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Steve Balough lives , miles from Silicon Valley, but it might as well be on the other side of the world. We dont have many jobs here, says Balough, , a high school teacher in West Plains, Mo., who voted for Presidentelect Donald Trump. We have lumber mills, but a few shoe and clothing factories got shipped out. As far as were concerned, the two coasts and the Midwest are two different cultures. Its like Europe is different than America.

Trumps victory over Clinton ??? an outcome few in the tech industry supported, and many failed to believe would happen ??? has engendered a mix of shock, anger, grief and denial in Silicon Valley. Its also prompted many to ask: Why and how did the companies that have become the most valuable in America lose touch with great pools of their customers One thing seems certain: While many of those voters engaged with this election using the fruits of the tech industrys latest advances, sharing curated news on Facebook, settling arguments via Google and checking notifications on an Apple iPhone, few thought they were enjoying a direct economic benefit from the U.S. tech industry. In some cases, its hurt them.

Steel mills cant keep up with cheap imports or advances in technology, says Ray Rogg, , a steel worker from Erlanger, Ky. The more automated and technical things are, and with better computers, it eliminates people, says Rogg, who has worked years at the TMK Ipsco mill in Wilder, Ky. It winds up streamlining things, and taking away jobs. Manufacturing jobs in the current economy are going away ??? we are moving to a service economy,??? says Steve Bennet, an adjunct professor at San Jose State University who specializes in entrepreneurship and venture capital.

In interviews with Trump voters across the nation, they described themselves as working men and women who simply want decent-paying jobs, with affordable health care, so they can take care of themselves and their families. Many ultimately overlooked Trumps off-putting comments because their underlying fear and anxiety about the economy runs deep.

The technology boom may have created vast wealth and a swathe of enviable, highpaying jobs clustered around metro areas like San Francisco and Seattle, but a nationwide surge in tech jobs has failed to follow. Much of the Rust Belt, South and Midwest are still reeling from the economic dislocations of globalization, the financial crisis and a technologydriven boom in productivity.

Deep red, in fact. Trump handily beat Hillary Clinton - in counties dominated by manufacturing, according to exit polls by Edison Research. He rolled to a -3 advantage in the reporting counties with the highest rates of unemployment.

The success of Silicon Valley in all its gilded glory hasn't translated to jobs, as machines and on-demand work replace low- and middle-income work.

Employment at computer and electronic companies has plummeted since the s, according to Labor Department statistics. They employed .3 in the U.S. in August, down from . in . In the same -year period, total employment at semiconductor makers was halved, to 3,.