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As a Jewish man, i can’t even begin to describe how misinformed this is. Believe you me, we are the furthest thing from a monolith, with the quirky Larry David-esque stereotype being but a minuscule sliver of the diversity of the American Jewish community.
Consider this: just today in my random internet readings, I’ve come across Jewish opinion running the full gamut: from far-right hawks like Ben Shapiro, to stereotypical campus, progressives, academic leftists, deeply religious orthodox and pickup-driving gun toting southerners. We are all of that and more, plus everything in between.
Your random internet readings give you a qualitative view, not a quantitative one. The vast bulk of American Jews, aside from the ultra-orthodox, are Democrats through and through.
This is meaningless though without the accounting for the political leanings of where Jews happen to live. I’m willing to bet if you the average Jew was no more democrat leaning than the median voter in his county, you’d still come away with Jews, measured at the national level, leaning democrat. But normalize for the political leanings of where Jews live and I guarantee you’d see a very different picture.
Even if their Democratic lean is caused by location (which I doubt), they're still not going to vote Republican; it's just not done.
Jews have been leaning more republican in the last number of elections
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That's normalizing out the result though. If they had more political diversity, they wouldn't all chose to live in those places.
What's your evidence that the causality always goes from location to political views?
I read the above comment as pointing in the other direction. That people with 'urban' political views are more likely to move to the city and less likely to move away.
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