The real
national divide isn’t between red and blue states
By Victor Davis Hanson
The densely populated coastal corridors from Boston to
Washington and from San Diego to Berkeley are where most of America’s big
decisions are made.
They remind us of
two quite different Americas: one country along these coasts and everything
else in between. Those in Boston, New York, and Washington determine how our
government works; what sort of news, books, art, and fashion we should consume;
and whether our money and investments are worth anything.
The Pacific
corridor is just as influential, but in a hipper, cooler fashion. Whether
America suffers through another zombie film or one more Lady Gaga video or
Kanye West’s latest soft-porn rhyme is determined by Hollywood — mostly by
executives who live in the la-la land of the thin Pacific strip from Malibu to
Palos Verdes.
The next smart
phone or search engine 5.0 will arise from the minds of tech geeks who pay
$2,000 a month for studio apartments and drive BMWs in Menlo Park, Palo Alto,
or Mountain View.
The road to riches
and influence, we are told, lies in being branded with a degree from a
coastal-elite campus like Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, or Berkeley. How
well a Yale professor teaches an 18-year-old in a class on American history
does not matter as much as the fact that the professor helps to stamp the
student with the Ivy League logo. That mark is the lifelong golden key that is
supposed to unlock the door to coastal privilege.
Fly over or drive
across the United States, and the spatial absurdity of this rather narrow
coastal monopoly is immediately apparent to the naked eye. Outside of these
power corridors, our vast country appears pretty empty. The nation’s muscles
that produce our oil, gas, food, lumber, minerals, and manufactured goods work
unnoticed in this sparsely settled fly-over expanse.
People rise each
morning in San Francisco and New York and count on plentiful food, fuel, and
power. They expect service in elevators and limos that are mostly made
elsewhere by people of the sort they seldom see and don’t really know — other
than to influence through a cable-news show, a new rap song, the next federal
health-care mandate, or more phone apps.
In California,
whether farms receive contracted irrigation water, whether a billion board feet
of burned timber will be salvaged from the recent Sierra Nevada forest fires,
whether a high-speed-rail project obliterates thousands of acres of ancestral
farms, whether gas will be fracked, or whether granite should be mined to make
tony kitchen counters is all determined largely by coastal elites who take
these plentiful resources for granted. Rarely, however, do they see how their
own necessities are procured. Instead, they feel deeply ambivalent about the
grubbier people and culture that made them.
In Kansas or Utah,
people do not pay $1,000 per square foot for their homes as they do on the
Upper West Side of Manhattan. They do not gossip with the people who write
their tax laws, as is common in the Georgetown area of Washington. Those in the
empty northern third of California do not see Facebook or Oracle founders at
the local Starbucks any more than they bump into the Kardashians at a hip
bistro.
The problem is not
just that the coasts determine how everyone else is to lead their lives, but
that those living in our elite corridors have no idea about how life is lived
just a short distance away in the interior — much less about the sometimes
tragic consequences of their own therapeutic ideology on the distant, less
influential majority.
In a fantasy
world, I would move Washington, D.C., to Kansas City, Mo. That transfer would
not only make the capital more accessible to the American people and equalize travel
requirements for our legislators, but also expose an out-of-touch government to
a reality outside its Beltway.
I would transfer
the United Nations to Salt Lake City, where foreign diplomats would live in a
different sort of cocoon.
I would ask billionaires
like Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, and the Koch Brothers to endow with their
riches a few Midwestern or Southern universities. Perhaps we could create a new
Ivy League in the nation’s center.
I would suggest to
Facebook and Apple that they relocate operations to North Dakota to expose
their geeky entrepreneurs to those who drive trucks and plow snow. Who knows —
they might be able to afford a house, get married before 35, and have three
rather than zero kids.
America is said to
be divided by red and blue states, rich and poor, white and non-white,
Christian and non-Christian, old and new.
I think the real
divide is between those who make our decisions on the coasts and the anonymous
others who live with the consequences somewhere else.
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