Slouching towards Gavin
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Newsom likes to present himself as a member of the hustling classes and yet, in truth, he has destroyed them
Joel Kotkin is the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class
From our US edition
Newsom likes to present himself as a member of the hustling classes and yet, in truth, he has destroyed them
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There is now a growing rift between these two historically persecuted groups
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How ‘the better city’ has gone from bad to worse
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Rather than signaling decay, the growth of suburban and exurban communities represents the cutting edge of 21st-century urbanism
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Trump is likely to be blamed for the implosion of the green agenda, but its collapse long pre-dates his re-ascension
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The billionaires have chosen their sides. What does that mean for the rest of us?
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Will new generations ever be able to afford a home?
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Does the rest of America want to be like the Golden State?
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Why has it been so hard to get unionizing efforts off the ground?
38 min listen
This week Freddy is joined in The Spectator offices by regular contributor and fellow of urban studies at Chapman University, Joel Kotkin. They discuss Biden and Trump’s respective attempts to burnish their credentials with the unions this week, how the cultural agenda is alienating voters, and whether technology could prevent the coming of neo-feudalism.
As recently as the early Nineties, when the great cities of the Midwest and East Coast were careening toward what seemed like an inevitable downturn, the urban agglomerations along the Pacific coast offered a demonstrably brighter urban future. From San Diego to the Puget Sound, urban centres along America’s western edge continued to thrive and
The rise of artificial intelligence may be rescuing the tech oligarchy, but its current trajectory could hasten our steps towards what virtual reality guru Rony Abovitz calls ‘computational autocracy’. The new possibilities posed by AI represent a force multiplier for the large tech firms. Musk, Apple, Meta, Google and Microsoft already seem poised to dominate
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Big business is getting bigger. That’s bad news for all of us
39 min listen
Freddy Gray speaks to Joel Kotkin who is the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. On the podcast, they discuss the collapse of Silicon Valley. With mass layoffs in the tech sector and a post-pandemic real estate downturn, Kotkin argues the Valley is entering a period of long-term decline
It is difficult, given what Silicon Valley has become, to convey exactly what it was like in the 1970s and ‘80s. It was a remarkable centre of technology, but also the embodiment of the spirit of capitalism at its very best, as epitomised by garage start-ups like Apple. Greed, of course, is always a human
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The country is on the move — giving Republicans a historic opportunity
America could be entering the ‘Great Stagflation’, defined by economist Noriel Roubini as ‘an era of high inflation, low growth, high debt and the potential for severe recessions’. Certainly, weak growth numbers, declining rates of labour participation and productivity rates falling at the fastest rate in a half century are not harbingers of happy times.
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Digital fantasies have collided with analog reality
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Younger generations inherit a world in which the middle ranks are struggling almost everywhere
We bemoan autocracies in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, Russia and China but largely ignore the more subtle authoritarian trend in the West. Don’t expect a crudely effective dictatorship out of Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four: we may remain, as we are now, nominally democratic, but be ruled by a technocratic class empowered by greater powers