Bangkok Post

Ignorance in fashion in 21st century

- Paul Krugman, a Nobel laureate in economics, is a columnist with The New York Times.

These days calling someone a “know-nothing” could mean one of two things. If you’re a student of history, you might be comparing that person to a member of the Know Nothing party of the 1850s, a bigoted, xenophobic, anti-immigrant group that at its peak included more than 100 members of Congress and eight governors. More likely, however, you’re suggesting that said person is wilfully ignorant, someone who rejects facts that might conflict with his or her prejudices.

The sad thing is that America is currently ruled by people who fit both definition­s. And the know-nothings in power are doing all they can to undermine the very foundation­s of American greatness.

The parallels between anti-immigrant agitation in the mid-19th century and Trumpism are obvious. Only the identities of the maligned have changed.

After all, Ireland and Germany, the main sources of that era’s immigratio­n wave, were the shithole countries of the day. Half of Ireland’s population emigrated in the face of famine, while Germans were fleeing both economic and political turmoil. Immigrants from both countries, but the Irish in particular, were portrayed as drunken criminals if not subhuman. They were also seen as subversive­s: Catholics whose first loyalty was to the pope. A few decades later, the next great immigratio­n wave — of Italians, Jews and many other peoples — inspired similar prejudice.

And here we are again. Anti-Irish prejudice and anti-German prejudice are mostly things of the past (although antiSemiti­sm springs eternal), but there are always new groups to hate.

But today’s Republican­s — for this isn’t just about Donald Trump, it’s about a whole party — aren’t just Know-Nothings, they’re also know-nothings. The range of issues on which conservati­ves insist that the facts have a well-known liberal bias just keeps widening.

One result of this embrace of ignorance is a remarkable estrangeme­nt between modern conservati­ves and highly educated Americans, especially but not only college faculty. The right insists that the scarcity of self-identified conservati­ves in the academy is evidence of discrimina­tion against their views, of political correctnes­s run wild.

Yet conservati­ve professors are rare even in hard sciences, and it’s not difficult to see why. When the more or less official position of your party is that climate change is a hoax and evolution never happened, you won’t get much support from people who take evidence seriously.

So the party that currently controls all three branches of the federal government is increasing­ly for bigotry and against education. That should disturb you for multiple reasons, one of which is that the GOP has rejected the very values that made America great.

Think of where we’d be as a nation if we hadn’t experience­d those great waves of immigrants driven by the dream of a better life. Think of where we’d be if we hadn’t led the world, first in universal basic education, then in the creation of great institutio­ns of higher education. Surely we’d be a shrunken, stagnant, second-rate society.

I’ve been rereading an important 2012 book, Enrico Moretti’s The New Geography of Jobs, about the growing divergence of regional fortunes within the United States. Until around 1980, America seemed on the path toward broadly spread prosperity, with poor regions like the Deep South rapidly catching up with the rest. Since then, however, the gaps have widened again, with incomes in some parts of the nation surging while other parts fall behind.

Moretti argues, rightly in the view of many economists, that this new divergence reflects the growing importance of clusters of highly skilled workers — many of them immigrants — often centred on great universiti­es, that create virtuous circles of growth and innovation. And as it happens, the 2016 election largely pitted these rising regions against those left behind, which is why counties carried by Hillary Clinton, who won only a narrow majority, account for a remarkable 64% of US gross domestic product, almost twice as much as Trump counties.

Clearly, we need policies to spread the benefits of growth and innovation more widely. But one way to think of Trumpism is as an attempt to narrow regional disparitie­s, not by bringing the lagging regions up, but by cutting the growing regions down.

So will our modern know-nothings prevail? I have no idea. What’s clear, however, is that if they do, they won’t make America great again — they’ll kill the very things that made it great.

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