I posted my list of 2012's top 10 economic stories in the Upper Midwest earlier today.
Richard Longworth, a former foreign correspondent at the Chicago Tribune who now writes and speaks for the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, disagreed with a lot of it.
Mostly he accuses my list of parochialism and draws different lines to define the Upper Midwest. The region spans from the western border of Minnesota to just east of Pittsburgh, he said. But the region I pay attention to includes the Dakotas and excludes Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. I'm sure he's probably right.
He's a smart guy and has a lot of good points. He said I could post his email:
Some thoughts on your list:
1. The North Dakota oil story belongs, but only as a part of the bigger energy and energy independence story, which includes the Keystone XL pipeline and (sorry, but other parts of the Midwest aren't totally irrelevant) the shale oil boom in other Midwestern states.
2. The labor battles? For sure. Great story.
3. Immigration is a terrific continuing story but the real story is the fact that the Midwest needs as many immigrants as it can get, at all educational and social levels, and the presidential election could go a long way toward solving this problem, by persuading the GOP that they're going to stay in the game only if they support some comprehensive sort of immigration law reform. All other aspects of immigration, including the educational part (admittedly, no small deal) depend on progress toward overall reform. So the election is the big story here.