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  • Will Trump’s win make the rocky marriage between big tech and big blue cities even worse?
    2024/11/16

    America’s bluest big cities are in a tense, co-dependent relationship with the tech giants that power their economies and anchor their prosperity.

    It didn’t start out that way. When tech giants first decided, about 20 years ago, to decamp from their cloistered suburban enclaves to embed themselves in the vibrant hearts of big blue cities, a torrid big tech bromance with urban America flourished. But what initially seemed to be the perfect marriage of shared progressive cultural values has soured. Now Trump’s big win threatens to further divide blue city leaders from some of the tech giants.

    We ask Professor Margaret O’Mara, author of “The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America," why the relationship between tech and blue cities has deteriorated, and what to do to try and repair it.

    Margaret O’Mara's writing about tech regularly appears in the New York Times and other outlets. She writes and teaches about the growth of the high-tech economy, the history of American politics, and the connections between the two at the University of Washington. Back in the 1990s, O’Mara worked in the Clinton White House and the Department of Health and Human Services.

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    55 分
  • Was the "insufferable left" to blame for Trump's big gains in blue cities?
    2024/11/08

    In decisively winning the presidency, some of Donald Trump’s biggest gains came in the places you’d least expect them: big blue cities and urban suburbs. A lot of Trump’s victory is due to voter dissatisfaction with mass migration and the price of eggs. But Dan Savage suggests urban progressives also need to look in the mirror: did an “insufferable" censorious streak within the culture of the urban left contribute to Trump’s win? We discuss and debate.

    Quinn Waller is our editor.





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    53 分
  • Dan Savage on Trumpism and the future of blue cities
    2024/10/31

    Twenty years ago, in the wake of a searing presidential defeat, Dan Savage encouraged progressives to move to blue cities and to fortify them into an “Urban Archipelago” of culturally separatist bastions that rejected the reactionary politics of the larger red American landscape. And he got his wish.

    Over the last two decades, rural places got redder and urban areas much bluer, and America’s bluest cities developed their own distinctive culture and politics. They became the leading edge of a cultural transformation that reshaped progressivism, redefined urbanism and remade the Democratic Party.

    But as blue cities went their own way, as they thrived as economically and culturally vibrant trend-setters, these urban cosmopolitan islands also developed their own distinctive set of problems. Inequality soared, and affordability tanked.

    And yet, as these cities evolved together and formed their own, increasingly shared worldview, the public conversation about this brave new pan-urban world-unto-itself stagnated, relegated to localized conversations in narrowly provincial regional newspapers or local NPR programming.

    On this pilot episode of Blue City Blues we pick up where Savage’s Urban Archipelago idea left off, with a national perspective on the present and the future of urban America.


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    44 分