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I
don’t know about you but I am not exactly dancing on the rooftops over the
2000 census.
According to the nose counters at the Census Bureau, Georgia is now the 10th
largest state in the union. Our population grew from 6,478,216 in 1990 to
8,186,453 in 2000, an increase of 24.6 percent. This growth reminds me of
something my wise father once said. Daddy opined that the state wasted a
lot of money painting stripes down the middle of the road. Nobody ever
went north. They all came south.
I haven’t
been able to analyze the census numbers in great detail yet because I have
been too busy reorganizing my sock drawer but I have a sneaking suspicion
that of the 1,708,237 who came to Georgia in the last decade, 37 came from
Alabama and Mississippi. The other 1,708,200 came from Guatemala,
Hanoi, Cleveland, Newark, Detroit, and New York City. Of that number,
1,000,000 brought preconceived notions that we are a bunch of rednecks who
live on dirt roads and marry our cousins.
We are
just going to have to learn to adjust. We could start by not continuing to
fight the Civil War, known to some as the War of Northern Aggression. The
last time I checked the history books that unpleasantness had ended about
136 years ago. We lost. You keep bringing it up to the newcomers and they
will keep telling you how their great grandfathers kicked our great
grandfathers’ butts. It is bad enough that I have to listen to my UGA
compatriots continue to talk about losing three in a row to Georgia Tech but
why keep reminding everybody that we came in second in a two country war?
The
chamber of commerce won’t tell you this, but the crowd that showed up over
the past decade didn’t come cheap. We had to build more roads, import
more gasoline, bulldoze
more land, open more strip malls, install more red lights, suck up more
water and foul more air.
Alas,
there is something at work here even more serious than finding room for a
bunch of snowbirds. If this in-migration keeps up at its present rate, we
risk losing our unique Southern heritage. We must stay ever vigilant or it
won’t be too long before our barbecue joints with sawdust on the floors and
Willie Nelson on the juke box will be replaced by Sushi Bars and waiters
named Greg, telling us to have a nice day. Pickup trucks will be supplanted
by SUV’s. Yard dogs by poodles. High school football by ice hockey and
sweet tea by microbrewed beer. Some of this I can live with. But I draw
the line at losing our lilting, honey-smooth Southern drawl. We seem to
have some kind of inferiority complex about the way we speak. Maybe that is
because our friends from north of the Mason-Dixon line take great delight in
tweaking us about our “slow talking,” as though slow speech equates to slow
thinking. Guess what? We aren’t too dumb. We didn’t move north, did we?
Besides, what is so intelligent about “fuhgedabowdit”?
One more
census like that last one and you might never again hear words like “ranch”
(“Honey, would you hand me my ranch? Ah’m gonna tighten the bolts on the
pickup.”) or “far” (“Ah luv you so much, my heart’s on far.”) or “bard”
(“Your no-good brother just bard my last dollar.”) or “thank” (“Ah thank
ah’ll have a Co-Coler.”)
Fortunately, we dodged a bullet this time. Two-thirds of the newcomers
settled in the Metropolitan Atlanta area and Atlanta isn’t Georgia. In
fact, Atlanta has about as much in common with Georgia as butter does with
butterfly. Atlanta has always wanted to be like New York City and got its
wish. Now everybody in Atlanta drives too fast, eats sushi and watches ice
hockey.
So take
heart, Hahira. Rejoice, Roopville. Celebrate Cedartown. The fact that all
these folks decided to congregate in Atlanta over the past ten years means
that you can crank up Willie Nelson in the pickup as loud as you want, drive
to your favorite barbecue joint as slow as you want and eat chitlin
cornbread and drink sweet tea as much as you want. But let me give you some
advice. Don’t go around bragging about how good you’ve got it. Otherwise,
when they finish counting us in 2010 you may find Greg serving you raw fish
and telling you to have a nice day. That would ruin everything. |