By Victor Davis Hanson
National Review
June 23, 2020
In Aesop’s Fables and Horace’s Satires a common classical allegory is variously retold about the country mouse and his sophisticated urban cousin.
The
 city-slicker mouse first visits his rustic cousin’s simple rural hole 
and is quickly bored and unimpressed by both the calm and the simple 
fare.
When
 the roles are soon reversed, the country cousin at first is delighted 
by big-city mouse’s sumptuous urban food scraps and the majestic halls 
where they may scuttle about. But as the crafty clawed house cat and 
sharp-toothed guard dogs threaten both, and the noise and bustle mount, 
the stressed-out country mouse scampers home — at last realizing that 
his unappreciated quiet and safe abode trump action and sophistication 
every time.
These
 Greek and Roman fables reflect the classical world’s paradox of not 
particularly enjoying life in the fetid, plague-ridden, and dangerous 
big cities of Athens, Rome, and Alexandria that nevertheless gave the 
world Socrates, Virgil, and magnificent libraries.
As
 towns grew into metropolises, their sheen as heady places for art, 
literature, and cultural change began to fade. In response, the once 
commonplace farm and distant town were increasingly romanticized, 
especially in such genres as pastoralism and bucolic poetry. The escape 
to the country estate was the ideal of the Roman senator, the same way 
that the “ranch” sometimes becomes the getaway from the Washington swamp
 for American presidents.
Originally,
 city man was “astute” (asteios/astu: town) and country man a 
rustic agroikos or bumpkin (argoikos/agros: farm). But it was not such a
 simple dichotomy, as even today “urbane” is not always an unqualified 
compliment, and “rustic” is sometimes a grudging commendation of 
authenticity.
The
 urbane city dweller (urbanus/urbs) was also often portrayed in Roman 
comedy and satire as a naïve and full-of-himself fop. In contrast, the 
rustic bumpkin (rusticus/rus: countryside) might have been grubby and 
smelly. But he is also usually commonsensical, grounded, and skeptical.
Globalization,
 we thought, confirmed the superiority and desirability of the urban 
coastal mice. From Miami to Boston, they looked across the sea to the EU
 for guidance, not to Appalachia. Likewise, the strip from San Diego to 
Seattle was a rich window further westward to Beijing, Shanghai, Tokyo, 
Seoul, and Taipei, not looking backward upon stagnant Bakersfield, 
Provo, or Missoula. Winners lived as urban gentry; losers were the 
clingers and deplorables of the interior.
Yale,
 Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, Hollywood, Facebook, Google, Amazon, CBS,
 NPR, PBS, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Wall Street are 
certainly not to be found in Kansas, South Dakota, or Arizona.
Things
 began to change a bit with the election of Donald Trump and his attack 
on Chinese mercantilism, the inequalities of globalization, open 
borders, and the deindustrialization of the American interior.
Election-night
 Electoral College maps revealed high-density, blue corridors as 
bookends on a less settled but undeniably geographically vaster red 
interior. The interior, not the coasts, determined the Electoral College
 vote. Peter Strzok’s smelly Walmart deplorables and Barack Obama’s 
clingers for once seemed to have had the upper hand.
Then
 came the COVID-19 epidemic. Suddenly, green mass-transit rail, 
high-density, elevator-reliant town houses, and subways were petri 
dishes, in a way Wyoming, upstate New York, and the Sierra Nevada 
foothills were not. Translated, what was the upside of going to 
Greenwich, Conn., poetry readings of the latest hipster poet or buying 
the prints of the future Andy Warhol on Manhattan’s Upper West Side if 
you were either infected or locked in your cramped apartment dependent 
entirely on a host of previously taken-for-granted Others who brought 
you water, food, and power, and took out your garbage and sewage — or 
sometimes didn’t?
Michael
 Bloomberg’s slur of dumb farmers dropping seeds by rote into the ground
 to produce corn on autopilot suddenly seemed even dumber when boutique 
bread was not to be so easily had at the corner La Boulangerie.
The
 contagion and the lockdown led to economic catastrophe. If the cities 
might have fared better than the countryside in the abstract calculus of
 finance and stocks, the recession also gave us another, rawer glimpse 
of Armageddon to come. Urban services and necessities may break down, 
but at least in the countryside, the proverbial basics of existential 
survival — food, water, power, guns, and fuel — are not so tenuous.
In
 small towns, outlying suburbs, and farmhouses, you can grow food, have a
 well, pump out your own septic tank, take target practice at home, and 
have a gasoline tank or a generator in reserve. You can be worth $2 
billion on the Magnificent Mile, but if your Gulfstream is locked down 
at the airport, your driver socially distanced at home, your elevator on
 the blink, and your food courier a day late, then you are poorer than a
 peasant in Nowhere, Okla. The poor in high-rises in Queens are far more
 vulnerable than those in rickety farmhouses in rural Ohio.
After
 the Trump election, the virus, the lockdown, and the recession, then 
came the looting, street violence, and arson of the protests that 
spiraled out of control after the initial demonstrations over the 
horrific death of George Floyd while in police custody. America saw that
 in
 extremis blue-city mayors and police chiefs would virtue-signal away 
the public’s own safety, to veneer either their own bias, fright, or 
impotence.
The country’s major cities — New York, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Washington, Philadelphia, and others — experienced not just mass fire and theft but state-sanctioned or de facto allowances of both. Police
 departments either could not — or would not — stop the stealing and 
burning. And officers on the beat often blamed their mayors and 
governors, who characteristically contextualized the violence, either 
because they felt they could do nothing about it or they wanted to do 
nothing about it, or they saw that excusing it was the more persuasive 
political narrative, at least in the short term. A family in the country
 may be two hours away from the rural constable, but when armed, it has 
some recourse against the nocturnal intruder, in a way that someone 
locked down in an apartment in gun- and ammunition-controlled Queens, 
with a politically beleaguered police force, does not.
On
 the national level, blue-state congressional representatives and 
senators treated chaos in city streets in the same way they had earlier 
packaged the epidemic, lockdown, and recession: more mayhem that could 
be blamed on Donald Trump and that would thus accomplish in November 
2020 what Robert Mueller, Ukraine, and impeachment did not. Suddenly 
millions without masks reminded us that shouting about endemic and 
systematic racism exempted one from the quarantine — though Donald 
Trump’s flag-waving crowds did not enjoy the same privilege. The urbane 
who quoted “science” chapter and verse manufactured all sorts of 
pseudoscientific exegeses about how storming into restaurants to shout 
down patrons and strolling through burning and smoke-filled Walmarts to 
loot for hours were permissible indoor social congregations, while going
 to a peaceful indoor Trump rally was Typhoid Mary recklessness.
For
 many liberal urban dwellers, all the violence, filth, dependency, 
plague, incompetence, and sermonizing were no longer worth the salaries 
earned from globalized high-tech and finances. Even the city’s retro, 
gentrified neighborhoods, its internationalism and sophistication in 
food, drink, and entertainment, its cultural diversity, and its easy 
accessibility to millions of similarly enlightened liberals with 
superior tastes and tolerance began to wear. When stores go up in 
flames, or the 58th floor comes down with the coronavirus, or Mayor de 
Blasio plays “Imagine” to illustrate why there are no police on the 
streets, then who cares about the intellectual stimulation that 
supposedly comes by osmosis from the nation’s tony universities anchored
 in cities or their nearby suburbs?
Increasingly
 over the past four months, millions of city folk have discovered that 
the police are as essential as water, food, sewage, and gasoline. 
Without them, life reverts not to a summer of love but more often to the
 Lord of the Flies and Deadwood. The urban hipster and marketing 
executive discovered that a spark somewhere 2,000 miles away can ignite 
their own neighborhood, and all the kneeling, foot-washing, and 
social-media virtue-signaling won’t bring safety or food.
For
 the boutique owner, whose store was looted, defaced, and burned, the 
existential crisis was not just that capital and income were lost, and a
 lifetime investment wiped out, after the earlier one-two-three punch of
 plague/quarantine/depression.
Instead,
 the rub was that the urban store owner and his customer grasped that 
all that mayhem could easily happen again and on a moment’s notice — and
 the ensuing
 losses would once again be written off as the regrettable collateral 
damage that is sometimes necessary to “effect social change.”
 When the mayor and police look the other way as the mob carries off 
Louis Vuitton bags, and CNN reporters assure us of peaceful protests 
while flames engulf our television screens, why rebuild or restore what 
the authorities and the influential deem expendable? Why live in Detroit
 in 1970 when a constant 1967 repeat was supposed to be a tolerable cost
 of doing business there?
A
 Mayor de Blasio or Durkan and a Governor Inslee or Newsom were more or 
less indifferent when “brick-and-mortar” livelihoods were wiped out. 
Observably, they expressed very little outrage. Preventing the recurrence of anarchy might alienate the looters and burners, and especially their appeasers and contextualizers.
Add
 it all up, and as the country mouse of old learned, the giddiness and 
opulence of the city are increasingly not worth the danger, noise, and 
mess of the city, at least after February 2020. There are simply too 
many claws and too many sharp teeth to justify the rich crumbs from the 
opulent table.
There is another force-multiplier of urban disenchantment: In
 the age of Zoom and Skype, the bustle of the city may not be able to be
 fully replicated, and the drama of the live classroom relived, but 
tele-business still can be conducted well enough without having to 
navigate around the feces of Market Street, or the looting, shouting, 
and burning of Seattle.
 If one wishes to endure watching the torching of the Oakland 
Mercedes-Benz dealership, one can do it on YouTube in Red Bluff without 
smelling the burning plastic four blocks away. And when the NFL coaches 
take the knee this fall during the National Anthem, it will be far more 
out of sight and out of mind in Hawthorne, Calif., than when living in 
Silicon Valley.
With
 downloads, social media, and instant visual communications, the 
sanitized version of the city can be used well enough by the county 
dweller. It is of course not the city, but a workable facsimile that 
means not flying into JFK, or navigating West Hollywood, or staying in a
 hotel in Chicago.
The cities are broke —
 a fact that will be more widely appreciated when they return to 
“normal.” They are no longer even marginally clean and safe, and their police
 nationwide will calculate that it is not worth getting killed, being 
fired, spat upon, or put in prison to answer a 911 call.
Our
 big cities are governed by a blue paradigm that fairly or not will now 
be increasingly synonymous with crime, debt, and high taxes that ensure 
bad services. Most city dwellers by needs and habit will still stay there.
But
 millions will increasingly seek to avoid cities and will appreciate 
their virtual upsides from a distance without having to endure their 
real downsides.
Wherever we live, in our dreams at least, we are all country mice now.
Hanson is a bright, articulate guy.
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