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50 States and DC Ranked in Order by Livability of their Better Areas; according to crystalk
8-19-02
| crystalk
Posted on 08/19/2002 11:52:05 AM PDT by crystalk
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To: crystalk
1. Florida.....climate an extra. Ya, I'd say extra-humid!
To: Brad Cloven
BTW, we moved from Phoenix and I hear you on not missing it. AZ was great for some things like homeschooling, but the culture and political climate was changing for the worst between illegals and Californians moving in.
82
posted on
08/19/2002 2:56:36 PM PDT
by
glory
To: sciencediet
Walk! I wouldn't even get outta my tank.
Besides that, those Mass drivers all flip the bird at us Southerners, an yell and things.
Besides that, there is a sign right there when y'all cross over inta Great Barrington, I thank ya calls it, that plainly as day sez, No Rednecks Beyonn This Hyar Pooint!
83
posted on
08/19/2002 2:58:00 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: austingirl
That's another place we would have liked to move to. At one time my dh's old employer was considering a base in Austin and they decided against it. I've heard mostly good things about Texas.
84
posted on
08/19/2002 2:58:03 PM PDT
by
glory
To: Mr. Jeeves
That's good to hear if things are truly changing since I do think California is beautiful. Be nice if all you conservatives could take that state back--not holding my breath though especially with the recent attack on homeschooling there.
85
posted on
08/19/2002 2:59:19 PM PDT
by
glory
To: viligantcitizen
Yall got Atlanta within an hour, well I gotcha'll beat.
Fer me, it is SIX hours away!
86
posted on
08/19/2002 3:00:29 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: Richard Kimball
No, Texas is awful! All those waitresses who say, "Can I get you some more coffee, swaaaaytie" more than make up for it. In this Briton's opinion anyway. ;)
Whistling, "I wish they all could be Alabama girls..."
Regards, Ivan
87
posted on
08/19/2002 3:03:00 PM PDT
by
MadIvan
To: crystalk
Gracias para su respuesta. Los problemas de California parecen fácilmente rectificados a mí.
To: MadIvan
They say that in North Florida too, just did this lunch hour.
89
posted on
08/19/2002 3:08:48 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: viligantcitizen
Al empezar, es posible que usted corra para la oficina de gobernador?
90
posted on
08/19/2002 3:11:50 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: crystalk
We do flip the bird at Floridians who drive 10 in a 50 mph zone.
Other than that, we have tons of rednecks in Mass.; they may be confused Democrats but they're here.
And as for getting out of your tank, thousands of parents send their kids here for college, doubling the Boston metro area's population every fall. The vast majority of those kids make it home alive.
91
posted on
08/19/2002 3:11:55 PM PDT
by
Lady Jag
To: sciencediet
Waa-l, their HEARTS might still be a beatin, but they has made a one durn LEFT TURN TOO MANY, somewhurrs along the way, er they'd never get a grade fum them dam Lisbon perfessers up thar.
92
posted on
08/19/2002 3:16:05 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: crystalk
I take it you've personally been to all 50 states? Or are you just basing this on pre-conceived notions (i.e. South=Good North=Bad)? And what do you mean by "gated communities" in South Carolina? Are the locals that dangerous?
Personally I think Virginia should be rated higher. I think it is a great state. Very clean and near-perfect climate. Not to mention a lot of history there. What is so bad about the I-81 stretch? I drive that stretch almost every year on my way to Alabama to visit my family. Huntsville (AL) is a great area but it's just too damn hot to live year round. And I can't get my clams there and it's difficult to find good beer.
To: crystalk
Mi punto era, es alot más fácil de manipular las situaciones sintéticas que natural. Yo lo amo cuando usted habla el español.. ; ^ )>
To: SamAdams76
No, it is just that some of the very finest gated communities in the nation are in SC, and unlike those in many states are not necessarily either prohibitively expensive, NOR located in or around major cities. They are vital to provide amenities in what otherwise would be boonies.
I myself lived in Virginia what time I didn't live in Fla, for the most part, but have visited 47 states and most of them for more than just a few minutes, ie at least a few days.
You have misread my comment about I-81, it is a lovely highway and traverses some of the most beautiful scenery in the world. Live along it, or east of it, but don't go more than 5 or 10 miles W or NW of it or it could turn into a pumpkin.
The three worst things about Virginia are January, February, and Washington DC.
95
posted on
08/19/2002 3:24:10 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: viligantcitizen
Y le gusta tambien, cuando hablo ingles como un "cuello rojo"?
96
posted on
08/19/2002 3:25:46 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: crystalk
If you track across lattitudinal lines the weather is nearly the same, I've lived in both. Most of NM cities are in a higher altitude so you get a ver slight reduction in temperature. What makes NM seem cooler is that most of the cities are further north than their AZ equivalent. I've done parts of July in both Yuma and Roswell, good God it's hot (I say this as a person who's spent most of his life in the desert, Yuma and Roswell go beyond mere desert hot). The whole northern half of AZ get's plenty cold, problem is there's nothing inbetween Phoenix and Flag (it's a visciously mountainous region, not a lot of room for cities and such). Phoenix also has the additional burden of all that concrete, it should be cooler than Tucson, but it's hotter.
97
posted on
08/19/2002 3:26:15 PM PDT
by
discostu
To: viligantcitizen
Pero, como se puede manejar un problema tan basico que, de que origen, nacionalidad, y tipo de cultura, es la poblacion de un lugar?
El estado, es la gente-- y la gente, es el estado. Si la poblacion es mexicana, la cultura tambien mexicana, como se puede evitar que se descompone todo la cultura gringa, con el siguiendo regreso hasta la nivel atrasa de la Republica Mexicana?
O es usted mexicano?
98
posted on
08/19/2002 3:33:05 PM PDT
by
crystalk
To: Paul Atreides
Alabama [Better in Mobile/coast area; or in/near sizable cities, or N/NE area.] Heh heh, I live in North Alabama.
And when you're ready to travel, it's just a hop skip and jump over to Meridian, Mississippi's huge, huge international airport...(riiiiight). All kidding aside, my relatives in Alabanga just sit and laugh at the rest of the country....and not missing a few potshots at the Kalifornia relations. I'm envious of them, sitting down there quietly getting richer and richer off of their oil and timber royalties.
To: crystalk
Yes, I misread that comment, I took it to mean that anything within 5-10 miles of I-81 was no good. That I-81 stretch in Virginia is the main reason that I drive instead of fly to Alabama each year. My wife and I have talked of moving there someday when the kids are grown so we can be within a day's drive of either my wife's family in Massachusetts and my family in Alabama (and far enough away from both of them!)
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