doug lauren boebert they all represent that are predominantly exurban.so the book begins, i'mo get toour questions take the long way around the scenic route through exurbia. the book begins as a work of political geography that rather than examining trump because we've all read a number of of trump they're all quite gruesome and unpleasant. rather than inspecting let's inspect the perhaps through inspecting those places we can learn about the people who vote for them and the movement that they represent. and what we discover is the movement is reactionary, but it's also reactive in the sense that it's an adverse reaction it's a backlash to the progress, the immense progress that is taking shape across the united states in my lifetime, your lifetime, just over the past few decades, the progress on issues of race, progress on issues of gender the progress on, issues of acceptance and opportunities for lgbt q people. and it's not to say that we live in an in an endemic paradise or a. there's still so much work to do and so many injustices to. correct. but it's due to the quiet revolution