Shankara20
Well, that is lovely
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2005
- Posts
- 58,546
I'm not a Jewish American, I'm Jewish-American. YMMV.
that ok - I'll still take your panties...
hee hee
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I'm not a Jewish American, I'm Jewish-American. YMMV.
We just don't seem west enough in my mind.
No, Newark sucks. But every body has an armpit and an asshole. Take your pick.
But Princeton (where my dad worked) and Morristown (where I grew up) areas are gorgeous. And "The Garden State" isn't an ironic name.
I shall now make a personally observed and heartfelt complaint:
"Nobody feels bad ragging on NJ! We're the only oppressed people remaining!"
Why is it okay, people?! WHY!?!
Because it stinks
Sorry...sorry.. New Yorker. Ragging on NJ is in my blood.
Do you remember sometime during the 90s or maybe early 2000s when NJ was accepting submissions to try to come up with a new slogan to replace the Garden State? Some of the suggestions were hilarious. "New Jersey, Fuggetaboutit." "New Jersey: Smell the magic."
What makes a place southern? I'm interested to know what this means to southerners, from a cultural perspective.
Knowing little about the culture itself, I perceive "southern" in largely political terms. If a state is physically located in the south, and most of its counties went for Huckabee over McCain in the primary, or if an alarmingly big chunk of the citizenry thinks Palin's just superfantastic, or if white democrats & white independents voted for Obama in significantly lower percentages than those demographics voted for Obama in the country as a whole in November, that's "southern" to me. And why I don't think of Miami or Research Triangle Park or Northern VA as southern - geography notwithstanding.
It's all about influx of non-southerners. Northern Virginia is a suburb of Washington DC. You know Washington, the hottest place in America to you? I think that's where your America stops! South Florida, much of Florida actually, you have had two things going on. The snow birds retiring there from the north and the Cuban population. If you want to think of it in political terms, there isn't much more solid republican vote from the panhandle across to Jacksonville.
And if you carry Northern Virginia, you win the state. That and Richmond. McCain carried 80% or so of the counties.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/state/#val=VA
If you are in the south I can tell you how to tell when you have left it. When you stop seeing a Waffle House at every exit.
I think I saw that on "The Daily Show" and I gave the whole segment the finger.
Fortunately Jon Stewart WILL admit he grew up in NJ and it's a beautiful place. If pressed.
One of the funniest things...now...my family loved to travel. When you travel you meet people. When it would be disclosed we're from "New Jersey" people's eyes would glaze over.
I remember one woman awkwardly saying "Well...wow...you guys must...really...like the trees." and then she excused herself and got away as quickly as possible.
Now...my parents were gardeners. I owned a horse. We had a Christmas tree farm. We'd probably seen (and cut down) more trees than she'd ever touched as we also owned 50 acres of entirely pristine forest in Hunterdon County along the Delaware river where we'd camp on weekends and chop wood for the winter.
Yes, I spent my summers chopping wood. My dad built our house. We heated it only with a wood stove and soapstone warmers for cold nights. We raised chickens and grew more zucchini and rhubarb than any family could possibly consume.
"Yup. Those trees sure are cool. I wonder who built them?"
My dad has a wicked sense of humor and LOVES playing dumb.
It's all about influx of non-southerners. Northern Virginia is a suburb of Washington DC. <snip>
If you are in the south I can tell you how to tell when you have left it. When you stop seeing a Waffle House at every exit.
People from NY talk a lot of smack about NJ but I don't know anyone who actually hates it. Some of my favorite things are in NJ! WFMU comes from NJ, Maxwelle's in Hoboken has great bands, lots of good produce comes from NJ, some of my favorite people live in NJ, etc, etc.
It's just a bitch to drive through and half of it stinks![]()
Hi, Wench.I always knew Ohio was a midwest state, but never understood it. We just don't seem west enough in my mind. Tho we are too west to be the east coast, and too north to be a southern state. But you have to admit, West Virgina and Kentucky and a few others are pretty north.
But then again, I always sucked at geography. Especially in that area where all the states are square.
I went on a tour of the capitol building in Richmond and I was kind of that Yankee bitch. I didn't mean to be, but the endless conversation about where we were all from, and what were we all doing here, and the weather just made me sort of mental and I was a bit snippy with my response at one point. I mean, I didn't take the tour to find out about other people on the tour! My boyfriend at the time was really ticked at me, and I still feel sort of badly about it. In my defense, I'd just been to the Musem of the Confederacy and felt kind of like Dorothy in Oz, had Dorothy been raised by lefty Jews.![]()
Waffles? Waffles? That's your answer to the question about southern cultural ID?It's all about influx of non-southerners. Northern Virginia is a suburb of Washington DC. You know Washington, the hottest place in America to you? I think that's where your America stops! South Florida, much of Florida actually, you have had two things going on. The snow birds retiring there from the north and the Cuban population. If you want to think of it in political terms, there isn't much more solid republican vote from the panhandle across to Jacksonville.
And if you carry Northern Virginia, you win the state. That and Richmond. McCain carried 80% or so of the counties.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/state/#val=VA
If you are in the south I can tell you how to tell when you have left it. When you stop seeing a Waffle House at every exit.
and felt kind of like Dorothy in Oz, had Dorothy been raised by lefty Jews.![]()
Heh. Well, I consider it more of a cultural difference.
I do understand my Southern family's point of view on the War of Northern Aggression. Regardless of any politics, to see history go up in smoke and families destroyed - not something forgotten or forgiven. My great aunt was a Daughter of the Confederacy. And although northeners can color this ONLY as support of racism or slavery, it is in fact to many people, cherishing lost roots.
Not to say there isn't racism, don't get me wrong. But the South is frank about its racism and covert about everything else. The North is frank about everything else and covert about its racism. (please do not take this literally. poetic licence stamped here.) Northeners think southerners are slow and stupid, southerners think northeners are rude and abrupt.
At the heart of it all is just people though. Defending what they know.
I'd always fake a southern accent when I visited to be accepted by neighbors and such. It was just easier. There is a deep resentment in parts about the attitudes and misunderstandings of the North and I didn't want to spend all day explaining, I wanted to play Frisbee with my cousins.
It wasn't any prettier though to watch Northerners go rabid when accusing Southerners all of being stupid racist dupes. My family.
I have a love and appreciation of northern and southern cultures through their Ambassadors, my parents.
There are a few of them-there "lefty Jews" in Kansas to raise Dorthy - but many more on the right side of center.
What makes a place southern? I'm interested to know what this means to southerners, from a cultural perspective.
Knowing little about the culture itself, I perceive "southern" in largely political terms. If a state is physically located in the south, and most of its counties went for Huckabee over McCain in the primary, or if an alarmingly big chunk of the citizenry thinks Palin's just superfantastic, or if white democrats & white independents voted for Obama in significantly lower percentages than those demographics voted for Obama in the country as a whole in November, that's "southern" to me. And why I don't think of Miami or Research Triangle Park or Northern VA as southern - geography notwithstanding.
Do you remember sometime during the 90s or maybe early 2000s when NJ was accepting submissions to try to come up with a new slogan to replace the Garden State? Some of the suggestions were hilarious. "New Jersey, Fuggetaboutit." "New Jersey: Smell the magic."
One of the funniest things...now...my family loved to travel. When you travel you meet people. When it would be disclosed we're from "New Jersey" people's eyes would glaze over.
I remember one woman awkwardly saying "Well...wow...you guys must...really...like the trees." and then she excused herself and got away as quickly as possible.
And if you carry Northern Virginia, you win the state. That and Richmond. McCain carried 80% or so of the counties.
If you are in the south I can tell you how to tell when you have left it. When you stop seeing a Waffle House at every exit.
Referencing my comment about the percentage of southern white democrats and white independents who voted for Obama, compared to the percentage of those in the same demographic in the country at large last November - is there a plausible reason other than disparate levels of racism for this gap? I'm sincerely asking.Heh. Well, I consider it more of a cultural difference.
I do understand my Southern family's point of view on the War of Northern Aggression. Regardless of any politics, to see history go up in smoke and families destroyed - not something forgotten or forgiven. My great aunt was a Daughter of the Confederacy. And although northeners can color this ONLY as support of racism or slavery, it is in fact to many people, cherishing lost roots.
Not to say there isn't racism, don't get me wrong. But the South is frank about its racism and covert about everything else. The North is frank about everything else and covert about its racism. (please do not take this literally. poetic license stamped here.) Northeners think southerners are slow and stupid, southerners think northeners are rude and abrupt.
At the heart of it all is just people though. Defending what they know.
I'd always fake a southern accent when I visited to be accepted by neighbors and such. It was just easier. There is a deep resentment in parts about the attitudes and misunderstandings of the North and I didn't want to spend all day explaining, I wanted to play Frisbee with my cousins.
It wasn't any prettier though to watch Northerners go rabid when accusing Southerners all of being stupid racist dupes. My family.
I have a love and appreciation of northern and southern cultures through their Ambassadors, my parents.
Waffles? Waffles? That's your answer to the question about southern cultural ID?
I don't think Republican = southern. Instead, Huckabee/Palin Republican = southern, to me. There's a big, big difference. That's why I referenced the '08 primaries.
As for your comment about the influx of non-southerners, they're the reason that parts of the south aren't "southern" anymore - I agree.
I live in a semi touristy area, and we (used to) see a LOT of folks from other states. Jersey was one of the most commonly represented states, and, wow, could you ever tell. It was always amusing to see the stereotypes of the "Jersey girl" and the guido played out again and again. Sometimes I had to wonder if they were being purposeful caricatures of the image.
I've heard this rumor! Forgive me, Shank, but do I have this right - you grew up and lived in the midwest, and then lived in California for a time before moving back? Do you feel more at home in the midwest, or California? (Or should I say San Francisco?) I feel like I could move to SF, Portland or Seattle and feel right at home the next day.
Right, I understand this. What I'm asking about is the culture. What is that defining factor? Is there a way it can be summarized or explained?Historically, "the South" is defined by which states seceded in the Great Unpleasantness (while I think that the "War of Northern Aggression" is a silly term, "Civil War" is entirely inaccurate). West Virginia is explicitly not southern as it exists because it was the portion of Virginia that split off due to the decisions of the Virginia govt at the outset of the war in question.
Certain midwestern states also fought on the side of the confederacy, but are not considered southern. Cultural reasons divide I would guess, as culture is another defining factor.
This went right over my head.How about where waffles and chicken are served, but not ironically?
Referencing my comment about the percentage of southern white democrats and white independents who voted for Obama, compared to the percentage of those in the same demographic in the country at large last November - is there a plausible reason other than disparate levels of racism for this gap? I'm sincerely asking.
I understand your point about cherishing lost roots and the War of Northern Aggression, but I honestly can't fathom people sending their kids to the pool with a confederate flag towel a hundred and fifty years after the fact. Okay, the confederacy wasn't all about "yeah for slavery", but surely there's value in teaching the next generation why that symbol might be deeply offensive to large chunks of the southern populace.
For the record, I don't think all southerners are slow and stupid, and it's absolutely true that many northerners are rude and abrupt.
Certain midwestern states also fought on the side of the confederacy, but are not considered southern. Cultural reasons divide I would guess, as culture is another defining factor.