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   talk.politics.guns      The politics of firearm ownership and (m      196,508 messages   

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   Message 196,259 of 196,508   
   Wild Dog to All   
   Re: California's cost of living is still   
   21 Feb 26 07:29:23   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc   
   From: hotmail@hotmail.edu   
      
   c186282 wrote:   
      
   >On 2/20/26 19:36, JTEM wrote:   
   >> Wild Dog wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> Broke & Blue California wrote:   
   >>>   
   >>>> California still has the highest cost of living in the U.S. And it's   
   not   
   >>>> just because of housing.   
   >>>   
   >>> Only the rich live there.   
   >>   
   >> It's about time that the poor joined their Red State friends.   
   >   
   >   They'll do MUCH BETTER with their Red State Friends.   
   >   
   >   Sorry, The South HAS risen again - becoming the   
   >   center of the biz/financial USA world.   
   >   
   >   Why ? LOOK IN THE MIRROR.   
   >   
      
      
      
      
   Why Red States Stay Poor While Blue States Grow Richer   
      
      
   When we think about inequality in the United States, we often imagine it   
   along racial, class, or urban-rural lines. But there's another divide, one   
   etched into the political geography of the country. The richest states in   
   America nearly all vote Democrat. The poorest ones, with rare exception,   
   consistently vote Republican. This is a slow-burning outcome of over a   
   century of historical injustice, economic neglect, and deliberate political   
   strategy.   
      
   Many Canadians and Americans themselves look at this divide and ask the   
   same question: why do some of the most economically distressed states vote   
   for a party that promises smaller government and less investment in public   
   goods? The answer lies in understanding the deeply-rooted forces that shape   
   these voting patterns, and the very real human costs they continue to   
   impose.   
      
   To understand today's political and economic map of the United States, one   
   must begin in the 19th century. Before the Civil War, the American South   
   was built on an agrarian economy dependent on slave labour. The war's end   
   marked a seismic shift. Slavery was abolished, but the economic collapse   
   that followed devastated the Southern economy. The brief Reconstruction era   
   that followed was a time of bold federal intervention and the promise of   
   racial equality. That promise was met with violent resistance.   
      
   Segregationist policies, underinvestment in education, and systemic racism   
   soon replaced Reconstruction. These states were left isolated from the   
   rapid industrial growth taking place in the North and West. Infrastructure   
   lagged, and public education systems were chronically underfunded. Wealth   
   remained concentrated in the hands of a few, and entire generations of   
   Americans were denied the opportunity to thrive.   
      
   In contrast, states in the Northeast and along the West Coast began   
   industrializing early. They welcomed waves of immigrants who helped fuel   
   innovation and expansion. Public infrastructure projects, from roads to   
   schools to sanitation, laid the foundation for long-term economic growth.   
   Cities like New York, Boston, and San Francisco became magnets for capital   
   and talent. Public education became a ladder to the middle class, and civic   
   institutions flourished.   
      
   These states began to understand something fundamental: investment in   
   people leads to prosperity. Governments in these regions increasingly   
   embraced social programs, labour protections, and public health   
   initiatives. These policies were not only morally sound, but they also made   
   economic sense. A healthy, educated, and supported workforce was far more   
   productive.   
      
   The political map we see today did not always look this way. Until the mid-   
   20th century, the American South was solidly Democratic, a legacy of the   
   party's role in defending Southern interests after the Civil War. But the   
   Civil Rights Movement began to change that. When Democratic presidents like   
   Lyndon B. Johnson pushed through the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights   
   Act in the 1960s, many white voters in the South felt alienated.   
      
   This discontent was strategically harnessed by the Republican Party under   
   Richard Nixon's "Southern Strategy, " which sought to appeal to white   
   Southern voters through coded language around states' rights and "law and   
   order. " Over time, this alignment deepened, and the Republican Party   
   became dominant in many of the very states that had once resisted federal   
   intervention most fiercely.   
      
   Today, Republican-dominated states often prioritize policies that reflect a   
   deep distrust of government. Lower taxes, fewer regulations, and minimal   
   public services are held up as ideals. Yet the economic data tells a   
   starkly different story.   
      
   Many of these so-called "red states" rank near the bottom in public   
   education funding, healthcare access, labour protections, and   
   infrastructure investment. They are also disproportionately dependent on   
   federal subsidies to maintain basic services. States like Mississippi,   
   Alabama, and West Virginia receive far more from the federal government   
   than they contribute in taxes. Meanwhile, wealthier "blue states" like   
   California, New York, and Massachusetts send billions more in federal taxes   
   than they get back.   
      
   This transfer of wealth is often derided by conservative politicians as   
   "welfare, " even though their states are among the largest recipients of   
   it.   
      
   Education plays a crucial role in this divide. States that invest heavily   
   in public education, including universal pre-kindergarten, college tuition   
   assistance, and special education, tend to produce a more skilled and   
   engaged population. These states often vote Democratic. Their residents are   
   more likely to value scientific evidence, public policy discussions, and   
   social equity.   
      
   Conversely, states with weak education systems often struggle to break   
   cycles of poverty. Chronic underfunding, school closures, and poor teacher   
   retention make it harder for children to access upward mobility. And it's   
   not just about schools. In many red states, policies actively undermine   
   labour rights through "right-to-work" laws, attacks on unions, and cuts to   
   worker protections. This leaves many residents unable to build stable,   
   middle-class lives.   
      
   Parental leave, disability benefits, and sick days are luxuries in many   
   Republican-controlled states. The result is predictable: a worker   
   undergoing cancer treatment may lose their job, their home, and their   
   ability to care for their family, all because they missed a week of work   
   they could not afford to lose.   
      
   Public health has also played a key role in this divide. In the early 20th   
   century, a hookworm epidemic plagued the American South. The parasite   
   caused chronic fatigue, stunted growth, and reduced cognitive development,   
   especially among children. Poor sanitation and malnutrition allowed it to   
   spread. The disease was so widespread that it had long-lasting effects on   
   economic productivity and public health outcomes.   
      
   To this day, Southern states rank near the bottom in life expectancy,   
   maternal health, and chronic disease prevention. The region has fewer   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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