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When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis spent public money to fly about 50 Venezuelan asylum-seekers from Texas to Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts, the ostensible point — besides trolling and publicity, of course — was to show that immigrants are a burden on red-state resources. But his stunt reveals a political and cultural corruption far deeper than the one the governor may have intended.
First, it shows that the U.S. has an elite that can no longer articulate or justify its own privileges — for instance, living in an exclusive community such as Martha's Vineyard.
Second, it shows that the conservative establishment has no real plan for fixing a broken U.S. immigration system.
Consider Martha's Vineyard, which has a limited population of about 16,000 residents, with a summer population swelling to more than 100,000. Real estate is very expensive. And the island is strictly zoned, making it hard to build a lot of dense, low-cost housing.
Martha's Vineyard is not my style (I would rather be in Los Angeles surrounded by El Salvadoran pupuserias; no such Central American sandwich shops are listed on the island) but I can see its attractions. I also concede that it is perfectly acceptable for people to decide to spend their money on an expensive house in an exclusive neighborhood.
Yet that is not necessarily the defense that left-wing intellectuals make, in part because of their increasing emphasis on egalitarian rhetoric and income inequality. It would be quite surprising if the wealthy residents of Martha's Vineyard, which has voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1976, suddenly decided to embrace their inner Ayn Rand.