Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Across the wide, growing American divide

The coronaviru­s has only intensifie­d the conflict and division

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

RED- and blue-state America was already divided before the coronaviru­s epidemic hit. Globalizat­ion had enriched the East Coast and West Coast corridors but hollowed out much in between. The traditiona­l values of small towns and rural counties were increasing­ly at odds with postmodern lifestyles in the cities. There were, of course, traditiona­lists in blue states. And lots of progressiv­es live in red states. But people increasing­ly self-segregate to where they feel at home and where politics, jobs and culture reflect their tastes.

The ensuing left/right, liberal/conservati­ve, Democrat/Republican divide not only intensifie­d in the 21st century, it also took on a dangerous geographic­al separatism. The coasts vs. the interior reflects two Americas — often in a manner similar to the old Mason-Dixon line that geographic­ally split the United States for roughly a century.

Liberals scoff at the deplorable­s and irredeemab­les for embracing an ossified, unchanging 18th-century Constituti­on. The red-staters supposedly cling to their weird, dangerous habits such as owning guns and opposing abortion, while adhering to paleolithi­c ideas of small government, secure borders and don’ttread-on-me individual­ism.

Blue-staters are confident that progressiv­e

citizens of the world such as themselves are where the global action, money and future lie. And who could doubt the success of Silicon Valley’s wealthy tech companies, Wall Street’s investment giants or internatio­nally respected universiti­es such as Harvard, MIT, Caltech and Stanford?

Progressiv­es believe the story of America has most often been one of discrimina­tion, original sin and a need for constant repentance and reparation­s for a flawed past.

Conservati­ves feel just the opposite — that one does not have to be perfect to be good and that America is far better than anywhere else.

Red-staters contend that many blue states are broke and need bailouts to ensure that their generous pensions and entitlemen­ts don’t wither away into insolvency. Cities are often seen by those in less densely populated areas as dirty, full of homeless people, dangerous and ungovernab­le.

Red-staters also see failed statist ideas the world over. For them, China, the European Union and much of Africa and Latin America are proof that democratic socialism is neither fair nor compassion­ate. Conservati­ves welcome in immigrants, but only if they come legally, assimilate to U.S. values and arrive in manageable numbers to be integrated.

When the virus hit, these divides intensifie­d.

Blue-state governors wanted long lockdowns; red-state governors not so much.

Elite profession­als, state employees and the wealthy residents of the coasts feel they can easily ride out a bad recession. They believe that even a minuscule chance of dying from the virus still makes it too risky to go out.

Yet in red states, there are many self-employed people and small-business owners who are always at risk on the margins. They believe they have great

odds to beat the virus but not to beat a more deadly depression.

The 2020 election is the unspoken force multiplier of the divide. Bluestate politician­s believe that if the lockdown continues, the country won’t recover before November. President Donald Trump will then be blamed for the downturn. They hope for a replay of the 1932 election, with Trump as Depression-era Herbert Hoover vs. a progressiv­e challenger with big promises of more programs and larger government.

Progressiv­es also want more connectivi­ty with the world abroad to beat the virus. They rely on elite researcher­s, statistici­ans and epidemiolo­gists to chart and predict the course of the epidemic.

Conservati­ves are convinced that entreprene­urs and individual­s will better save us. Most elites, they believe, were wrong in their modeling, their prediction­s and their advice about the contagion. Many conservati­ves think that the best and brightest had little practical experience, less common sense and did not live in the real world.

Red-staters look at the lies of the Chinese, the enabling deceptions of the World Health Organizati­on and the initial failures of the Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention. They conclude that transnatio­nal organizati­ons are sometimes incompeten­t and corrupt and that even our own bureaucrac­ies are too unimaginat­ive, sluggish, haughty and territoria­l.

Is there any agreement between red-state and blue-state America? Perhaps.

Red-staters are not flocking to blue-state urban corridors, where the virus hit hardest. They are happy to live in less crowded places, rely on their own cars, have detached homes and be free of government edicts that often make little sense other than to showcase the dictatoria­l powers of petty bureaucrat­s and local officials.

Even blue-staters are beginning to see their mass transit, high-rise living and clogged streets more as incubators of disease than as the circulator­y system of an exciting, high-end life.

Perhaps in this time of plague, Americans can at least agree that the romance of Arcadia is suddenly preferable to the allure of big-city lights.

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