Re: Some country club members oppose [Franklin] battlefield restoration
I agree with Dusty; I hadn't understood the article fully. As a child I grew up swimming in a country club pool. Today, much like Mr. Kindred, I consider my money wasted if spent on buying friends by joining a country club. I probably overstated my point by defending a country club. I simply found the "eat-the-rich" attitude of this thread to be counter-productive to battlefield preservation. It is our duty as progressive reenactors to change the attitude of outsiders to reenacting. In my community, until recently rural, many large farmers have had to sell out to developers. Their farms could not produce enough revenue to pay property taxes. When offered a couple of million dollars, they naturally chose development. Then they were vilified by historical preservationists. Until preservationists act in a friendly manner towards property owners, they will be viewed in a bad light. It is our duty as progressive reenactors to extend this olive branch and prove to America we are not the hung-over yahoos they see at mainstream events. Partnership, not last-ditch rhetoric, is the answer. Only a slim minority of corporations are Wal-Marts and Lowe's; most hold some interest in the community in which they operate.
Dave Eggleston
I agree with Dusty; I hadn't understood the article fully. As a child I grew up swimming in a country club pool. Today, much like Mr. Kindred, I consider my money wasted if spent on buying friends by joining a country club. I probably overstated my point by defending a country club. I simply found the "eat-the-rich" attitude of this thread to be counter-productive to battlefield preservation. It is our duty as progressive reenactors to change the attitude of outsiders to reenacting. In my community, until recently rural, many large farmers have had to sell out to developers. Their farms could not produce enough revenue to pay property taxes. When offered a couple of million dollars, they naturally chose development. Then they were vilified by historical preservationists. Until preservationists act in a friendly manner towards property owners, they will be viewed in a bad light. It is our duty as progressive reenactors to extend this olive branch and prove to America we are not the hung-over yahoos they see at mainstream events. Partnership, not last-ditch rhetoric, is the answer. Only a slim minority of corporations are Wal-Marts and Lowe's; most hold some interest in the community in which they operate.
Dave Eggleston
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