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question everything

(47,487 posts)
Sun Jul 28, 2019, 01:53 PM Jul 2019

Minnesota's urban-rural divide is no lie - Professor Jacobs in the strib

(snip)

With predictable academic stiffness, I pointed to my charts and maps as proof. Wrong, I was told. Middle- and lower-income voters in the two regions share the need for health care, housing, and an easing of economic inequality. What I am presenting, my critics insisted, is in fact evidence of failed DFL leadership rather than of a meaningful divide among voters. An able politician would bring urban and rural voters together in a coalition. Fair enough, to a point. Strong campaigns by U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Gov. Tim Walz have won in rural areas where few Democrats succeed these days. On the other hand, the past dozen years of state legislative races reveal an unmistakable trend.

(snip)

When I talk to people in greater Minnesota, most report that it’s city/country economic disparities, rather than shared concerns, that dominate their thinking.... “We’re getting shafted,” reported a county commissioner from greater Minnesota. “Jobs are not here for long, but we still have to pay taxes while prices and taxes keep rising.” The common outstate conclusion that “no one cares about us” is reinforced by impressions of Minneapolis prosperity — “everywhere there are cranes and help-wanted signs for jobs that start at $15 per hour” says one observer, compared with aging Main Streets and fragile, lower-paying employment opportunities outside the metro area.

(snip)

This visceral sense of being “shafted” reveals itself in this mortifying pattern: Minnesota farmers and miners draw food and minerals from the earth, which then enrich processors and retailers in the Twin Cities. Most of the money made from agriculture was reaped in the Twin Cities even though the crops were grown in rural communities.

Meanwhile, a biting second divide emerges from the Minneapolis campaigns against “white privilege” or “privilege” of other kinds. Here’s a sample: A Minneapolis official accused residents who support retaining green spaces of engaging in “white pastoralism.” Cards announcing “Your homeowner privilege is showing” were distributed last year to owners of single-family homes who questioned the introduction of triplexes into low-density neighborhoods they may have lived in for decades and paid the heavy taxes to do so... Activists and the media have also tracked racial disparities in the conduct of the Minneapolis Police Department for some time... “The progressive left’s language of equity,” a prominent person of color explains, “alienates whites who don’t see themselves in the picture and [who] then move to the right.”

My conversations with county commissioners and others in greater Minnesota steamed with resentment. “There’s no white privilege,” I was frequently informed. “I’ve had to work for whatever I have.” Charges of white privilege, one rural researcher explained, are understood in rural Minnesota as “metro privilege — many people [here] are struggling to find and keep a job and make ends meet.” In short, the focus on racial identity in Minneapolis may be widening the urban/rural divide. Nearly everyone I spoke with in greater Minnesota let loose with the same exasperation: “Minneapolis is out of touch with reality.” Or, less politely: “You guys are nuts.” One well-placed state leader bluntly diagnosed the state’s political malady and its source: “The urban/rural divide is a serious problem, and Minneapolis is the cause.”

More..

http://www.startribune.com/minnesota-s-urban-rural-divide-is-no-lie/513267582/


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Minnesota's urban-rural divide is no lie - Professor Jacobs in the strib (Original Post) question everything Jul 2019 OP
Whoa, Wellstone ruled Jul 2019 #1
My mother grew up in Renville County dflprincess Jul 2019 #2
No of what you speak. Wellstone ruled Jul 2019 #3
 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
1. Whoa,
Sun Jul 28, 2019, 03:41 PM
Jul 2019

know Rural Minny quite well. And yes,I have heard the same bitching about the Taxes and no representation,which is bogus as it gets.

Jacobs missed the key point that he should have investigated and what affects the 1970's Fiscal Disparities Tax Law has on out-state Minnesota. The Metro Seven County Area shares Tax Collections with those Counties outside of it's Taxing Authority.

The loudest Counties for the Bitch are the ones in the Southern and South Western part of the State. Look no further than Brown,Redwood,Renville,Swift,McCloud,Stearn's Isanti,and the Southeastern Corner. All run by Tea Bagger Commissioner's.

dflprincess

(28,079 posts)
2. My mother grew up in Renville County
Sun Jul 28, 2019, 09:11 PM
Jul 2019

Last edited Sun Jul 28, 2019, 10:00 PM - Edit history (1)

(left for "the cities" when she turned 18 and never looked back). One of her sisters lived there her whole life and, like my grandmother who also lived there her whole life, would mock the familes who voted Republican "even while FDR was saving their farms".

I only have a few cousins left in rural MN, but fortunately, all but one of them is an exception to the people portrayed in this article.

 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
3. No of what you speak.
Sun Jul 28, 2019, 09:58 PM
Jul 2019

Still have In laws and Niece in Redwood County and they are hard core DFLers all the way. Yes there are a few Folks out in the Hinterland that understand how Minnesota Tax laws work. Most seemed to only read the Pitty Party Line and that is good enough for them. And as someone who spent weekends walking the ditch lines carry signs protesting the Farm Forecloses of some off Southern Minny's hard core Republican voters,heard the Cat Calls and the verbal threats from neighboring farmers and towns people. I was just one of many. But,it sure revealed the true nature of many.

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