The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield
Welcome to "The Greenfield Reportwith Henry R. Greenfield," where 50+ years of world travels across 10 countries shape insightful takes on current geopolitical events. Join Robert for eye-opening global reports with practical local solutions, and enjoy guest appearances offering fresh perspectives. Embark on a journey of understanding and lively discussion.
The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield
Episode 37- Blue Versus Red: The Fight Over Power And People
The map looks familiar, but the ground beneath it is moving. We open from Singapore with a hard look at an off-year election that punches above its weight: governors’ races that signal voter appetite for moderation and a California ballot push that could reshape congressional math. From there, we trace the long arc from Dixiecrats to today’s polarized blocs to show why the fight over district lines is less about party trivia and more about who gets heard when budgets and benefits are decided.
We unpack the demographic engine driving the South—Black remigration and Hispanic growth—and explain how representation lags when maps are drawn to mute new majorities. That gap spills into daily life: wages that miss the cost of living, SNAP framed as a partisan crutch despite heavy red state usage, and Medicaid expansions that keep rural hospitals alive even as pundits deny the reliance. Along the way, we challenge the convenient narratives that cast poverty as a choice and benefits as a blue-state indulgence. The numbers tell a different story about who pays, who profits, and why resentment travels faster than reform.
Then we go straight at the cost crisis: how hospital consolidation, middlemen, and fragmented bargaining push U.S. health care to world-beating prices with middling outcomes. We outline pragmatic fixes—real negotiation power, simpler billing, less duplication—and make the broader case for shifting decisions closer to the people who live with the consequences. Local and state control won’t solve defense, climate, or antitrust, but it can restore a line of sight between taxes and services, letting communities pick wage floors, coverage levels, and priorities without waiting for a national truce.
If you care about fair maps, livable wages, and health care that doesn’t hollow out your paycheck, this conversation offers a clear, grounded way forward. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves data more than spin, and leave a review with one local change you want to see next.