No, it's not. The situation in those places is the result of a lot of political choices that can absolutely be reversed or changed.
I’ll cut to the chase: a ubiquitous motif of your writing and worldview is that almost every problem is the result of political choices and every problem can be solved with different political choices (namely, voting for socialist stuff). Without going into detail, it’s totally not how I see most problems or the world in general. To me, this outlook has its place, but it’s often an analytical trap.
In what sense is AI a political problem? Because DARPA? Because NSF grants? In what sense is politics going to solve AI-related problems? In what sense even can politics solve AI-related problems?
Honest question: why'd you give my post a like when you evidently agree with Paul Krugman?
I did like it but didn’t agree with a lot of it. Similarly, I liked Owen’s big post upthread (thought it was really good, in fact) but I either didn’t understand it fully or I disagreed with it.
Sounds like typical liberal solution involving Market Forces that is foredoomed to failure.
Yup, foredoomed _and_ bound to fail.
But yes:
Upstream: high-level industrial policy, investing in the future, investing in technology and ideas the market isn’t interested. This can target flyover country too.
Downstream: don’t screw too much with the labor market, it’s not going to work. Cities are ultra efficient labor markets. Make it easier for people to move to the cities, reduce barriers like rent control, invest in better public transport to make urban labor markets more efficient, etc.
Even Scandinavian paradises accept that labor markets are key.
mean, I agree with you, but Democrats have nothing to offer these people either. At least the GOP speaks to their reactionary cultural concerns. Democrats offer, at best, "move to the city if you don't like it"
All throughout human and American history people moved. We don’t live in a world where resources and labor markets will magically be awesome for everyone all the time. Problems suck and representative politics mandates we at least try to solve problems (doesn’t mean we will). But there’s a limit to this thinking and it’s intuitive if you don’t see everything as a political problems to solve with politics.