Rural Dark Ages, And The Cities’ r-selected Renaissance

Rural America is suffering:

At the corner where East North Street meets North Cherry Street in the small Ohio town of Kenton, the Immaculate Conception Church keeps a handwritten record of major ceremonies. Over the last decade, according to these sacramental registries, the church has held twice as many funerals as baptisms.

In tiny communities like Kenton, an unprecedented shift is under way. Federal and other data show that in 2013, in the majority of sparsely populated U.S. counties, more people died than were born — the first time that’s happened since the dawn of universal birth registration in the 1930s.

For more than a century, rural towns sustained themselves, and often thrived, through a mix of agriculture and light manufacturing. Until recently, programs funded by counties and townships, combined with the charitable efforts of churches and community groups, provided a viable social safety net in lean times.

Starting in the 1980s, the nation’s basket cases were its urban areas — where a toxic stew of crime, drugs and suburban flight conspired to make large cities the slowest-growing and most troubled places.

Today, however, a Wall Street Journal analysis shows that by many key measures of socioeconomic well-being, those charts have flipped. In terms of poverty, college attainment, teenage births, divorce, death rates from heart disease and cancer, reliance on federal disability insurance and male labor-force participation, rural counties now rank the worst among the four major U.S. population groupings (the others are big cities, suburbs and medium or small metro areas).

In fact, the total rural population — accounting for births, deaths and migration — has declined for five straight years…

Gutted neighborhoods and the loss of jobs and taxpayers contributed to a socioeconomic collapse. From the 1980s into the mid-1990s, the data show, America’s big cities had the highest concentration of divorced people and the highest rates of teenage births and deaths from cardiovascular disease and cancer. “The whole narrative was ‘the urban crisis,'” said Henry Cisneros, who was Bill Clinton’s secretary of housing and urban development.

One thing I have noticed is that as things turn r, the free resources are spent more haphazardly. As a result, whereas in K-selection people spent resources carefully based upon quality and utility of the product in pursuit of a tangible goal, in r-selection people spend their money based upon things like does Kim Kardashian endorse it?

As a result, I see a shift toward an economy based upon the accrual of social status, and the production of cheap and less important products, marketed to less discriminating buyers through the use of the accrued social capital. This favors cities.

I mean, ask yourself, how many products are actually manufactured in cities? It would seem from a national perspective, cities are more about organization, records processing, financial activities, business connections, advertising, media, legal, and so on. But from a national perspective, they aren’t actually making anything and shipping it out in large quantities. Look around your house at the tangible goods, and ask yourself how many of those items were shipped to you from where they were made, in a major American city? TV’s? Cars? Coffeemakers? Phones? Furniture?

Ask why they aren’t made there, and people will say because it is too expensive. But that is the stuff which you buy. So when you buy it, the city is draining off excess resources along the way, tacking it onto the prices, for things like advertising, or banking, which though they guide your purchase, you never see. In a way, the cities are kind of like leeches, attached to the neck of the economy, draining off resources for services you never notice.

One aspect about K-selection is it is minimalist. When resources are extremely shy, the buying motive shifts, and as it does, so does the buying decision. Suddenly, if there is one cheap product, which costs a little more because part of its cost goes to Kim K’s $25 million dollar a year salary for endorsing things, and there is another cheap product which is a little cheaper because it isn’t advertised by Kim K, and there is a third product which costs as much as the first but it is better made, but doesn’t advertise beyond its obvious quality, the product which won’t sell is the Kim K endorsed one. Likewise I expect companies to begin skimping on legal, advertising, and cutting things like diversity staff, as a way to compete.

Think about how that would affect the cities, as all those services you never see are removed from the price, or re-added into the product in the form of quality, in an effort to compete. Now go back and ask yourself what did the cities look like back in 1980 after Carter had worked his magic? What did the rural areas look like? What did the cities look like in the economic downturn around 1990? What did the rural areas look like? What did the cities look like in the mid eighties, as the first national debt surge from Reagan kicked in, and Gordon Gekko said, “Greed is good!”? What do cities look like today in the age of Obama phones, and free heathcare, and zip cars for the poor, and so on?

It is all sort of reminiscent of the quote about r and K-selection, where r is about quantity, while K is about quality. Here I would just add in that r is also about the ephemeral social, while K is about the end result of success.

Way back I had an old freezer handed down by relatives. It was many decades old, but it never had a hiccup, without so much as a wipe down, and was a great deep freeze that kept everything so cold it would last forever. In contrast a new top-line freezer from a very well respected name had no end of minor problems which had to be dealt with constantly, beginning a year after it was bought. One item was made during K-selection, the other was made during r-selection. We hear about this all the time, with people complaining that the stuff made in the fifties lasted forever, while the cheap Chinese crap today falls apart after a year.

They key is, we have not made a one-way trip to poor-quality that our species will never recover from. Some day in the future, we will make quality, long-lasting products again. All that is required is that something has to change in our species – we need to go K again.

When we do, expect the Apocalypse to devastate the cities again, and watch for the rural renaissance – at least relative to what the cities will be seeing.

Spread r/K Theory, because we need quality over quantity in our political theories

This entry was posted in Conservatives, Decline, Economic Collapse, ITZ, K-stimuli, Liberals, Morals, Politics, Psychology, r-stimuli, rabbitry. Bookmark the permalink.
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7 years ago

[…] Rural Dark Ages, And The Cities’ r-selected Renaissance […]

Duke Norfolk
7 years ago

God I only wish that I could live in that K world again. Who knows exactly what it will be like, as it won’t be just like the vaunted 50s again, but it sure would be great to see. Alas, I don’t know that I’ll live to see it though.

I’m 54 now, so who knows, I just might spend my last days in something like that if I live a really long life. We’ll see. I sure hope so. I’d love to see my grandchildren get that world instead of this dysfunctional bizarro world we have now.

Duke Norfolk
Reply to  Anonymous Conservative
7 years ago

Yeah, I guess it just feels like it will take forever to really change back to that kind of society. Time will tell.

Duke Norfolk
7 years ago

I spent my early childhood in a small OH town. Wilmington; a little college town near Dayton. Classic small town life in the 60s. What a great way to live. Hurts my heart to think about what we’ve lost.

One thing that changed our life was that feminism and other hippy dippy crap started poisoning my mother’s mind (it’s still pretty much there at 84 yo too). Suddenly it wasn’t good enough to live a quiet, happy life in a safe place with good people. Oooooh, noooo, she had to start saving the world and doing something meaningful (cause raising us just wouldn’t do). And my father was too weak to stop it.

Covfefe
Covfefe
7 years ago

Anon, what do you think is happening here when studies indicate a larger amygdala volume may be a predictor for higher levels of anxiety? https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-athletes-way/201311/the-size-and-connectivity-the-amygdala-predicts-anxiety

I don’t yet have the book, so I can’t compare the studies indicating the opposite to this one.

Covfefe
Covfefe
Reply to  Anonymous Conservative
7 years ago

That makes more sense. I appreciate the insight, as well as the rest of your writings.

FrankNorman
FrankNorman
7 years ago

I think it’s also relevant to look at the differences between how conservatives and liberals raise their children. Liberals do set and enforce clear boundaries, with any clear consequences.

Anonymous
Anonymous
7 years ago

Some rabbits have noticed that rural America is in decline. https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2017/06/06/the-real-reason-working-class-whites-continue-to-support-trump/
“The only way of addressing their plight is a form of political hospice care,” he said. “These are communities that are on the paths to death. And the question is: How can we make that as comfortable as possible?”

The parasite sees itself as the host. Why do you think it’s acting like this? Is it signaling to keep the r-selection going by phasing K’s out with out-breeding and little/no hardship (hence the word “comfortable”), or is it trying to soothe its (and other rabbits’) amygdalas by pretending that K’s are powerless and shooting themselves in the foot? What also stands out to me is the trend of rabbits seeing rural K’s as opioid addicts, but I’m not sure if it’s projection, or an inability to discern the K’s from rural rabbits.

mobiuswolf
Reply to  Anonymous
7 years ago

Their three main weapons are: framing, framing and temper tantrum.

dirkhblog
7 years ago

most of the product developers are in the megacities or in their vicinity.
Factories are one thing. Someone has to tell them what to make though. Thousands of different high tech products made in tiny numbers yet crucial. Think satellites. HUGE development man years, tiny numbers produced, hugely efficient for their singular purpose.
Behind each such product is a network of dozens or hundreds of subsystem suppliers. Many not doing hardware at all.

You COULD move any of the companies away from a megacity. But, they usually prefer to be close to the transport infrastructure of an existing city.