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Around 2010, the internet began gutting Democrat-dominated industries like media, while Chinese manufacturing simultaneously hollowed out Republican-dominated sectors. With the economic pie shrinking for both parties' bases, they turned on each other, sparking the intense conflict of the last decade.
AI and immense tech wealth are becoming a lightning rod for populist anger from both political parties. The right is fracturing its alliance with tech over censorship concerns, while the left is turning on tech for its perceived alignment with the right, setting up a challenging political environment.
Current American political turmoil is not about personalities but the structural breakdown of both major parties. Each has lost key voter factions, creating a chaotic period where neither can truly win. This instability will persist until a new political alignment emerges.
Societal hatred and tribalism are lagging indicators of economic distress. By the time political polarization becomes extreme, the underlying system is already in crisis due to factors like excessive debt and money printing. The economy is the root cause to watch.
After temporary alliances like 'Red and Tech vs. Blue', the next major political shift will unite the establishment left and right against the tech industry. Blues resent tech's capitalists, Reds resent its immigrants, and the political center blames it for societal ills. This will create a powerful, unified front aiming to curtail tech's influence and wealth.
The historic gap between Republican and Democratic pride in America reflects a "K-shaped" economy. A soaring stock market benefits a concentrated few, exacerbating wealth inequality and breaking the social contract. This disconnect between headline market performance and the economic reality for most citizens fuels political division.
As the internet decimated Democratic strongholds like legacy media, 'wokeness' was deployed as an ideological weapon against Republicans, and the 'techlash' was used against the internet itself. These cultural movements were defensive reactions to economic disruption, not merely social trends.
The political landscape is not a simple left-right binary. It's a four-way conflict between distinct factions: the internet (tech), Blue America (media), Red America (manufacturing), and China. Each engages in specific clashes, like the 'tech clash' (internet vs. blue) or the 'trade war' (red vs. China), which better explains modern global tensions.
The widening gap between the economic fortunes of the rich and the middle class is eroding faith in capitalism across the political spectrum. This sentiment is no longer confined to the left, as Republican pollsters find their own focus groups expressing deep skepticism of big business, mirroring progressive talking points and signaling a broad political realignment.
Political alignment is becoming secondary to economic frustration. Voters are responding to candidates who address rising costs, creating unpredictable alliances and fracturing established bases. This dynamic is swamping traditional ideology, forcing both parties to scramble for a new populist message centered on financial well-being.
It's no longer accurate to speak of a single 'America.' The country has fractured into three distinct entities—Blue America, Red America, and Tech America. Each has its own values, economic base, and potentially divergent foreign policies, much like North and South Korea are two different countries.