Britva415
"Alabaster," my ass
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2022
- Posts
- 5,095
I don't think they want to, I think they like it this way.If you live in such a place, you should move to a civilized place where saying 'Hello' is not considered threatening.
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I don't think they want to, I think they like it this way.If you live in such a place, you should move to a civilized place where saying 'Hello' is not considered threatening.
Not big-city: "Crowded city."Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso, Fort Worth and Oklahoma City (amongst others) are all larger than Boston and people don't look askance at you for saying hello, or won't be pleasant in an elevator, so I don't think you can chalk it up to "big city" either.
I grew up in and around Boston and remember being taken aback when I moved to San Francisco and Oakland.I grew up in a place with no subways, but spent some of my young adult time in an urban setting with subways. I recall being somewhat taken aback by what I perceived as the rudeness of people in the "big cities," but I also quickly got used to it, especially because I knew many people from the region who were as warm and friendly as anybody else anywhere when you got to know them.
People just have different customs in different places, and when you are new to an area you have to get used to them and adapt. If you are in an area where people are not so chummy with each other in public then you cannot force your customs on them and complain when they don't react the way you want them to.
This might help. It's color coded.
View attachment 2569435
This might help. It's color coded.
View attachment 2569435
See, this gets me steamed, because this only makes sense to someone who doesn't know where de faults really lie.
So that's a map from some trucking game, itemizing the different maps you load for different areas of the US, but now I'm also learning that you don't know that Appalachia and the Carolinas are regions too.Yes, find that person who calls Kentucky "Appalachia" and South Carolina "Carolina" instead of referring to both as "the south".
Good try though.
I'm baffled by this notion that one interaction is considered harassment. Harassment is a persistent pattern of... well, unwanted attention in the particular case of this story, but this supposedly global universal consideration which was alleged doesn't even refer to what we usually mean when we say "unwanted attention."
An exception can be made for a single instance of absolutely inexcusable interaction, we can call that harassment, sure, but, a regular old greeting of normal severity doesn't rise to that level.
I think that that allegation says more about the conditioning of the one who alleged it than it says about all the people on all of the many many global subway systems they have ridden.
So that's a map from some trucking game, itemizing the different maps you load for different areas of the US, but now I'm also learning that you don't know that Appalachia and the Carolinas are regions too.
I was wrong before. Please continue participating in this conversation. This is fantastic.
So, you do know that person?now I'm also learning that you don't know that Appalachia and the Carolinas are regions too
In California, they're genuinely rude because they can't bring themselves to appear the least bit rude. If your friend doesn't want to go to the movie with you, they'll say "yes" and then just flake out.
In Philly, we boo'd Santa Claus. Sometimes a spade really just is a spade.There's something to this.
In the Northeast, people seem rude to a person who's not from the Northeast, but there's something real and genuine about it. They're not bullshitting you.
In the South and in Midwestern places like Minnesota, people are more courteous, sometimes strangely so to someone unfamiliar with the customs, but it can be superficial and insincere. A Minnesotan might say to you "Well, isn't that interesting" and really mean "You are a fucking moron." A New Yorker or a Bostonian won't talk to you that way.
In California there's an attitude of constant pleasantness, but not exactly courteousness. It's more of a minimalist courteousness, and it doesn't mean much. Customs are more laissez-faire.
But when you cut through the customs and get to know people, they're equally good and bad everywhere.
There's something to this.
In the Northeast, people seem rude to a person who's not from the Northeast, but there's something real and genuine about it. They're not bullshitting you.
In the South and in Midwestern places like Minnesota, people are more courteous, sometimes strangely so to someone unfamiliar with the customs, but it can be superficial and insincere. A Minnesotan might say to you "Well, isn't that interesting" and really mean "You are a fucking moron." A New Yorker or a Bostonian won't talk to you that way.
In California there's an attitude of constant pleasantness, but not exactly courteousness. It's more of a minimalist courteousness, and it doesn't mean much. Customs are more laissez-faire.
But when you cut through the customs and get to know people, they're equally good and bad everywhere.
Well, as we say to people like @AwkwardMD , Bless your heart!
In Philly, we boo'd Santa Claus. Sometimes a spade really just is a spade.
EDIT: I'm conflating sports fan behavior and general city dweller demeanor, but sometimes Philly really is just like that.
They are more than willing to spend DAYS explaining how you can get your own set though...People in Utah are the best, but they absolutely will NOT let you wear their underwear.
ChatGPT, explain pregnancy to me, with illustrations.
Well, I'm nice!I bet they're nice as hell in Melbourne.
KY/TN east of a line from Lexington - Chattanooga is absolutely Appalachia. There can be no dispute about that.Yes, find that person who calls Kentucky "Appalachia" and South Carolina "Carolina" instead of referring to both as "the south".
Good try though.