FILE PHOTO
FILE PHOTO Credit: STAFF PHOTO

I compose this column on a deck overlooking the Pacific Ocean in a seaside town of Newport, Oregon. I have just returned from the Lincoln County Fair, a mini-festival of vendors, livestock auctions, and country music, a venue that cried out to me, loud and clear: โ€œYou are not in Leverett, Massachusetts anymore, Geno!โ€

One vendor in particular caught my attention. Several tall TRUMP signs waved in the wind above a large tent that housed hundreds of T-shirts, banners, bumper stickers and other assorted Trump paraphernalia. As a reader of my columns, you may know that I do not write about political issues; I am not here to advocate for specific causes or candidates. That said, I must admit I have zero understanding of how anyone could cast a ballot for Donald Trump. Given the choice between a decent human being with declining mental capacities and a crude, corrupt, narcissistic man-child, Iโ€™ll take the former any day of the week.

Anyway, seated in a folding chair under the tent was a middle-aged woman, tattooed and pierced from head to toe (โ€œnot that thereโ€™s anything wrong with it.โ€) I approached her (much to the chagrin of family members who were at the fair with me) with the express purpose of having a calm, civil discussion about our choices in the upcoming November election. Such discussions are, admittedly, challenging for me, but I was determined to give it a go.

โ€œThis will sound a little strange,โ€ I said, โ€ but I have never had the chance to speak with someone who supports Donald Trump. Iโ€™m not here to be judgmental; I would just love to know why you like him.โ€

โ€œSo, you think I like him because I sell this crap?โ€ the woman replied. โ€œI hate the guy. Canโ€™t stand him.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure how to respond. โ€œWell, I guess I assumed you were pro-Trump. Now Iโ€™m curious. If you donโ€™t mind my asking, how do you justify selling pro-Trump souvenirs when you donโ€™t support him?โ€

โ€œListen. In 2020, I bought a house, all cash, with the money I made selling this stuff out of trailers all across the state. What am I supposed to do, not sell it and live in a sh- – hole?โ€

This was a woman who sugar-coated nothing. โ€œAt least youโ€™re making money off of Trump,โ€ I said. โ€œWhich is more than some of the people who work for him can say.โ€ She smiled and I walked off, leaving her hawking her right-wing wares.

Dear reader, this encounter left me wondering what the ethicist at The New York Times would say about selling products that conflict with oneโ€™s beliefs and values. Is it OK to sell anti-abortion bumper stickers if one believes in a womanโ€™s right to choose? Can someone own a liquor store while attending AA meetings? And would it matter if the rationale were to help provide for a family or loved one?

Many therapists and others in the mental health field believe it is unhealthy to engage in activities that conflict with oneโ€™s โ€œcore values.โ€ Such conflicts can create a sense of being inauthentic to oneโ€™s true self, or, more succinctly, of being a fraud. According to experts, this can create all degrees of self-doubt, even self-loathing. I am not in the mental health field, but my hunch is that self-loathing canโ€™t be a good thing.

But acting contrary to oneโ€™s โ€œpreference valuesโ€ is a different story. You and I have beliefs that are important to us, ways we see the world that, in our own minds, are reasonable, moral, and ethical. Iโ€™m sure we could all make lists of where we stand on a wide range of issues such as immigration, climate change, recycling, clean air, taxes, womenโ€™s rights, health care, and so on. And if you are like me, you have a hard time living by your beliefs, consistently, every day.

Do I consider any of these a core value? Do you? Do I have any moral principles that are non negotiable, anything that means so much to me that I would lay down my life to protect? Well, of course I do. I would, without hesitation, trade my life to save the lives of my children, grandchildren and my four siblings (I am the oldest of five. If I were the youngest, I would have to give this more thought!).

Now I feel I may be straying off-topic. Love of family is not considered a core value, is it? Iโ€™m not sure; maybe it is. Perhaps it is the only, pure, core value that exists.

I do know, or strongly assume, that we can find T-shirts emblazoned with โ€œLove Your Papaโ€ or โ€œGrandmas Are Beautiful,โ€ being peddled to adoring grandkids by people who dislike their own grandparents. I also know I am in no position to cast judgment on the choices of strangers.

The straight-talking, anti-Trump vendor, sitting under a โ€œTrump For Presidentโ€ poster, may be supporting a family from her earnings. Perhaps she donates to worthwhile charities and supports causes opposed by the felonious man-child.

Or maybe she is simply a woman willing to do whatever it takes to make a buck, principles be damned.

You never really know.

Gene Stamell usually lives by his principles in Leverett. He welcomes feedback at gstamell@gmail.com.