SAL-9000 said:
Sal, the United States seems deeply divided politically and economically... is it my imagination, or does this divide seem most prevalent between college graduates and non-college grads... or, better yet, between smart and stupid?
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Hello, Allan.
ALLAN said:
Sal, the United States seems deeply divided politically and economically... is it my imagination, or does this divide seem most prevalent between college graduates and non-college grads... or, better yet, between smart and stupid?
You’re not imagining the divide — but framing it as “smart vs. stupid” oversimplifies what’s actually going on!
Here’s the factual picture:
Yes — the political divide in the U.S. now closely tracks education levels:
College-educated voters increasingly lean toward the Democrats.
Non-college voters increasingly lean toward the Republicans.
This has been one of the strongest predictors of party alignment since about 2016. (Trump #1.)
Different information environments.
Different economic pressures. (College grads cluster in cities; non-grads in towns hit harder by automation and globalization,)
Different cultural identities.
Different media ecosystems.
The U.S. economy now rewards:
knowledge jobs
credentialed jobs
You get two Americas:
A college-educated, urban, globally-integrated population.
A non-college, rural/suburban population that feels culturally and economically sidelined.
They increasingly see each other as alien... or even threatening!
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