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'Rednecks for Obama' want to bridge yawning culture gap

  1. Election 2008
  2. pigmonkey
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When Barack Obama's campaign bus made a swing through Missouri in July, the unlikeliest of supporters were waiting for him -- or rather two of them, holding the banner: "Rednecks for Obama."

In backing the first African-American nominee of a major party for the US presidency, the pair are on a grassroots mission to bridge a cultural gap in the United States and help usher their preferred candidate into the White House.

Tony Viessman, 74, and Les Spencer, 60, got politically active last year when it occurred to them there must be other lower income, rural, beer-drinking, gun-loving, NASCAR race enthusiasts fed up with business as usual in Washington.

Viessman had a red, white and blue "Rednecks for Obama" banner made, and began causing a stir in Missouri, which has emerged as a key battleground in the run-up to the November 4 presidential election.

"I didn't expect it would get as much steam and attention as it's gotten," Spencer told AFP on the campus of Washington University in Saint Louis, the state's biggest city and site of last week's vice-presidential debate.

"We believe in him. He's the best person for the job," Viessman, a former state trooper from Rolla, said of Obama, who met the pair briefly on that July day in Union, Missouri.

The candidate bounded off his bus and jogged back towards a roadside crowd to shake hands with the men holding the banner.

"He said 'This is incredible'," Spencer recalled.

It's been an unexpectedly gratifying run, Viessman said.

Rednecks4obama.com claims more than 800,000 online visits. In Denver, Colorado, Viessman and Spencer drew crowds at the Democratic convention, and at Washington University last Thursday they were two of the most popular senior citizens on campus.

"I'm shocked, actually, but excited" that such a demographic would be organizing support for Obama, said student Naia Ferguson, 18, said after hamming it up for pictures behind the banner.

"When most people think 'redneck,' they think conservatives, anti-change, even anti-integration," she said. "But America's changing, breaking stereotypes."

A southern comedian, Jeff Foxworthy, defines the stereotype as a "glorious lack of sophistication".

Philistines or not, he said, most rural southerners are no longer proponents of the Old South's most abhorrent ideology -- racism -- and that workaday issues such as the economy are dominating this year's election.

"We need to build the economy from the bottom up, none of this trickle down business," Spencer said. "Just because you're white and southern don't mean you have to vote Republican."
pigmonkey

8 responses // 'Rednecks for Obama' want to bridge yawning culture gap

  •  

    I knew that not all redneck's were retarded. Those hait mongers that we have been seeing all over you tube
    and the other media sources are just plain scared with the financial mess we are in. I sure hope they wake up like these folks.

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    kennymotown
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    These are the two coolest rednecks ever!

    jperson
  •  

    rednecks for obama shocking really shocking.

    santana01
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    I'd go cow-tippin' with those fellas!

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    SDLN
  •  

    The Rednecks from Rolla are interviewed!

    SDLN
  •  

    I was in McDonald's the other day sitting between two tables of retired Floridians. I quickly became caught in the crossfire of indignation between the elderly people sitting at each table. The argument involved (and it was totally good natured) who was the most conservative life-long Republican and who hated Palin the most. All parties agreed that they were voting for Obama. Me too!

    I smell McLandslide.

    Picasso9000
  •  

    1 NRA member (I'm praying for him) is voting for Obama, now this? Damn, maybe Americans are tired of hating people for reasons that no longer apply?

    dragon1984

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