Got local? It’s a question to ponder before Christmas

Maybe the bottleneck in the worldwide supply will help turn our focus closer to home during the holiday shopping season, observes Hoptown Chronicle editor Jennifer P. Brown.

One morning this week I watched a television news story about supply chain bottlenecks and the expectation that Americans are going to face some empty store shelves and disappointment on the World Wide Web this Christmas season. 

Y’all better “buy early,” said someone in the know. 

Jennifer P. Brown

CNBC told this story through the lens of a Care Bear factory in China and a toy store in Bedford, Massachusetts. In between those two points, it was a slog attributed mostly to the pandemic. Boxes of plush toys sat for weeks in factory storage waiting to be loaded into shipping containers, followed by several days at sea. There aren’t enough trucks to meet the ships at port, and that means dozens of ships at a time waiting in the harbor before crews can unload the containers. Then those Care Bears have to get from the Port of Los Angeles to warehouses and stores across the country, including that shop in Massachusetts. 

Really puts one in the holiday spirit, doesn’t it?

As I watched this story, I thought about a book I read a few months ago — Bill McKibben’s short novel, “Radio Free Vermont: A Fable of Resistance.” McKibben is an environmentalist and journalist who writes about global warming. 

The book’s message is about “busting loose from Washington,” one reviewer describes. Using an illegal, underground radio broadcast, a small but determined group tries to instigate Vermont’s secession from the United States. Their goal is to free Vermont of a corrupt federal government and its role in climate change. Heavy stuff, of course, but the novel is still humorous and surreal. There’s a chase scene with good guys on cross-country skis that would fit perfectly in a James Bond movie.  

At the heart of McKibben’s novel is a deep appreciation for local places and local economies. The anti-corporate hero Vern Barclay begins his campaign by taking over the audio speakers in all of Vermont’s Starbucks and obstructing Walmart store openings. Meanwhile, he promotes local goods like craft beer.

Maybe you can see how I got from a story about the mass production of Care Bears to another story about a band of eccentrics hell-bent on preserving the unique character of their place. 

A vintage Teddy bear sits in a display outside Mac and Catherine Arthur’s antique store on Sixth Street during the 2020 holiday shopping season. (Photo by Jennifer P. Brown)

I’ve started thinking about how I want to celebrate Christmas, and a big part of that involves giving presents to family and friends. I’ve promised myself that I’ll be more intentional about finding gifts from locally-owned businesses — especially those that make something you can’t really get anywhere else. You might recall that last year Hoptown Chronicle featured some of those entrepreneurs in a holiday campaign we called “Only in Hoptown.”

If gift-giving is part of your holiday tradition, maybe you’ll also find some inspiration this year from local sources. I’ll be doing my best to avoid anything like a Care Bear that is destined to be in a landfill in 10 years. 

Jennifer P. Brown is co-founder, publisher and editor of Hoptown Chronicle. You can reach her at editor@hoptownchronicle.org. Brown was a reporter and editor at the Kentucky New Era, where she worked for 30 years. She is a co-chair of the national advisory board to the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, governing board past president for the Kentucky Historical Society, and co-founder of the Kentucky Open Government Coalition. She serves on the Hopkinsville History Foundation's board.