Why I ignore many conservatives who say I should abandon Boston

Bas-relief of the Liberty Tree at 630 Washington Street, Boston, MA, near Liberty Square

I recently read a reaction to a Telegram post about the mandatory vaccine implementation for the city of Boston’s businesses. It went something like this:
 
 “Get the hell out of that commie city while you still can.”
 
I understand the sentiment, which I consider a rational view worth considering, but I have recently begun to rethink that idea.
 
Perhaps because I am starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel regarding this “pandemic” madness (despite this last gasping attempt at control by Boston’s commie Mayor Wu), I now think that remaining in the city is a better choice. Why?
 
Let me first explain that my husband and I grew up in a tiny town of about 2000 residents in central Maine. The nearest city was Bangor—the Queen City—a small, bowl-shaped cluster of five-story buildings nestled along the Penobscot River. The next closest city was Portland, a two-hour drive south on I-95. We both attended the University of Maine at Orono—a half-hour’s drive north of Bangor—and married soon after graduation, then settled into our first apartment in the Queen City.
 
Two years later, with a newborn son in tow, we moved to Columbia, MD, for my husband’s new government job. Columbia is a planned community that, at the time, had a population of 88,000. This was an actual “big city” move to us, although the city’s layout was more like a cluster of suburban villages. We lived there for ten years, adding two more children, until the booming housing market and my husband’s job change allowed us to move closer to family back in New England.
 
We settled in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, an idyllic suburban town of about 11,000 residents, where we lived for 17 years. My husband changed jobs again and began commuting 50 miles to Boston every day, which took 2 hours each way, on average. A total commute time of 4 hours…every day. He did this for three years.
 
When our youngest went to college, we saw it as an opportunity to improve our quality of life by cutting the commute and moving to Boston, a real “big city.” We had paid off our mortgage and had no other debt (thanks to my husband’s hard work and lucrative career), so we decided to keep the house as a fallback and try city living.

I looked forward to all that Boston had to offer—the museums, the history, the libraries, the endless choices of walking routes. Although I was hesitant about being surrounded by gobs of leftists, I’ve always been a solitary person, never needing a “squad” to keep me company.
 
We moved to downtown Boston in September 2019. Any worry I had about not taking to city life disappeared immediately. Everything was new and exciting. The restaurants, the shops, the history! I enjoyed hearing snippets of conversations in various languages as I walked down the street. This small-town girl was having the time of her life.
 
We enjoyed five full months in Boston before everything shut down because of “The Virus.” Suddenly, everything was hushed and empty. But somehow, the city was still beautiful to me. Unlike most Boston residents, we were never afraid to go outside. We had the city to ourselves, save a smattering of other daring souls. We ate at whatever establishments remained open, never needing a reservation. We walked alone through the parks and along the Charles River. Sure, the museums were closed, and shopping was only for groceries, but I never liked shopping anyway. Boston was abandoned, ghostly, enchanted.
 
Then came the “George Floyd Riots” at the end of May. We watched the street violence from our 16th-floor window all night as fires burned, helicopters churned, and mobs of rioters and looters destroyed clustered blocks of the city. We compared reports from the police scanner and the tv news to what we witnessed. Discrepancies abounded. Fortunately, I never felt threatened in our secure building. As a person who grew up around cows, it was fascinating to watch.
 
We took a walk the following day to survey the damage. Downtown Crossing was destroyed and abandoned. It felt like I was walking through the set of a post-apocalyptic movie. My heart broke for all the business owners. Riots on top of lockdowns did not bode well for the city’s future.
 
I had no idea that this ridiculous fake pandemic scenario would still be in play two years later. Some businesses have returned, but many have not. Those who have chosen to stick it out have been rewarded with a loyal customer base. But the city is doing its best to ensure visitors and tourists stay away, with all the mask mandates and now the vaccine mandate.
 
Boston is hurting. Despite the thin veil of normalcy displayed on sidewalk placards and window signs, I feel the shaky breath of a city barely holding on to its once honorable place in American history. Every step I take on the Freedom Trail feels like a lie. A ghost of what used to be. A shameful reminder that the Patriots who fought for freedom are long, long gone. I can almost hear them crying out, “What have you done? What are you doing?”
 
I am not an outwardly social person. I don’t speak out or wave signs at the protests I attend. But I do stand alongside those with louder voices. I do march beside my fellow Patriots in quiet, resolute support. And I am far too stubborn to abandon this birthplace of the American Revolution to the evil tyrants trying to erase history by destroying it.
 
On my walks, I often pass by Liberty Tree Square. I always look up to the bas-relief on the brick building where the tree once stood and imagine the Sons of Liberty plotting their resistance to the Crown. I think about Paul Revere racing on horseback as I pass his house, the Old North Church, and its famous bell tower. And in the distance, I see the monument on Bunker Hill, a reminder of all those brave souls who fought and died for freedom.
 
No, I won’t let them beat me. I won’t let them chase me out before I have had a chance to experience Boston the way it should be. I won’t cut and run. I must see Boston through the madness if only to be one more person who appreciates and honors its history. I may not loudly orate on the steps of Faneuil Hall, but I can quietly represent the American people who owe so much to the young revolutionaries who started it all. So, I will stubbornly remain until the birthplace of freedom is returned to its rightful glory.

by Erin W.

Editor’s note: This article was originally written on January 17, 2022. It is reprinted here with the author’s permission.

One response to “Cut and Run”

  1. Thank you, Erin…your heart-felt comments about Boston were beautifully said.

    I used to think Boston was a lovely city, but more and more, the events that have unfolded over these past few years…. with the closings of so many businesses and schools, the attempts of government to isolate our families from one another during holidays, social and family events and times when we needed support from those closest to us, and the cruel consequences levied upon us in an all out effort to force us to comply with mandated vaccines spoke so very poorly for the conscience and heart of those many government officials who decided they were justified in brutalizing the population in these ways. And so much of this cruelty and inhumane treatment was (and still is) so very unnecessary.

    My home state of South Dakota did none of these things to their people, yet…they survived and thrived through it all. Today, South Dakota is a place where I often wish I still lived. I’d like to go back home again…if only to experience a place where the political agenda is not so crazy for power, people are not so divided into their own little “thought camps” and everyone is free to just “live and let live”. I imagine it would feel liberating after experiencing what we have these past four years.

    Just my “two cents”…

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