Els votants, a les elits: “em veieu ara?”

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imageSupported by [SKIP ADVERTISEMENT](#after-sponsor) David Brooks Voters to Elites: Do You See Me Now? Opinion Columnist We have entered a new political era.For the past 40 years or so, we lived in the information age.Those of us in the educated class decided, with some justification, that the postindustrial economy would be built by people like ourselves, so we tailored social policies to meet our needs.Our education policy pushed people toward the course we followed — four-year colleges so that they would be qualified for the “jobs of the future.” Meanwhile, vocational training withered.We embraced a free trade policy that moved industrial jobs to low-cost countries overseas so that we could focus our energies on knowledge economy enterprises run by people with advanced degrees.

The financial and consulting sector mushroomed while manufacturing employment shriveled.Geography was deemed unimportant — if capital and high-skill labor wanted to cluster in Austin, San Francisco and Washington, it didn’t really matter what happened to all those other communities left behind.

Immigration policies gave highly educated people access to low-wage labor while less-skilled workers faced new competition.We shifted toward green technologies favored by people who work in pixels, and we disfavored people in manufacturing and transportation whose livelihoods depend on fossil fuels.That great sucking sound you heard was the redistribution of respect.People who climbed the academic ladder were feted with accolades, while those who didn’t were rendered invisible.The situation was particularly hard on boys.By high school two-thirds of the students in the top 10 percent of the class are girls, while about two-thirds of the students in the bottom decile are boys.Schools are not set up for male success; that has lifelong personal, and now national, consequences.

Society worked as a vast segregation system, elevating the academically gifted above everybody else.

Before long, the diploma divide became the most important chasm in American life.

High school graduates die nine years sooner than college-educated people.They die of opioid overdoses at six times the rate.They marry less and divorce more and are more likely to have a child out of wedlock.They are more likely to be obese.A recent American Enterprise Institute study found that 24 percent of people who graduated from high school at most have no close friends.They are less likely than college grads to visit public spaces or join community groups and sports leagues.They don’t speak in the right social justice jargon or hold the sort of luxury beliefs that are markers of public virtue.The chasms led to a loss of faith, a loss of trust, a sense of betrayal.

Nine days before the elections, I visited a Christian nationalist church in Tennessee.The service was illuminated by genuine faith, it is true, but also a corrosive atmosphere of bitterness, aggression, betrayal.As the pastor went on about the Judases who seek to destroy us, the phrase “dark world” popped into my head — an image of a people who perceive themselves to be living under constant threat and in a culture of extreme distrust.These people, and many other Americans, weren’t interested in the politics of joy that Kamala Harris and the other law school grads were offering.Advertisement [SKIP ADVERTISEMENT](#after-bottom).

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