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JA's avatar

I still have no clue where Matt gets this idea that *all* problems with shoddy media coverage are downstream of problems with the audience. (Obviously, *some* problems are responses to financial incentives provided by the audience.)

There's an obvious alternative, isn't there? Shoddy coverage could arise due to bad norms among journalists. The meltdown at the NYT over the Cotton op-ed, for instance, was driven by employees. I doubt subscribers were particularly angry about the op-ed, and refusing to print those types of essays may have even been financially detrimental.

Similarly, I doubt that too many Americans want to see presumably neutral newspapers present coverage with some sort of anti-Israel bias. I certainly don't think it was financially beneficial for the NYT to print ISRAEL BOMBS AL-AHLI HOSPITAL (oops, nvm). Why should I think these trends aren't driven by norms among extremely left-leaning employees (in spite of financial incentives)?

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Erik's avatar

Regarding Long Island, speaking as a native who has lived across the country but returns frequently: the core of it are all of the members of the NYPD and NYFD who live in souther Nassau County. Traditionally they have an anti-city / anti-Democrat (and pro-Guiliani) bias. These are the people who made Staten Island Republican because there was a time when that had to live within city limits.

That then forms a core for other blue collar professionals ties to the city who don't particularly like the city. My father and brother were/are union electricians who lived in Nassau and worked in the city. They did NOT share this view, but many of their brethren did. This blue collar contingent lives south of the LIE, in the same places as the cops and firefighters, and the temperature has turned up.

I think the final driver is the fact that much of central Nassau has really changed from a combination of eastward migration of second and third-generation immigrants from Queens, and a change in immigration patterns where new immigrants skip the five burroughs entirely and land in central Nassau. The rapidly changing demographics of, say, East Meadow, has made many of these people uneasy. NYC has historically played fairly unique as a catch basic for international immigration, Queens in particular, so as you mention "once your family has committed to moving out of NYC to the east"... that's Nassau county, and it does not have the capacity for sprawl that Souther California does, as you aslo note.

Finally there is the fact that Long Island is quite dysfunctional. Every public service has a different map and the boders only sometimes align: there is the county, which has courts and parks, but your trash is pickup up by the three TOWNS that comprise Nassau country. The many school districts are not contiguous with the water boards, etc. If you manage to organize over one issue, the polity that you put together is non-transferrable to another issue because half the people are under a different map. So it's broken and there has been a long-time sense that it is broken.

And NIMBYism is rampant because Nassau county's core value is that it's "not the city", so the resistance to density, which could help address some of the stress, is almost genetic, going back to Levittown.

This has all long been true. But in Nassau, Trump made it acceptable for the most vocal to be all the MORE vocal.

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