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12 May 2008 11:53 am
Behind Polarization
Take a bow, Charles Murray:
What accounts for the decline of ideologically mixed localities? Bill
Bishop, a journalist, and Robert Cushing, a sociologist, who have
studied this issue, stress that the age of “white flight” to the
suburbs is over. Instead, during the past two decades, many whites have
moved to one group of cities and many blacks to another. Meanwhile,
young people have deserted rural and older manufacturing areas for
cities like Austin and Portland. Places with higher densities of
college graduates attract even more, so that the gap between such
communities and less-educated areas widens further. Zones of high
education, in turn, produce more innovation and enjoy higher incomes,
generating communities dominated by upper-middle-class tastes.
Lower-educated regions, by contrast, tend to be more family-oriented
and more faithful to traditional authority.
The Bell Curve's fear of an increasingly divided and stratified society - based on intelligence and education - keeps coming closer to reality.
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