Blue dystopia
I read this over at Hullabaloo, “Blue dystopia” by Digby “The fantasy liberal hellholes red America loves to hate”
“The Dystopian Myths of Red America,” New York Times, Paul Krugman
Desensitization is an amazing thing. At this point most political observers simply accept it as a fact of life that an overwhelming majority of Republicans accept the Big Lie that the 2020 election was stolen — a claim with nothing to support it, not even plausible anecdotes.
What I don’t think is fully appreciated, however, is that the Big Lie is embedded in an even bigger lie: the claim that the Democratic Party is controlled by radical leftists aiming to destroy America as we know it. And this lie in turn derives a lot of its persuasiveness from a grotesquely distorted view of what life is like in blue America.
Urban elites are constantly accused of not understanding Real America. And, to be fair, most big-city residents probably don’t have a good sense of what life is like in rural areas and small towns, although it’s doubtful whether this gap justified the immense number of news reports interviewing Trump voters sitting in diners.
But I’d argue that right-wing misperceptions of blue America run far deeper — and are far more dangerous.
Let’s start with the politics.
The other day The Washington Post’s Dave Weigel, reporting from the campaign trail, noted that many Republican candidates are claiming that Democrats are deliberately undermining the nation and promoting violence against their opponents; some are even claiming that we’re already in a civil war.
Some (many?) of these candidates have been winning primaries, suggesting that the G.O.P. base agrees with them. Actually, I’d like to see some surveys along the lines of those showing that most Republicans accept the Big Lie. How many Republicans believe that President Biden and other leading Democrats are left-wing radicals, indeed Marxists?
Relatedly, I’d like to know how many Republicans believe that Black Lives Matter demonstrators looted and burned large parts of America’s major cities.
Now, the reality is that the modern Democratic Party is a mildly center-left coalition, consisting of what Europeans would call social democrats, and relatively conservative ones at that. To take one measure, I can’t think of any prominent Democrats — actually, any Democratic members of Congress — who have expressed admiration for any authoritarian foreign regime.
This is in contrast to widespread conservative admiration for Hungary’s Viktor Orban, who recently denounced other Europeans for “mixing with non-Europeans” and declared that he doesn’t want Hungary to become a “mixed-race” country.
On the domestic violence front, a study by the Anti-Defamation League found that 75 percent of extremist-related domestic killings from 2012 to 2021 were perpetrated by the right and only 4 percent by the left.
Finally, about B.L.M.: The protests were, in fact, overwhelmingly peaceful. Yes, there was some arson and looting, with total property damage typically estimated at $1 billion to $2 billion. That may sound like a lot, but America is a big country, so it needs to be put in perspective.
Here’s one point of comparison. Back in April, Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, pulled a political stunt at the border with Mexico, temporarily imposing extra security checks that caused a major slowdown of traffic, disrupting business and leading to a lot of spoiled produce. Total economic losses have been estimated at around $4 billion; that is, a few days of border-security theater appear to have caused more economic damage than a hundred days of mass protests.
Yet pointing out these facts probably won’t change many minds. Nor does there seem to be any way to change the perception, also alluded to in that Post article, that a lax attitude toward law enforcement has turned America’s big cities into dangerous hellholes. It’s true that violent crime rose during the pandemic, but it rose about as much in rural America as it did in urban areas. And despite that recent rise, violence in many cities is far lower than it was not long ago.
In New York City, homicides so far this year are running a bit below their 2021 level, and in 2021 they were 78 percent lower than they were in 1990 and a quarter lower than they were in 2001. As Bloomberg’s Justin Fox has documented, New York is actually a lot safer than small-town America. Los Angeles has also seen a big long-term drop in homicides, as has California as a whole. Some cities, notably Philadelphia and Chicago, are back to or above early 1990s murder rates, but they’re not representative of the broader picture.
But who among the Republican base will acknowledge this reality? Whenever I mention New York’s relative safety, I get a wave of mail saying, in effect, “You can’t really believe that.”
The fact is that a large segment of the U.S. electorate has bought into an apocalyptic vision of America that bears no relationship to the reality of how the other half thinks, behaves or lives. We don’t have to speculate about whether this dystopian fantasy might lead to political violence and attempts to overthrow democracy; it already has. And it’s probably going to get worse.
The post The Dystopian Myths of Red America appeared first on New York Times.
(The post above is Paul Krugman’s column from July 25. The one below is more recent.)
Did Democrats Just Save Civilization?
Paul Krugman – August 8
Was in NYC a couple of weeks ago. Nothing bad happened, although my kids were approached by what seemed to be a mentally ill Elsa in Times Square hoping that it would result in a photo and $5 or so. It did not, but apart from that it was not stressful, although we stayed in midtown really and did not move any further afield. But it did feel comparatively empty for a peak day of summer. No wait at the Empire State Building, the Met was not crowded. Bryant Park had places to sit down at 5:45 PM. Sidewalks were easily navigable even with 2 kids. No sign of coronavirus precautions. No masks on the LI railroad, nobody asking for vaccine documents. I guess that is all over. Long Island – which was the main stop on our vacation, was also a lot less crowded than in pre-pandemic vacations.
Eric:
I am happy you had a good time in NYC with your family. If it is the first time there, it can have a huge impact on the younger set. The tall buildings, etc.
As far as Covid, I would still stay away from unmasked close crowds. The stuff is still out there.
I believe much of the reason Red America believes Blue America urban regions are hell holes lies with TV programming. They are constantly bombarded with cop programs replete with ultra-violence and usually set in an urban landscape. Where else are you going to find the population and pictorial density needed to make an interesting visual for a TV screen? So, you follow a half dozen people on screen and ultimately see 2-3 of that number shot/killed/blowed-up and think, “Gee, urban life is really dangerous.” The viewer hasn’t thought about the fact that there live on the two blocks in either direction from that “action” more people than live in the county they reside. The Red State folks also aren’t real good with math beyond counting and refuse to acknowledge that violence also had rates and ratios beyond absolute numbers, thereby enabling them to ignore just how dangerous their own neighborhood is.
Praha
Very true Praha. I am used to NYC, Chicago, and LA. There are places you do not go and I know it. In Beijing, Shanghai, Shantou, Seoul, Manila, Bangkok, etc. similar exists but it is much more unknown to me the extent. I found those places were accepting of us in the business areas. TV exaggerates this dynamic.
Too many people running around thinking they are the law of the land in the US too.
People are convinced NYC and Los Angeles are dangerous because cops and robbers shows have used them as backdrops. The only more dangerous place to live was probably Cabot Cove in Maine which probably had a negative population by the end of the long running Murder, She Wrote television series. Media is centered in those cities, so crime based shows are set there. It’s like the shark music in Jaws. People cringe in fear when they see what writers and directors have established as fearful street scenes. The fact that both those cities were actually safer than the typical red state suburb is irrelevant. Cue the music, and a good writer or director can have us shivering in our boots as we zoom in on the slasher remake of Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.
https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/murder-map-deadliest-u-s-cities/
Murder map: Deadliest U.S. cities
By Elisha Fieldstadt
Updated on: February 23, 2022 / 8:48 PM / CBS NEWS
In America, an estimated 16,425 people were murdered in 2019. This was a 0.3% increase from the 2018 estimate.
Here are murder rates in 65 major U.S. cities (cities with greater than 100,000 residents) for 2019. These rates are calculated using the latest statistics available — the FBI’s 2019 Crime in the United States data, as well as data culled directly from city police officials and the U.S. Census Bureau…
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[Richmond made the list twice with my Richmond (VA) at number 11 and CA at number 39. I was surprised a little by 61. Bridgeport, Connecticut, 54. Springfield, Massachusetts and 33. Hartford, Connecticut. My wife is from Enfield, CT, but that has not lead me to an understanding of the trafficking routes and rivalries that are the source of most high murder rates in the US. What perhaps distinguishes LA and NYC is aggressive policing and well established dominance among gang rivals with LAPD and NYPD acting as paid referees evicting unwelcome outsiders from the field of play. Long ago RVA had a scheme much like Oakland, where the Local LEOs shared the black market space with the biker gangs seizing product from unwanted competitors for resale via their female CIs. So, most of the assaults and murders were just between the cops and biker gangs over turf.
A more probable condition of murder rate emanating from black market turf rivalries is that murder rate is expressed in terms of murders over some unit of general population, whereas black markets take advantage of economies of scale being more efficient where population and transportation resources are concentrated. So, the largest cities may have more murders and still have lower murder rates. ]
Another problem is projection. Republicans think everyone is like them. Since they are always the ones engaging in or suborning electoral fraud, they assume the other side is. Maybe we should take them at face value, so when an election denier is elected, we should question them as to the level of fraud their election entailed.