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This commentary is by Mark D. Szuchman, who resides full-time in Andover. He’s professor emeritus of Latin American historical past at Florida Worldwide College, a member of Florida’s State College System. He’s a registered Democrat.
It’s by now well-known that liberals within the U.S. discover themselves divided over issues that used to uniformly characterize adherents to classical liberalism, however which now look like the province of, properly, classical liberals, as distinguished from the censorious, hectoring actors who seem to imagine that insults and untoward behaviors are the best way to win over of us.
VTDigger’s commentary relating to the experiences of a liberal couple from Vermont transplanted to Florida offers a possibility as an instance this division.
Analysis within the behavioral sciences constantly factors to 2 enduring details. First, it’s very tough, although not unimaginable, for people to vary their opinions, notably heartfelt ones. The second, accepted for many years, is that constructive suggestions works higher than detrimental. Each smart canine coach is aware of this to be true.
Why is it, then, that within the commentary, the self-described “Vermont liberal” (VL) would slander a whole inhabitants — on this case, residents of the state of Florida? “Selling violence is a lifestyle down right here,” VL tells us. How are the views of political liberalism superior — if that’s a desired aim —when behaviors are defined by “an abundance of aged whose brains are in varied phases of losing away”?
What will we do about the truth that the 2020 census reviews the aged (65+) in Florida as representing 21.3 p.c of its inhabitants (second within the nation), and in Vermont, the determine is a really comparable 20.6 p.c (ranked fourth)?
Not so very way back, segments of pseudo-scientific and political communities of Europe advocated social engineering measures designed to enhance the “high quality” of their populations. The Nazis borrowed and prolonged these concepts, discovering logic and misusing notions relating to the aged, who, as VL tells us in his commentary, expertise that as “the curtain closes within the closing act, so does the thoughts,” and that, due to this fact, “there’s no level in placing a fairly body round (such) an unpleasant reality.” Phrases matter.
We additional be taught from VL that “Poor eating regimen, lack of train, spotty well being care at obscene price, mixed with a soupçon of existential grief, largely exhibited on the second-childhood off-ramp of popularism (sic), mind atrophy, and dread of imminent dying” is “sufficient to make anybody cranky.” After which, it hits us: VL is cranky! Crankiness, it seems, seems to be a private attribute, unbiased of regional experiences, ideological tendencies, or instructional stage. Or possibly crankiness is triggered by contact with Floridians.
My spouse and I moved right here over a decade in the past from Florida, the place we spent almost 40 years. Shifting to Vermont was a private choice, wishing to return to the Northeast of our youth, not compelled on us by exterior forces of the labor market or household exigencies. We needed to stay in a stupendous area, with nice selection in climate and panorama.
However as well as, now we have skilled being amongst — not shielded from — individuals with totally different political tendencies. And now we have mates, shut mates, with very totally different cultural and political views than our personal.
Maybe the ratio of liberals to conservatives is at this time totally different in Vermont in comparison with Florida — this stuff change over time — however nobody with listening expertise who has lived right here would deny that there are many every. We discover each in Vermont, as we did in Florida. Vermont, with a firearm possession charge of fifty.3 p.c, ranks fifteenth within the nation. Florida ranks 41 with an possession charge of 28.8 p.c.
Keep in mind when, in the course of the Democratic main debates in March 2016, Bernie Sanders demurred when challenged by Hillary Clinton to tackle the gun foyer? Solely the ignorant, or cranky individuals, would paint Vermonters as gun-toting radicals.
To the extent that stereotypes are one way or the other wanted in our occasions, be happy to assign them: an city couple, tutorial professionals. And in my case, from Latin American origins (and I actually, actually miss Florida’s ample Latin American delicacies).
However in any other case, these liberal transplants from Florida are doing simply high-quality residing full-time in very rural Vermont, mixing it up with conservatives, and by no means lamenting our determination.
Readers Say
Vermont was ranked the best state in the country for fall foliage by Airbnb, so we asked Boston.com readers for help crafting a fall itinerary in the Green Mountain state.
Ahead, check out seven reader-recommended destinations:
The 93-mile Lamoille Valley Rail Trail and the 26.4-mile Missisquoi Valley Rail Trail, both in Franklin County, are well worth exploring this fall season, wrote John B. from St. Albans, Vermont.
“Franklin County’s amazing rail trails would make for an extraordinary bike ride, walk, or longer hike,” he wrote.
For a scenic drive full of iconic fall foliage, travelers should set their GPS for the Scenic Route 100 Byway, wrote Mike P.
The 146 mile-route runs through Stowe and Waterbury and continues all the way down to West Dover.
Route 100 was named one of the best places in North America to see autumn leaves by Architectural Digest.
Fall travelers can’t go wrong in Stowe, wrote Jason J.
Stowe, known as a leaf peeping utopia, is often ranked among America’s best foliage destinations.
“Stowe is the best,” he wrote. “Plus it’s near Ben & Jerry’s.”
The Ben & Jerry’s Factory in nearby Waterbury is the only Ben & Jerry’s Factory open to the public and offers daily guided tours, a retail shop, a full service Scoop Shop, playground, and Flavor Graveyard.
Discover what it was like in Stowe during peak foliage last season.
Morgan, a town in the Northeast Kingdom, a region in northeastern Vermont comprised of the state’s three most rural counties, is “breathtaking” in the fall, wrote Jason from Andover.
“The vibrant foliage reflects off the waters of Seymour Lake. Seymour is Vermont’s second largest lake wholly inside the state, at 1,700 acres. The quiet backroads and rolling hills make every drive or hike a picture-perfect experience. It’s the ideal place to slow down, take in the crisp air, and enjoy Vermont’s most colorful season. Cell service is spotty too — a plus for me!”
Check out more places to eat, stay, and play in the Northeast Kingdom.
Reader Lori W. loves going to Lake Champlain in Vermont.
“Lots of cabins to rent on the lake, great antique shopping and farms. Very close to the Canadian border as well,” she wrote.
USA Today readers named Lake Champlain one of the most “amazing” lakes in America.
Reader Linda from Roslindale enjoys visiting Bridgewater.
“It’s smack dab between Killington and Woodstock and is usually a bit cheaper for Airbnbs,” she wrote. “You can find a lot of great riverside spots to enjoy in Bridgewater.”
John from Boston raved about the Sun Lodge at Bromley Mountain in Peru.
“You’ll have views that’ll blow you away,” he wrote. “It won’t break the bank like other locations. Driving up there will also provide for views that even the best painter can’t duplicate. Mother Nature’s paintbrush will be on fire! Take this advice from this former Vermonter.”
Take a look inside the 50-year-old Sun Lodge, which debuted a new name and look in 2025.
Brattleboro is great for foliage and also for a bite to eat, wrote Mark O, who has a favorite restaurant there.
“Brattleboro is a nice few hours,” he wrote. “Go to Yalla Vermont for lunch. Best homemade pita, falafel, hummus I’ve ever had.”
Responses have been lightly edited for clarity.
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A federal appeals court on Tuesday ordered Vermont’s school sports league to allow a Christian academy to compete, more than two years after the school forfeited a basketball game rather than play a team with a transgender athlete.
The court found that the Vermont Principals’ Association, which governs middle and high school sports in the state, likely violated the First Amendment rights of Mid Vermont Christian School when it expelled the institution over the forfeiture in 2023. At the time, the league “displayed hostility toward the school’s religious beliefs,” impinging on its free exercise of religion, the court wrote Tuesday.
The preliminary decision, by the New York-based US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, reverses an earlier one by a federal district judge in Vermont. It allows Mid Vermont, a K-12 private school in the Upper Valley village of Quechee, to compete for the time being while an underlying lawsuit wends its way through the courts. The school and the families of two students sued the principals’ association and other state and local entities in November 2023, alleging religious discrimination.
The Vermont case is one of many around the country testing the constitutionality of state laws and school policies governing transgender athletes’ participation in sports. The US Supreme Court plans this fall to review bans on transgender athletes enacted in Idaho and West Virginia but blocked by lower courts.
The Vermont dispute stems from a high school basketball tournament in February 2023, when Mid Vermont’s girls’ team was slated to play the Long Trail School, whose roster included a transgender girl. The Christian academy called on the league to prevent the transgender athlete from playing, but the league said doing so would violate its nondiscrimination policies and Vermont law.
The school forfeited the game and withdrew from the tournament, saying in a written statement that “playing against an opponent with a biological male jeopardizes the fairness of the game and the safety of our players.” Three weeks later, the Vermont Principals’ Association barred the school from participating in sports and other extracurricular activities, including spelling bees and debate competitions.
Mid Vermont later said that playing Long Trail would have violated its belief that “sex is God-given and immutable and that God created each of us either male or female,” but the league argued that playing another team does not involve adopting its views.
“This case has nothing to do with beliefs,” a league committee wrote at the time. “It has everything to do with actions and their impact on transgender students.”
The appeals court, however, found that the league — and its leader, in particular — likely did not apply its policies to Mid Vermont in a neutral manner. It pointed to testimony Vermont Principals’ Association executive director Jay Nichols gave to a state legislative committee shortly after Mid Vermont’s forfeit.
“Thank goodness the student in question didn’t attend that religious school,” Nichols told the committee. “But what if they did? Would we be okay with that blatant discrimination under the guise of religious freedom?”
The three appeals court judges who signed the order reinstating Mid Vermont — all appointed by President Donald Trump or President George W. Bush — took issue with those comments.
“The VPA’s Executive Director publicly castigated Mid Vermont — and religious schools generally — while the VPA rushed to judgment on whether and how to discipline the school,” the court wrote, adding that “the punishment imposed was unprecedented, overbroad and procedurally irregular.”
Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian legal group that brought the case, celebrated the court’s order Tuesday.
“The government cannot punish religious schools — and the families they serve — by permanently kicking them out of state-sponsored sports simply because the state disagrees with their religious beliefs,” said ADF senior counsel David Cortman, who argued the case.
Nichols said in a brief interview Tuesday that the principals’ association would not comment on pending litigation. But he pushed back on the notion that the league’s actions — and his words — were motivated by religious animus, calling himself a Christian.
“There’s nobody at the VPA that has any animosity toward any religion — none of our officers, none of our members or anyone employed by the VPA,” Nichols said.
Over the past decade, the way people connect and build community has shifted in meaningful ways.
As Joshua Smith watched these changes unfold, he noticed something important: while online platforms offered new opportunities, many people around him still craved real, local connection. Around the same time, the owner of WYKR, his hometown radio station, kept joking, “Josh, if you ever want to buy a radio station, let me know.” In 2023, Josh took him up on it.
Based in Wells River and serving parts of northern Vermont and New Hampshire, WYKR is the oldest country radio station in Vermont. True to its roots, Josh is revitalizing what radio was back in the ’70s and ’80s, featuring outdoor shows and programs, broadcasting the local basketball games, and keeping advertising affordable.
Josh is building something enduring. He took over The Bridge Weekly Showcase, a local paper, soon after buying WYKR. He formed Yankee Kingdom Media to sustain and grow both outlets. Local ownership, he notes, ensures the voices and stories of his community are heard. And it enhances the symbiotic relationship between local businesses. “Keeping local media local and independent? We can’t take it for granted,” he says.
“I don’t know where I would have ended up.”
When Josh reflects on where he started—a disengaged student from rural Vermont—he’s clear about one thing: “I wouldn’t be here without VSAC believing in me.”
A self-professed theater kid at Blue Mountain Union High School, Josh wasn’t sure about college. His three brothers didn’t go, and although his parents wanted him to continue his education, he knew they couldn’t pay for it. Then, junior year, he began meeting monthly with a VSAC outreach counselor from VSAC’s GEAR UP college and career readiness program.
“My outreach counselor guided me through the entire process and took away any barriers I perceived. She also helped me remove the barriers of funding. She reinforced the fact that education is a right, not a privilege.”
Josh’s VSAC counselor helped him with his applications and financial aid paperwork, and coached him on what to expect in college. “VSAC looked at me and saw the full future version of me. Not my test scores, not my grades. Me,” he says.
Josh’s theater teacher had friends who taught at Webster University in Saint Louis, and they encouraged him to apply. So he did, along with a slate of other schools, all of which he was accepted to. Webster remained his first choice—and he ended up with a financial aid package that made it possible for him to go.
From art school to international service
Josh originally dreamed of becoming a children’s book illustrator. Over the course of his college years, however, his perspective began to shift. He joined the Peace Corps after college, which changed everything, and high school French classes landed him a position in Niger.
After being in Niger for two years, Josh renewed his option to stay for another two years. “I lived in a mud hut and pulled my own water from a well. And while there, I read all the books I was supposed to read in high school.”
Josh’s Peace Corps experience ignited a passion for international service. He went on to earn a master’s in International Education from the School for International Training in Brattleboro and spent the next 12 years working with global humanitarian organizations, including Doctors Without Borders and Action Against Hunger. From Pakistan to the Philippines, Libya to Nigeria, Joshua managed the complex logistics of getting food and medical supplies to those in crisis.
“I repaired ambulances in Libya during the revolution and had a machine gun pointed in my face. Along with survival, the logistical challenges of getting food and medical supplies to places during a crisis were mine to solve.”
But even while doing this high-stakes work, he never forgot his roots—or the people who helped get him started. “The key to success is showing up and believing in yourself,” he said. “My self-confidence really came from working with VSAC. They made me feel comfortable with being uncomfortable. When you’re a teenager, there is no self-confidence. When you have someone who believes in your potential more than you do, especially when it’s an adult—that’s powerful.”
“I don’t believe in one career for the rest of your life. I’m on my third.”
After marrying his wife, Edith (whom he met while working in Niger), and moving back to Vermont, Joshua earned an MBA from Norwich University and dove into the nonprofit world. He led an organization supporting people with intellectual disabilities and sat on several local boards before the opportunity to purchase WYKR came about.
Now 49, at the helm of Yankee Kingdom Media and living in Morrisville with his wife and three children, one of Josh’s greatest joys is hosting a podcast—Vermont Authors and Artists—bringing together his lifelong love of creativity, service, and conversation.
Through it all, he carries forward his commitment to continuous curiosity—something he learned in theater and through the arts and is now passing on to his children.
“I don’t believe in one career for the rest of your life,” he notes. “I’m on my third. Ten years ago, I wouldn’t have seen this career coming.”
The Vermont Student Assistance Corp. was created by the Vermont Legislature in 1965 as a public nonprofit agency. We advocate for Vermont students and their families to ensure that they have the tools they need to achieve their education and training goals. We create opportunities for all Vermont students, but particularly for those—of any age—who believe that the doors to education are closed to them. Growing families save for education with VT529, Vermont’s official 529 savings program. To help Vermonters plan and pay for college or job training, our counselors work with students in nearly every Vermont middle school and high school, and are also available to work with adults. Our grant, scholarship, and workforce development programs create opportunity, help students re-skill or learn new skills, and grow the economy. VSAC’s loan and loan forgiveness programs provide competitive education financing to students and families. Find us at www.vsac.org or visit Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn.
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