After reading an excerpt from a new book by a recent Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, i tried to understand the difference between "somewheres" and "anywheres". I think I rest between the two.
In my search for further clarification I found this article written after the Brexit vote. Harper explains what happened in the US reflected similar thinking in 2016. It is not Democrats vs Republicans so much as two differing views of our world. Is that what is shaping policies and loyalties today around the world?
Source: https://www.newstatesman.com/politic...xit-inevitable
Goodhart renames the new tribes the “Anywheres” (roughly 20 to 25 per cent of the population) and the “Somewheres” (about half), with the rest in between. And it broadly works. Those who see the world from anywhere are, he points out, the ones who dominate our culture and society, doing well at school and moving to a residential university, and then into a professional career, often in London or abroad. “Such people have portable ‘achieved’ identities,” he says, “based on educational and career success which makes them . . . comfortable and confident with new places and people.”
The rebels are those more rooted in geographical identity – the Scottish farmer, working-class Geordie, Cornish housewife – who find the rapid changes of the modern world unsettling. They are likely to be older and less well educated. “They have lost economically with the decline of well-paid jobs for people without qualifications and culturally, too, with the disappearance of a distinct working-class culture and the marginalisation of their views in the public conversation,” Goodhart writes. He argues that this distinction, emerging from a melange of social and cultural views together with life experiences, matters more than old distinctions of right and left, or social class.