endorsed Barack Obama before the primaries because he presents the right vision for this important time in our country's history and possesses the skills and potential for growth to best serve in the office of President of the United States. Please join me.
Opinions expressed on MinnesotaBrown belong to me alone. MinnesotaBrown strives to provide a spectrum of opinions about news and politics in Northern Minnesota. That said, I am active in my Iron Range community and disclose the following conflicts of interest: Hibbing Community College (employer), Hibbing Daily Tribune and KAXE (contract work); Precinct chair and central committee director for the Itasca County DFL; political chair for State Rep. Tom Anzelc; co-chair of Dylan Days in Hibbing. This blog does not reflect the opinion of any of these organizations and I welcome comments from all points of view.
I'm a writer, college instructor and political organizer from northern Minnesota's Iron Range. I was born in Hibbing, raised on a family-owned salvage yard just north of the Sax-Zim peat bog and now live in Itasca County with my family. In October 2008, my new book "Overburden: Modern Life on the Iron Range" will be released by Red Step Press.
Iron Range: General term for a region in northeastern Minnesota including the Mesabi, Vermilion and Cuyuna iron ranges. Often the term implies only the Mesabi and Vermilion ranges since the Cuyana hasn’t seen mining activity since 1984. Positioned over once rich formations of natural iron ore and taconite the Iron Range has provided the largest domestic iron ore supply for the American steel industry since the late 1800s. Because of decades of geographic isolation, large influxes of European immigrants and a strong tradition of labor and political activism, the Iron Range also represents a distinct subculture within Minnesota and the Midwest in general. This subculture values a strong work ethic, votes a socially-conservative labor-friendly brand of Democratic, and remains deeply distrustful of outsiders, especially ones who dress well and drive foreign cars. The wild fluctuations in the steel industry and dependence on mining and logging as the dominant source of reliable jobs have created a boom or bust tradition on the Iron Range that continues today. Efforts to modernize and diversify have led to mixed results, though recent developments have been positive.
The Iron Range today owns a reputation as a rough place with a volatile economy, deeply-held ethnic and social traditions, easy access to bars, churches and the Great Outdoors, a unified but ill-disciplined political network, stock car racing, and an innate cultural fascination with guns, fire and alcohol. Public schools are the largest, most ornate and prized buildings on the Iron Range. About half those who graduate from these schools leave for Duluth, the Twin Cities or elsewhere. The other half stay to raise families and work jobs that, despite modern titles, remain indirectly tied to the fortunes of natural resource industries like mining and logging.I write for both groups, those who stay and those who left, and all who join us in body or spirit.
~ Promotional release for "Overburden: Modern Life on the Iron Range" available in bookstores and online in October 2008 from Red Step Press. Copyright 2008 by Aaron J. Brown.
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