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Home » America’s Forgotten Working Class: J.D. Vance (Transcript)

America’s Forgotten Working Class: J.D. Vance (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of J.D. Vance’s talk titled “America’s Forgotten Working Class” at TED Talks 2016 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

A Cultural Outsider’s Journey

I remember the very first time I went to a nice restaurant, a really nice restaurant. It was for a law firm recruitment dinner, and I remember beforehand the waitress walked around and asked whether we wanted some wine, so I said, “Sure, I’ll take some white wine.” And she immediately said, “Would you like sauvignon blanc or chardonnay?”

I remember thinking, “Come on, lady, stop with the fancy French words and just give me some white wine.” But I used my powers of deduction and recognized that chardonnay and sauvignon blanc were two separate types of white wine, and so I told her that I would take the chardonnay, because frankly that was the easiest one for me to pronounce.

Cultural Struggles and Upward Mobility

So I had a lot of experiences like that during my first couple of years as a law student at Yale, because, despite all outward appearances, I’m a cultural outsider. I didn’t come from the elites. I didn’t come from the Northeast or from San Francisco. I came from a southern Ohio steel town, and it’s a town that’s really struggling in a lot of ways, ways that are indicative of the broader struggles of America’s working class.

Heroin has moved in, killing a lot of people, people I know. Family violence, domestic violence, and divorce have torn apart families. And there’s a very unique sense of pessimism that’s moved in. Think about rising mortality rates in these communities and recognize that for a lot of these folks, the problems that they’re seeing are actually causing rising death rates in their own communities, so there’s a very real sense of struggle.

I had a very front-row seat to that struggle.