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Tuesday, May 25, 2004 - Page updated at 12:45 P.M. Red country: Conservative values mark residents of Sugar Land, Texas By David Finkel
Second of three parts SUGAR LAND, Texas This is the home of Britton Stein, who describes George W. Bush as "a man, a man's man, a manly man," and Al Gore as "a ranting and raving little whiny baby." Forty-nine years old, Stein is a husband, a father, a landscaper and a Republican. He lives in a house that has six guns in the closets and 21 crosses in the main hallway. His wife cuts his hair with electric clippers. His three daughters aren't embarrassed when he kisses them on their cheeks. He loves his family, hamburgers and his dog. He believes in God, prays daily and goes to church weekly. He has a jumbo smoker in his back yard and a 40-foot tree he has climbed to hang Christmas lights. He has a pickup truck that he has filled with water for the Fourth of July parade, driving splashing kids around a community where Boy Scouts plant American flags in the yards. His truck is a Chevy. His beer is Bud Light. His savior is Jesus Christ. His neighbors include Rep. Tom DeLay, R-Texas, the House majority leader, who says of Sugar Land, "I think it is America."
No fans of Kerry When a recent poll by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press concluded that the American electorate is "further apart than ever in its political values," one of its emblems could be Stein, who says that it would take "a frontal lobotomy" for him to vote for Sen. John Kerry. When Catholic University political professor John Kenneth White says that Kerry and Bush are navigating for votes in "parallel universes," the universe of Stein is the one in which the president is Republican, the U.S. senators are Republicans, the congressman is Republican, the county commissioner is Republican, the Inspector of Hides and Animals is Republican, and friends and neighbors are Republicans. Brick homes, clean streets, good schools, plentiful churches "it's the typical white-picket-fence, 2.1-children atmosphere," Mayor David Wallace, also a Republican, says of Sugar Land. No litter, landscaped boulevards, approved-plant lists, recommended-rose lists, strict zoning, a town square called "Town Square," logos everywhere, and the ever-present smell of just-mown grass in a voting precinct that went Bush 72 percent, Gore 25 percent this is the landscape of Stein, whose path here can be condensed to this: A voter's evolution In 1977, he bought a pair of hedge trimmers for $25. A month later, he went back to the same store and bought a second pair of trimmers, but now they were $30. That's when he angrily learned about inflation and began paying attention to politics. Then he learned about the notion of American weakness during the Iranian hostage crisis. Then he learned about responding to a politician's message when Ronald Reagan talked of America's greatness coming from its people rather than government.
Stein starts with the Drudge Report Web site, where he scans the headlines and clicks on one that says, "Rallying Cry For Dems: Vote Bush Out of Rove's Office." "This is the kind of stuff that pisses me off," he says. "They don't give Bush the respect he deserves. Not only because he's president, but because he's a helluva good man." Next he goes to a Web site called WorldNetDaily.com. He clicks on an article that says, "Poll: Bush's Approval Sinking," but dismisses it as untrustworthy when he sees the poll was done by CBS. "Of course I have a suspicion of CBS," he says. "Dan Rather, Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw they don't have any credibility with me." Next he goes through a site called FreeRepublic.com, which calls itself "the premier conservative news forum," and then moves on to a site called sftt.org. "Soldiers for the Truth," he says, scrolling through another list of articles and watching a video of what the site says is a U.S. Apache helicopter targeting and obliterating three Iraqis. "It's amazing, the military, the men and women who are serving us," Stein says. "You think about the sacrifices, the idea of spending Christmas in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in West Africa, in these hellholes. In the civilian world, they get some injury, carpal-tunnel syndrome, and they want to go sue their employers, and these guys ... I'm so proud of them. I'm so glad they're on our side." Next he goes to Military.com, where there's a photograph of an American soldier holding a wild-haired Saddam Hussein on the ground moments after his capture. "Look at the contrast," Stein says. "There's the American soldier coming to liberate the country, and there's the tyrant who ran the rape rooms and the children's prisons. That inspires me." Next he goes to AmericanRhetoric.com, where he has listened to an "awesome" speech by Bush, an "amazing" speech by Reagan, and a "great" speech by Martin Luther King Jr. from a time before "things got so distorted," and then he goes to townhall.com, which calls itself a "conservative news and information" site, where he begins hopscotching from Pat Buchanan to Robert Novak to Ann Coulter. This is how Stein gets his information, along with watching Fox News and skimming the local paper. He recognizes that the information he seeks out reinforces his beliefs rather than challenging them, but "I feel I'm more informed than most people," he says. "Most people don't read all of this." Food for thought Stein's breakfast is scrambled eggs over congealed grits fried in butter, and coffee that comes not in bean form but already ground and is brewed not through natural brown paper filters but white ones. " 'Melitta plants four trees for every one used in the production of our filter paper,' " he says, reading the side of the box of filters. "I could care less." Over a brisket-and-sausage barbecue sandwich for lunch, he wonders what people categorized by pollsters as Blue Americans would think about him. "I would guess they would say I am mean-hearted and mean-spirited. They'd probably think I'm for big business at the expense of poor people. They'd think we want to hurt the poor, hurt the environment, do away with the school system. They'd think that we believe everybody should be able to own Uzis or any kind of gun, and that we want to impose God on them," he says, and then says what he thinks of them: "Some of what they're saying may be found on good intentions, but a closer look will show it's really not going to work. Their solutions come from government rather than from themselves. ... Every year they take more and more and more money. And when you see some of these programs, and you're paying thousands of dollars into them, at some point resentment begins to build." Stein's dinner is hamburgers with American cheese, salad and Tater Tots. He gas-grills the burgers while the salad is assembled by Patrice, Stein's wife of 23 years and counting. He oversees their business' landscape crews and she manages the office. He hunts on weekends, and she makes gumbo with deer sausage. He drives the truck; she drives the minivan. He takes the La-Z-Boy; she takes the couch. According to a recent poll by Zogby International, 70 percent of voters in states that voted for Bush say marriage should be between a man and a woman, and the Steins, who agree on most everything, agree on that, too. "Anything else is not marriage," Stein says. "In my opinion, it's wrong. It's not just that I don't like it. It's wrong." The heart of the issue isn't homosexuality, they say, but God-given, Bible-based morality. "My attitude toward them is I really don't care," he says. Drawing the line "There's got to be a point as you go from Ozzie and Harriet to the most total perversion there is, to child molestation, or bestiality, where there's a line, that from here on it's right on one side and wrong on the other," Stein continues. "Where homosexuality falls, maybe it's inside the line, but somewhere we have to say: No farther. Our society, our culture, our religion, our history all revolve around the family. The traditional family unit. There are variations, sure, but go too far, and somebody has to say that's wrong."
Carolyn, 14, interrupts her parents, holding up a finger with a fresh paper cut. "My second one this week," she says and explains that she got the first one when she and other members of a school club were at the house of a woman who provides emergency foster care for children in crisis, that helping the woman is their project this year, that there are kids everywhere in the house and old furniture and writing on the walls, that they were wrapping gifts for a birthday party when a piece of wrapping paper sliced into her hand. So life isn't perfect in insular Sugar Land. There are children who need emergency foster care. There was a Christmastime double murder a few planned communities away from the Steins', and the suicide of an Enron executive just up the street. There is a homeless woman with a "Food Please" sign to whom Britton gives money to as he rolls past in his truck. There was the night the Steins were upstairs, and "we hear this crash downstairs, and my heart started racing because it sounded like somebody kicked the door in," Stein says. "I said, 'OK, I'm going to go downstairs and run straight to the closet and get my gun,' and that's what I did." Even though the noise turned out to be the clatter of a falling cookie sheet, he now keeps a gun upstairs, always within easy reach, because sometimes, even in Sugar Land, bad things happen. But not often. "I don't know," Patrice says. "Maybe I just want to live in a little bubble or something." Praying together Sunday. Time for church. According to the Zogby poll, 51 percent of Red State voters attend church at least weekly. In Blue America, it's 34 percent. In Red America, 32 percent go to church on holidays, rarely or never. In Blue America, it's 46 percent. Into the minivan goes the Stein family. Past the community swim club, where the Modifications and Deed Restrictions Committee meets once a month. Past the country club. Past the turn to the high school, where the SAT scores are reassuringly above average. Into the rapidly filling church parking lot, past the "Monument to the Unborn," which Stein helped install near the church's entrance. "And so we are a big church," the pastor, the Rev. Drew Wood, says, looking around as the service gets under way, and so they are: 1,000 seats, five Masses each weekend, each Mass filled to overflowing. The seats are also full at Christ United Methodist, 900 per service, where the Rev. Tom Pace III, when asked what concerns are on the minds of his congregants, says, "family issues"; and it's that way at the 1,800-member River Pointe Community Church, where the Rev. Patrick Kelley's answer is, "How do we grow strong, healthy, balanced families in today's culture?" "Once you say, 'I believe what the Bible tells me,' that brings certain responsibilities, and one of them is going to church," Stein is saying now, after the service. "There were times when we didn't go to church much," Patrice says. "But it kind of changed when we had kids. They don't come with a set of instructions. They need some guidance. They need morals and examples." "Belief in a superior being," Stein says. "Forgiveness. Goodness. Service." "Where do they get the information that leads to their morals?" Patrice wonders about people who don't go to church. "There's a sense of community," she says of what else a church offers. "You're around like-minded people," Stein says. "Good people." "Schools, churches, grocery stores," Stein says during the short ride home. "It's all close by." A few rounds All except Hooters, which is in the city of Stafford, just beyond the Sugar Land line. It's Wednesday afternoon now and Stein is there with two friends, Craig Lannom and Lance May. They are three husbands, three fathers, three Bush votes, three guys watching ESPN and drinking some beers. Round Number One: "They make me feel like I have no hope. They make you feel like, why wake up in the morning?" Lannom says of Blue Americans he sees on TV or hears on the radio. "It's like every time I hear Al Franken speak, the world we live in is sooo bad, everything is going sooo wrong. Is it really that bad?" "We see life as it is," May says. "They seem bitter," Lannom says. "They just never seem happy. Every time you hear them talking, they're bitching about something." "They're whiners," Stein agrees. Round Two: "I have a cappuccino maker," May confesses. "You have a what?" Stein asks. Round Three: "It's early in the morning, when the sun comes up behind that bank of fog," Stein says, describing his favorite thing about hunting. "It's when you're fishing, and you look around, and you're the only guy around," May says. "Fly fishing in Colorado. It was a religious experience," Lannom says. Round Four: "I feel it's safer out here. I feel it's more stable. More my kind of people," Lannom says of the appeal of Sugar Land. "Where the grass is green and the trees are trimmed," Stein says. "You live in planned neighborhoods where your investment is fairly safe," May says. "The first time I put my trash out, I put it by the curb, and my neighbor came out and said, 'We don't curb our trash here in Sugar Land.' " Lannom says, laughing. "I had some cinch bugs in my front yard or something, my neighbor says, 'Craig, I want to talk to you about your brown patch.' " "It's so predictable here," Stein says. "But that's not bad, though," Lannom says. "No, that's not bad," Stein says. The rhythm of life Time to go. In a few hours, Carolyn will have soccer practice. On Friday, Stein is supposed to go quail hunting. In a few weeks, when the pear trees bloom, work will get so busy Stein will be running from morning till night. "They'll be snow white," Stein says of the blooms, in anticipation. He is, at his core, a sentimental man, Patrice says, and Stein wouldn't disagree. "I'm very thankful," he says of his life in which nothing, so far, thank God, knock on wood, has gone wrong. "This is the life I wanted and created with help from God, from Patrice, from the kids. We have a vision of what we want life to be." Tomorrow: Blue country a family in San Francisco
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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