The Urban Rural Divide

A Tale of Two Moralities -
Part One: Regional Inequality and Moral Polarization

The United States is not very united.

Americans have been sorting themselves along ideological lines into like-minded regions of the country, increasing polarization in congressional voting patterns, and creating a striking division in political preference and party loyalty between city-dwellers and the denizens of low-density exurban and rural counties.

Urban/Rural ideological divides and party affiliation:

Americans have been sorting themselves along ideological lines into like-minded regions of the country, increasing polarization in congressional voting patterns, and creating a striking division in political preference and party loyalty between city-dwellers and the denizens of low-density exurban and rural counties.

That’s how Hillary Clinton managed to lose the Electoral College vote to Donald Trump despite beating his overall vote total by nearly three million votes. There are more Democratic voters, but they are densely concentrated in a handful of Democrat-heavy cities and states, while Republicans are spread relatively thinly but evenly across the country’s non-urban expanse.

Who or what is the target of the backlash against the establishment?

I'm taking pains to be clear about who we are and aren’t talking about when we’re talking about “elites” and “the people” for a reason. It has become conventional wisdom in some circles that “the elites” and “the people” are divided by cultural and informational “bubbles” that offer incompatible perspectives on the facts of the world and the nature of a good society, and thus regard each other with mutual distrust and contempt. All this demographic complexity aside, the conventional wisdom that there is a widening cultural gap between “the people” and “the elites,” and that the rise of populist nationalism is due to backlash against “the establishment,” contains more than a grain of truth. But we need to get much clearer about what exactly that truth is.

So far I have just covered the exploratory intro:

And that means it’s important to understand the mechanisms underlying our cultural and moral polarization. That’s what I’m going to begin to do in this (long!) post, in a preliminary, speculative, exploratory spirit.

Now we can begin:

Why Is Our Moral Culture Polarizing?

One place to start is to ask why it is that people, as individuals, gravitate to certain moral and political viewpoints. Jonathan Haidt’s “moral foundations” theory—which shows that conservatives and liberals have different moral sensibilities, sensitive to different moral considerations—is perhaps the best-known account. But there are others.

In a 2012 piece for the Economist, I surveyed some of the research in personality psychology that indicates a correlation between political ideology and a couple of the “Big Five” dimensions of personality—conscientiousness and openness to experience, in particular—and then connected that to evidence that people have self-segregated geographically by personality and ideology. It’s an interesting post and you should read it.

The Economist article

[Which analyzes The Big Five groups of Extroverted People, Agreeable People, Conscientious People, Neurotic People and Open to Experience People]

Back to the story:

Here’s the problem. Knowing that a certain personalities incline to conservative or liberal opinions doesn’t tell us what the content of those opinions will be at any given point in history.

The Freedom Rising and Human Empowerment Theory:

For those interested in digging deeper, the best current overview of the theory is Christian Welzel’s Freedom Rising: Human Empowerment and the Quest for Emancipation. It’s an impressive body of work with a great deal of data and analysis behind it.)

Which suggests:

That suggests that the United States may be dividing into two increasingly polarized cultures: an increasingly secular-rational and self-expression oriented “post-materialist” culture concentrated in big cities and the academic archipelago, and a largely rural and exurban culture that has been tilting in the opposite direction, toward zero-sum survival values, while trying to hold the line on traditional values.

Ok. Rural poverty drives the threat to "traditional values". Back to the basics:

Inequality and Post-materialist Value Polarization

Let’s revisit the fundamental idea behind Inglehart’s theory. When people become more materially secure, they worry more about self-realization and less about survival. In effect, the climb Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. If people lose a sense of material security, you’d expect them to shift back a little toward survival-oriented values.

All of which explains very little:

You’ll have to take my word for it when I say that the mere fact of an increasing gap between the lowest and highest percentiles in the income distribution doesn’t tell us anything very useful. Everything depends on the mechanisms that drive inequality.

And I can’t review all the mechanisms driving inequality here. I’ll just say that the combined effects of technology and education are a big part of the story—much bigger than globalization. Declining manufacturing employment, which is without a doubt important to the question at hand, has much more to do with automation than offshoring. (And that’s why Trump’s strategy of punishing firms who move production abroad is more likely to hurt working-class Americans qua consumers more than it will help them qua workers.

Good question. What are the actual mechanisms driving inequality? Second, what policies and programs can reverse inequality?

The Great Divergence: Rich Cities Pulling Away from Everybody Else

. . .

It probably has not escaped you that low-density Trump country is not home to America’s big economic winners.

The Urban Poor and Working Classes Are Probably Liberalizing, Too

First, the non-white urban poor and working classes especially benefit from liberal norms of racial and economic equality, particularly multicultural tolerance and inclusion.

Second, they tend to identify with the Democratic Party, which is the more reliable champion of the rights of immigrants and minorities, and favors public aid for the poor.

(plus three more factors I omitted for brevity)

Obama to Trump voters were devastated by the housing/mortgage ripoff:

The Material Insecurity of Low-Density White America

As Michela Zonta, Sarah Edelman, and Colin McArthur of the Center for American Progress observe, counties that shifted from Obama in 2012 to Trump in 2016 had unusually high rates of negative equity.

And a problem we are very aware of here at c99p:

But working age men in particular have been dropping out of the workforce at an alarming rate. According to the White House Council for Economic Advisors, the labor force participation rate for prime-age men decreased from 98% in 1954 to 88% last year. This is the second largest decrease among any of the OECD countries.

The explanation for this drop is a contested and extremely complicated story for another day.

The conclusion:

I've kept this post focused on the sort of economic conditions that drive the advance and retreat of liberal cultural attitudes. I haven’t really talked at all about the way cultural and moral polarization affects the way we feel about and treat one another.

But I think the cultural antagonisms generated by the polarizing material consequences of the Great Divergence have their own internal logic, which has led to a sense of winner-take-all culture war hostility that exacerbates the instability of America’s basic economic and political situation. I’ll explore the logic of our quasi-religious culture war dynamic, and some ideas for moderating the toxic ethos of winner-take-all mutual contempt, in a follow-up post.

That's the key goal; "ideas for moderating the toxic ethos of winner-take-all mutual contempt."

The link to
A Tale of Two Moralities

This article raised some interesting points about how economic inequality drives cultural attitudes and the interaction with voting behavior. It also has a couple of links to interesting theories of social behavior.

Bias alert from their "About" pdf: The Nissan Center is a bi-partisan think tank started in 2015 that has "libertarian" roots. Their stated concern:

Policy change is not reliably driven by electoral
outcomes or public opinion. It is instead a product of intense insider activity to overcome profound status quo biases in the political system
—biases that are not easily moved by external political pressure or material resources.

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Wink's picture

that complicated. A candidate that looks and speaks like O'bummer is going to have a Great shot at winning, regardless of party or policies. All about tv optics. Candidates like Hillary on the other hand... not much chance. Even with a $Billion.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Meteor Man's picture

@Wink
I'll Grant you that tv optics are unfortunately a big factor, but how about Bernie? Is his popularity based more on optics or policy?

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

riverlover's picture

@Meteor Man Domestic is fine. I think He's running again.

I seem to be a distributor of CBD products now. Higher strength stuff. Contact me.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Wink's picture

guy, I couldn't care
@riverlover
less if we even have a foreign policy, believe that when you're the big dog with the cold nose you don't really need a foreign policy, kinda like the 7th grade bully. But, yeah, it would be nice if he dumped Israel. Doubt it will happen, but would be nice. O'bummer had 8 years to stop the war(s) and didn't, and he's regarded by many as the bestest president ever. Ever! So, there's your foreign policy.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Wink's picture

bull$h!t, straight talk approach that voters (and kids, apparently) find appealing.
@Meteor Man
I guess. What was his appeal in 2016?
Whatever it was it's the very same appeal today.
Jeebus, watching the video of H.S. kids (on their day of blowing the school day off to protest gun violence at schools) run - Run! - to get near him when they heard Bernie was among them... girls screaming like the school girls they are... how much more je ne sais quoi does a candidate need than that? The video the very definition of rock god! Whatever a candidate needs to win an election Bernie has it. Still. In spades.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Meteor Man's picture

@Wink
but I think it's the issues AND the straight talk.

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Wink's picture

away by the response from H.S. kids when they heard from other kids that Bernie was nearby.
@Meteor Man
I swear you would have thought it was Bruno Mars! (the only rock star name I know from this century). We know he's popular with college kids, millenials even. But H.S. kids? When H.S. kids are paying attention - and actually know who the old guy with the white hair is - that's mighty impressive! Becuz in two years many of those kids vote! And if the election were held today they'd be voting for Bernie. What other politician can claim they own the youth vote? Imagine Bernie getting 68% of the 18-24 vote in 2020. Would it be enough, would it be the difference maker? Dunno. But one thing I do know. The Bernie Movement far from dead.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Daenerys's picture

@Wink If he'd been allowed to run in 2016 he would have won by a landslide, I'd bet my last dollar on it.

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This shit is bananas.

studentofearth's picture

As time passes residents in a district are less likely to be represented by an individual representing their values. It exaggerates the distortion of view points between rural and urban populations.

The Constitution created 65 seats in the House of Representatives, set a minimum size of 30,000 residents for a Congressional district, and mandated a reapportionment after each census. As new states entered the union and the nation's population grew, the size of the House increased every decade until 1912, when it reached the current size of 435 and the average district had 210,000 residents.

Today the average district has a startling 650,000 people. The largest district – Nevada's Third – has 960,000 residents, and the smallest – Wyoming's single district – has 493,000.

These disparities will continue to grow. By 2040 the average district will have more than 900,000 residents. Districts could range from as few as 500,000 residents to more than 1.7 million. Almost one-third of the states in the "People's House" could have only one or two representatives.

Our current situation where part of the country has to lose a congressional seat for another to gain one creates opportunity for long range efforts to create a hostile bi-polor political contest. Rural vs urban and shifts the focus from areas of universal concern. There are many individuals in each community where the current electrical process does not reflect their opinion or the historical opinions of the residents. Find it interesting progressive populism gained its footing in rural America. Since FDR many rural areas have been deliberately depopulated and repopulated with conservatives and corporations.

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Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.

Meteor Man's picture

@studentofearth
Thanks for this:

Rural vs urban and shifts the focus from areas of universal concern. There are many individuals in each community where the current electrical process does not reflect their opinion or the historical opinions of the residents.

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Wink's picture

My NY-21 is damn near
@studentofearth
the size of Conn., Mass. and R.I. combined.
The east and west sides of the district separated by a mountain range - the Adirondack Park - making it a pain-in-the-ass 2.5 to 3 hour drive from one side to the other. Try organizing That sumbitch! And, if the Republicon wins again this year, would be her 3rd term, we can pretty much kiss the district goodbye until she runs for Senate against Shoomer.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

arendt's picture

@studentofearth

overhaul for twenty years. Here is a version from 2007 (sorry about the GOS link)

Here is a section laying out the problem you identify:

The Federalist Papers lay out the thinking behind the Constitution, while the Constitution itself is as compact and to the point as a piece of computer code. Both documents agree on the need to get the size of the district of representation correct. Too small and it can be taken over by some cabal; too big and it becomes nothing more than an emotion-driven mob.

This fundamental rule of district size was never brought into law, due to political maneuvering at the very beginning of our country. The politicians who killed this law knew full well what they were doing; but the typical voter did not see the scaling problem or, more likely, did not know how to deal with it. So they let it continue, like a person slowly gaining weight. Unfortunately, our democracy is now morbidly obese and about to expire. So, we require some drastic surgery in order to survive.

This essay is hardly the first to point to the "30k problem". All sides of the rational political spectrum have identified it, and have proposed to enlarge our assembly. (One website that is a good introduction to the problem is: http://www.thirty-thousand.org And there is where the thinking stops, because enlarging the assembly was known to be unworkable already by the Founders.

Here is a section that begins to state my overhaul:

4. A Large Number of Representatives is not a Technical Issue. It is an Organizational Issue.

A quick calculation shows we currently would need ( ~215 M eligible voters / 30,000 voters per representative = ) ~7,200 representatives to meet the requirement in the Constitution. Of course, if these were organized as a single legislative body, we would have mob chaos. But, look at Congress today. There are on the order of 20,000 Congressional staff members - the people who really do the committee and sub-committee work. The Congress is a slow-moving bureaucratic machine, not a chaotic mob. There is organization, and it succeeds in producing legislation. The fact that this legislation serves only corporate interests does not negate the fact that Congress works for the people who control it.

Part of the reason corporations control Congress is that most voters do not have direct access to the critical, but obscure, Congressional staff who do the real bureaucratic work. Corporations, on the other hand, have a revolving door deal with the Congress; and all the staff members are anxious to please their real constituents, who just happen to be their future employers. (Talk about conflict of interest!) Meanwhile, the interface presented to the voter is the horrible, pseudo-celebrity "bundle" of the candidate. If, instead, the voters could interface directly to the staff, the ratio would be ~10,000 voters per staff member! Plus, the limited responsibilities of the individual staff members would make it clear who was responsible for what, and avoid the shell game of "politics is the art of compromise" that is often used to dodge voter pressure. And, most importantly, these political footsoldiers would no longer be obscure staff members, but would now be representatives accountable to voters - long before they are ready to exit via the revolving door.

Bottom line: your observation is correct. But it can't be fixed, because, in the current political system, its a feature, not a bug.

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snoopydawg's picture

People who had been hurt the most during the economic crisis were the ones who voted for Trump. They saw Trump saying the right words about helping them get back to work and on their feet again, while Hillary was offering more of the same as Obama.

I commented on one person's article and said that the reason Trump is president is directly related to Obama's tenure and he was so happy that someone got what he was saying, he sent me an email thanking me. This made my day Smile

BTW, here's Hillary lying her butt off to the people of India.

I don't know if this video starts where she is telling her story about Putin's parents, but if not it started about more than half way through it. I got there from another link.

You are finding some interesting articles. Thanks for posting them.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

@snoopydawg first she falls down the stairs, now she's broken her wrist falling in the hotel bathroom. Can someone please get this woman into rehab?

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snoopydawg's picture

@GusBecause

I have no idea why she is wearing a blanket during her interview, but she is definitely lying her buttocks off during it. And she said that Harry Reid was one of the people who refused to alert America about Russia. I may be wrong here, but didn't Reid retire? Pretty sure he did. I too wish she would go away, but if she is going to make a fool of herself, go to it, Hills ...

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Wink's picture

a deeper hole.
@snoopydawg
It's a beautiful thing to watch.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

@Wink

let her keep digging nice and deep and we'll toss supplies down to her when she needs 'em.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

arendt's picture

Retro vs Metro

This book generated a lot of comments at the time. I even took the time to read the whole thing. IIRC, this book coined the term "metrosexual".

The argument you are quoting sounds a lot like RvsM.

Unfortunately, one of the authors of RvM was John Sperling, the founder of the University of Phoenix - a large and early voice in the campaign to privatize all of education.

I agree with other commenters that the problem is the gigantic size of Congressional districts, and the overrepresentation of rural states in the antiquated EC. In fact, I think that problem alone has allowed our system of government to be bought by the person with the most TV ads.

Further, while the problem identified is real, we want to minimize it; not maximize it. With Identity Politics splintering the country already, we don't need another way to divide people.

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