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I know what he meant. That's why I said what I said. NYC is further south than Chicago, meaning that Yankee country would start further south than northern Illinois.
LOL, ohmygod, this gets better.
CULTURE, my friend, CULTURE! But if you want to get yourself in a hooey over the geographic placement of states, well, didn't the OP specifically limit his answers to the Northeast? Re: reading comprehension, did you miss that statement?
Quote:
Originally Posted by jm02
4) Ignored parts of posts asking you to back up several unsubstantiated claims.
5) Immaturely addressed people who called you on the above nonsense.
All-in-all a poor showing. Sorry, but until you offer something besides pre-formed opinion, I'm not persuaded by your argument that CT best represents the "deep north." Perhaps one of the other four members who voted with you may offer a more compelling case.
I'll stay posted.
I'll overlook 1, 2 & 3 because they've been addressed ad nauseum, so I'll let you run in your own circle.
4) Must I show you again? Need I find other stats and prove them? I've showed you stats from studies ranking states, thus they are not "unsubstantiated". Have you ever written a thesis? Have you cited paragraphs? That's how it's done. You make a statement, and cite your answer. That's what I've done, and I feel sorry for you for being unable to grasp this obvious 'foreign concept'.
5) Nobody called me on anything. The only thing that's happening here is: a) folks still cannot understand what the OP meant in his thread, and b) the ones who [seem to] understand cannot appropriately separate fact from opinion.
It's really sad that said posters likely have college degrees. What does that say about the American educational system?
Quote:
Originally Posted by jm02
I'll stay posted.
I see my posts are keeping you up at night.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LINative
The OPs orginial post. Note the two sentences highlighted. Unfortunately the two questions do not necessarily lead to the same answer.
The first question asks which state is the most representative of the "Deep North". Given the states the OP says is Deep North*, a mixture of urban, suburban, rural, mountains, farms, beaches, forest, wild areas etc. you would probably come up with New York** followed by Massachusetts and Connecticut.
The second question asks the one state "that is the most opposite of the Deep South with regard to all aspects of life". Here Vermont, the rural liberal state is a good answer. Connecticut is also a good answer as KidYankee rightly points out and I would also add Massachusetts. Those are the three best answers to the cultural question IMO.
* I am not sure if I agree New Jersey is "Deep North"
** if the Great Lake states were included in the poll, then New York, a mixture of Mid-Atlantic, New England, Rustbelt, Appalachia and Great Lakes influence would even be a better answer.
THANK YOU! Now there are three people in this thread who frickin' get it.
I think the others are just frustrated that they have no idea what we're talking about. It's okay guys; it's okay. *pats them on the head*
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stars&StripesForever
Connecticut is tiny. If you were to take similarly small wealthy areas of the South and call them "states", they'd look wealthier too. When a "state" is the size of a "postage stamp", as is the case with MA, RI, CT, NH, VT, MD, DE, & NJ, and when those "states" are occupied by urbanized land, of course they're going to appear "wealthier". In all states, the urbanized areas (suburbs included) are the wealthiest. It's just that they have lots and lots of rural land, given that they are real-sized states, that has a general less wealthy population.
How many other excuses are you going to come up with?
Lets see, for per capita income;
Average for MA, RI, CT, NH, VT, MD, DE, NY and NJ: $45,780
Average for Mississippa, Alabama and Georgia (similar in size): $32,817
Average for Texas: $36,484
So no, they don't just "appear" wealthier because they are smaller states, the region as a whole is very wealthy even including non-urbanized land when you tally them all up. Find me a large suburb like Greenwich, CT in any of these states.
Last edited by kidyankee764; 09-20-2011 at 05:21 AM..
That's what I've done, and I feel sorry for you for being unable to grasp this obvious 'foreign concept'.
b) the ones who [seem to] understand cannot appropriately separate fact from opinion.
It's really sad that said posters likely have college degrees. What does that say about the American educational system?
I see my posts are keeping you up at night.
I think the others are just frustrated that they have no idea what we're talking about. It's okay guys; it's okay. *pats them on the head*
Moderator cut: see comment
What I find funny is that you Moderator cut: see comment you fail to grasp that the OP was asking peoples OPINIONS, and that is what they got. There is no single right or wrong answer, they are just peoples opinions and you are NOT in a position to judge what criteria they used to come to their opinions. Most have NOT said they picked geographically, that is a conclusion you jumped to and are now beating like a dead horse. Most didn't say what they used to come up with their answers, you just assumed they HAD to have used geographical placement because their answers are not the same as your own.
Last edited by Bo; 09-20-2011 at 02:41 PM..
Reason: I explained these edits in the direct message I sent you.
You're still here? Sorry, but perhaps I wasn't clear enough so I'll be more direct: Continue to post away if you will, but I stopped lending credence to any of your posts several pages back. My challenge is to the other four posters who selected CT: Perhaps one of you can offer a compelling case for your choice. To date, I've only had one poster repeatedly proffer the same foolish palaver, as if re-stating it several times somehow transforms its lack of substance.
Culturally speaking, northeastern NJ, Long Island, Westchester NY and Western CT, with honorable mention to suburban Boston counties (Middlesex, Norfolk).
Culturally speaking, northeastern NJ, Long Island, Westchester NY and Western CT, with honorable mention to suburban Boston counties (Middlesex, Norfolk).
So maybe the best "most opposite" state would be NJ, just because of the dense population who rely on mass transit both in the northern and southern parts of the state.
This is an interesting concept. Clearly we know that Mississippi (or Louisiana) is the state that probably best represents the Deep South. But which state would be the most representative of the "Deep North" in your opinion, and why? The one state that is the most opposite of the Deep South with regard to all aspects of life. I'm referring specifically to the Northeast states.
So maybe the best "most opposite" state would be NJ, just because of the dense population who rely on mass transit both in the northern and southern parts of the state.
That's about right, if you consider population density on both ends of the state to be over 2000 per sq mile around Camden county near Philly, as well as Bergen/Passaic/Hudson/Essex around NYC. The level of competition, intensity and aggression is easily recognizable when you are living the lifestyle there. Again, using cultural instead of geographical, this is about as 'deep north' as you are going to find.
With that said, I would issue the caveat to this that there are other NJ counties, namely Cape May, Salem, Cumberland, etc, that do NOT fit this bill explicitly. These counties would be more culturally aligned with Kent or Sussex (slower lower) counties Delaware.
If you consider an ENTIRE state, then NJ would be the de facto winner, but there are always exceptions, which is why evaluating this paradigm is probably more applicable on a city/county, or micro level, rather than on a macro level. For instance, suburban Atlanta or suburban New Orleans is probably more culturally 'northern' than many rural northern counties in New England. I've been to places like Coos County NH, or Essex County VT, that are not what anyone would think of as cosmopolitan, in any manner whatsoever.
That's about right, if you consider population density on both ends of the state to be over 2000 per sq mile around Camden county near Philly, as well as Bergen/Passaic/Hudson/Essex around NYC. The level of competition, intensity and aggression is easily recognizable when you are living the lifestyle there. Again, using cultural instead of geographical, this is about as 'deep north' as you are going to find.
With that said, I would issue the caveat to this that there are other NJ counties, namely Cape May, Salem, Cumberland, etc, that do NOT fit this bill explicitly. These counties would be more culturally aligned with Kent or Sussex (slower lower) counties Delaware.
If you consider an ENTIRE state, then NJ would be the de facto winner, but there are always exceptions, which is why evaluating this paradigm is probably more applicable on a city/county, or micro level, rather than on a macro level. For instance, suburban Atlanta or suburban New Orleans is probably more culturally 'northern' than many rural northern counties in New England. I've been to places like Coos County NH, or Essex County VT, that are not what anyone would think of as cosmopolitan, in any manner whatsoever.
Well said, and some very good points made. Sounds a LOT better than a geography lesson.
This is an interesting concept. Clearly we know that Mississippi (or Louisiana) is the state that probably best represents the Deep South. But which state would be the most representative of the "Deep North" in your opinion, and why? The one state that is the most opposite of the Deep South with regard to all aspects of life. I'm referring specifically to the Northeast states.
Why wouldn't Maine be a logical choice? I voted Maine and I'm from Philadelphia. Maine is 98 percent white and epitomizes all of that New England pilgrim stuff in many of our minds. It's the "Deep North" in my book.
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