• @[email protected]
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    48 hours ago

    There’s a lot of knowledge drain in republican states. People who go to university and lean left usually move out of the state, for 1. Being closer to like minded people 2. Lots of jobs and opportunities exist purely in cities

    Basically people dont usually stay in red states if they lean blue

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      And then nobody wants to move back. At best you’ve got some purple cities like Austin starting to shift blue, but even then. I was in Austin for a few days this spring. I was infatuated. Started looking at home listings. Then I realized I’d be living in Texas. Who the hell wants that?

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      17 hours ago

      People who go to university and lean left usually move out of the state

      That’s as much a part of the employment prospects as anything. States with large industrial and commercial centers tend to end up with the old “Blueberries in the Tomato Soup” effect. Austin, Houston, and increasingly Dallas in Texas, for instance. Atlanta in Georgia. Tampa and Tallahassee in Florida.

      Basically people dont usually stay in red states if they lean blue

      Some of the most populous states in the country still tilt red. Florida and Texas most notably, but Pennsylvania and Ohio and Georgia and North Carolina as well.

      If the state has a lucrative industry, people move there regardless of the prevailing state ideology. That’s one thing Republicans do tend to get right. Attracting big corporate HQs to your state can make up for a lot of your shitty revanchist social policies.

      • @[email protected]
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        45 hours ago

        Texas is gerrymandered to shit, and employs pretty nasty voter suppression tactics in populous (see: blue) counties by having very few polling stations per capita in those areas and making it a crime to give water/food to people waiting in line to vote. Big Texas cities are blue for the most part (maybe a few exceptions in the DFW area)

        If you look at pretty much any of the cities within Texas on the latest map, you can see that they consolidate the core of the city into one or two solid blobs, then split the rest out to be diluted by rural areas. See Dallas/Tarrant County, Travis County, Bexar County, and Harris County for the most obvious cases of these.

        https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/docs/88th_Senate_Tabloid_2024_05_20.pdf

        On a population level, Texas is basically a blue state held hostage by a red state administration.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 hours ago

          Yeah. And the problem is that that won’t change unless blue people move outside the cities and into the rural areas. And most have absolutely no desire to do so. Those that do, have no desire to be politically isolated.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 hours ago

            You’re telling me that the solution to systemic voter suppression is a massive urban exodus to spread out the voting population until it’s homogenous?

            That’s the solution, instead of I dunno, forcing the Texas government to stop suppressing voters?

            • @[email protected]
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              3 hours ago

              Well yeah, do that too. But as long as we’re weighing votes based on land, Texas will remain a red state.

              Fixing voter suppression tactics might help federal elections. Probably just Senate, actually. But state office elections…there are far more red counties and towns than there are blue cities and towns. And somehow that matters.