Two recent stories in my local paper bring back memories.
This one
For the second straight year, the Yuma Crossing National Heritage Area has been labeled as pork.…and this one.
A federal civil rights official said American Indians who live in Yuma don’t have the same rights as other people, and local authorities are unhappy about it.
What they have in common is that they are both about people from other places making less-than-informed pronouncements about Yuma and Arizona.
Back in my early online days, circa 1995, I belonged to one of those massive e-mail discussion groups of the time. This one numbered around 1500 members from all over the world, and we discussed all kinds of things in the areas of the bizarre and unusual – things like alternative medicine, conspiracy theories, UFOs.
For awhile we seemed to have an unusual number of posts about things supposedly happening in Arizona. The UN was said to be setting up a base of operations for US takeover at Ft. Huachuca, there was a concentration camp being built outside of Tucson, an alien fossil was discovered outside of Wellton. One lady talked about a “mass desertion” of Yuma, with people leaving in RV’s and motorhomes in droves, as a result of – get this – an underground alien base.
Since I knew this supposed mass desertion was nothing more menacing than our annual migration of snowbirds (otherwise known as winter visitors, the retirees who spend the cold months here) I decided to look into these rumors, and found all of them had prosaic explanations.
It was also right around that time that a New Agey sort of book on shamanism appeared, that described Yuma as a backward, uncivilized place, where the Quechan Indians were uneducated illiterates who lived in mud huts. The author also described Picacho Peak as being a mile or so away from town, when it’s more like 30.
After all this, I asked the group what the deal was. Why did they think so much strange stuff was so likely to be happening here, when they wouldn’t believe any of it for a moment if it had been said about say, Michigan or Indiana?
Among the answers I got back was one I’ll never forget. One of the ladies (who lived in upstate New York, as I recall ) said, “You can say anything you want about Arizona. Nobody lives there!”
Sheesh.