Look, no one said not voting for Bush was going to be easy

CalInsider ( peekURL.com/zJDsAzJ ) directs us to "Hey, Guys, the Action's Down There" ( peekURL.com/zFYzcAm ):

Look at Kerry's chief supporters and you see a new kind of elite, a veritable "hip-ocracy" of high-tech tycoons, Hollywood moguls and celebrities, and a bevy of Wall Street financiers. This group is bolstered by Americans with graduate degrees and a growing number of college and university faculty members.

These core Kerry constituencies, the technical and professional intelligentsia, increasingly show signs of seeing themselves as a new social elite, what urban guru Richard Florida has anointed as the nation' s "creative class." Most make their homes in the peculiarly elitist economies of post-industrial metropolises such as greater Boston, Manhattan, San Francisco and the west side of Los Angeles, where the definition of middle class often comes with a million-dollar-plus mortgage, a PhD and, often enough, more than a few pence handed down from the parents. Kerry, a Yale graduate identified by Burke's Peerage as having more royal blood than any presidential candidate in U.S. history, educated in Swiss boarding schools and married to his second heiress, is an almost-too-perfect representative of this new class...

11/10/12 UPDATE: The WaPo article is by Joel Kotkin.

Comments

If one can define these political groupings by their extremes, the Kerry enthusiasts have a distinctly welfare-parasitical cast to them. The professors, of whom ~90% are on public payrolls, are notorious for doing the least work of any employed group. D.C. has the largest concentration of graduate degree-holders alongside hordes of welfare cases and bureaucratic quota-placeholders; Kerry will get, what, 80 or 90% of the vote there? What these groups have in common is the belief that freedom means freedom for aggression, such as that of the professors' academic freedom against the rights of the taxpayers; while the rest of the country wants freedom from aggression.