When Texas Governor Rick Perry announced his run for the presidency on Saturday in South Carolina, he began his speech with an origin story. In his speech he of course does not include how people who knew him his whole life feel about him, one resident who had known Perry since kindergarten said “She feels the Perrys operate on the edge of legality and that Rick is a big mouth who doesn’t do much.” Hit the jump to read the rest of the story.
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“I’m the product of a place called Paint Creek — doesn’t have a zip code,” Perry explained. “It’s too small to be called a town along the rolling plains of Texas.” He then invoked images of his rural school, growing cotton and wheat, his mother sewing his clothes when he went off to college, his boyscout troop (No. 48), and meeting his future wife at a piano recital at roughly age 8.

It’s an effective tale for Perry and one that he has used often in his more than 25 years holding elected office. In interviews, Perry has affirmed his love for Paint Creek. “It’s a great place to grow up,” Perry told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week. “Wonderful people out there.”

Except a lot of those wonderful people out in Haskell County, home to Paint Creek, don’t like Perry all that much. Residents who populated just about every aspect of Perry’s biographical sketch told The Huffington Post they had grievances with Perry — especially since he changed parties from Democratic to Republican in 1990. When it comes to helping his home county, they suggest, Perry is all talk.

Even Perry’s old Boy Scout Troop Leader, the one who awarded him his Eagle Scout badge, said he likely won’t be voting for him.

Wallar Overton, 72, took over from his father as Perry’s scout master just before the governor earned his Eagle Scout badge. When asked whether he’d support his former scout, Overton replied: “I don’t know how to say this, just leave me blank on that.”

“We just don’t talk politics,” Overton added. “Our relationship is based on scouting. Very proud of him.” But when it comes to supporting Perry’s candidacy, “Our politics don’t jibe,” Overton explained.
HP