+ azdr0710 Posted Tuesday at 01:40 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:40 AM pubic_assistance, Danny-Darko and + Just Chuck 1 1 1
+ azdr0710 Posted Tuesday at 01:41 AM Author Posted Tuesday at 01:41 AM (edited) Mass continues its rep as most liberal state in the country. Colorado is considered by many as containing the most-educated population in the country. Edited Tuesday at 01:44 AM by azdr0710
pubic_assistance Posted Tuesday at 01:59 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:59 AM Based on my travels - this map makes sense. Although I am confident in my guess that much of the negative feelings toward homosexuality in States like Pennsylvania and Florida is coming from regions that you wouldn't be caught dead in, anyway....😆 + Charlie, Danny-Darko and + Pensant 1 1 1
BSR Posted Tuesday at 02:20 AM Posted Tuesday at 02:20 AM 17 minutes ago, pubic_assistance said: Based on my travels - this map makes sense. Although I am confident in my guess that much of the negative feelings toward homosexuality in States like Pennsylvania and Florida is coming from regions that you wouldn't be caught dead in, anyway....😆 I love this description of Pennsylvania: “Philadelphia on one side, Pittsburgh on the other, with Alabama in the middle.” + jimbosf, + DrownedBoy, jeezifonly and 9 others 2 1 9
columbuslaw123 Posted Tuesday at 02:42 AM Posted Tuesday at 02:42 AM I'm very surprised Arkansas is lower than say Oklahoma or Idaho or Wyoming. Little Rock, Eureka Springs, Bentonville are all pretty liberal areas and when I was there I had no problem being with my husband. Idaho on the other hand felt extremely unsafe. I haven't been to Oklahoma but I imagine it's pretty terrible as well. samhexum, + Just Chuck and + Pensant 1 2
mike carey Posted Tuesday at 06:01 AM Posted Tuesday at 06:01 AM 3 hours ago, BSR said: I love this description of Pennsylvania: “Philadelphia on one side, Pittsburgh on the other, with Alabama in the middle.” Haha, you beat me to it! Danny-Darko and pubic_assistance 1 1
+ Just Chuck Posted Tuesday at 09:25 AM Posted Tuesday at 09:25 AM All of the geographically big states are hard to characterize at a state level. Texas in particular would look very different (and probably get a score like Arkansas) if you separated DFW, Austin, San Antonio, and Houston from the rest of the state. + Charlie, + azdr0710, + DrownedBoy and 4 others 1 6
+ Pensant Posted Tuesday at 11:15 AM Posted Tuesday at 11:15 AM 5 hours ago, mike carey said: Haha, you beat me to it! That part of the state is also known as Pennsyltucky. I’d imagine the Philadelphia metro area, where I’m originally from, is in the low 80s. pubic_assistance, mike carey and + Charlie 1 2
mike carey Posted Tuesday at 11:18 AM Posted Tuesday at 11:18 AM 1 minute ago, Pensant said: That part of the state is also known as Pennsyltucky. I’d imagine the Philadelphia metro area, where I’m originally from, is in the low 80s. Idyllic farmland and villages with an unseen darkness beneath. + Charlie 1
+ Pensant Posted Tuesday at 11:20 AM Posted Tuesday at 11:20 AM 1 minute ago, mike carey said: Idyllic farmland and villages with an unseen darkness beneath. Sounds like HP Lovecraft’s description of the Dunwich country. + DrownedBoy and + Charlie 2
+ DrownedBoy Posted Tuesday at 11:35 AM Posted Tuesday at 11:35 AM 12 minutes ago, mike carey said: Idyllic farmland and villages with an unseen darkness beneath. That's the problem with these maps. Illinois is an entirely red state except for the Chicago area. I've worked in Southern Illinois and it was totally conservative, with a majority of fundamentalist churches. It's amazing. In rural Wisconsin, it's the same, but the moment you get to even a small town, red turns to blue. Guess living with different people forces empathy. + Charlie and Danny-Darko 1 1
pubic_assistance Posted Tuesday at 01:37 PM Posted Tuesday at 01:37 PM 2 hours ago, mike carey said: Idyllic farmland and villages with an unseen darkness beneath. I grew up there. It's not even "unseen"....we all see it. There is an expectation of "group-think" where you MUST do as others do. If you don't, you are to be hated for not participating. THIS is why I am so sensitive to "group-think" when I see gay men playing that same evil game. Group-think whether left of right thinking is suffocating. MaybeMaybeNot, NipLuvr212, Km411 and 6 others 3 1 1 2 2
NipLuvr212 Posted Tuesday at 05:47 PM Posted Tuesday at 05:47 PM 16 hours ago, azdr0710 said: i love new england! Yea... thanks for this! + azdr0710 1
+ Charlie Posted Tuesday at 06:15 PM Posted Tuesday at 06:15 PM I think the only reason for doing this calculation by states is because the laws which affect sexual behavior are decided at the state level, not at the local level. If I were trying to decide where to live or visit, I would be more interested in polls at the city level. + DrownedBoy, Danny-Darko, + Pensant and 1 other 1 3
NJF Posted Tuesday at 06:30 PM Posted Tuesday at 06:30 PM (edited) 16 hours ago, pubic_assistance said: Based on my travels - this map makes sense. Although I am confident in my guess that much of the negative feelings toward homosexuality in States like Pennsylvania and Florida is coming from regions that you wouldn't be caught dead in, anyway....😆 Alabama is still 50/50. The only two states that are homophobic (<50% acceptance) are Arkansas and Mississippi Edited Tuesday at 06:31 PM by NJF
NJF Posted Tuesday at 06:38 PM Posted Tuesday at 06:38 PM 15 hours ago, columbuslaw123 said: I'm very surprised Arkansas is lower than say Oklahoma or Idaho or Wyoming. Little Rock, Eureka Springs, Bentonville are all pretty liberal areas and when I was there I had no problem being with my husband. Idaho on the other hand felt extremely unsafe. I haven't been to Oklahoma but I imagine it's pretty terrible as well. You need to get out of the cities and see the rural parts of Arkansas and Tennessee. Bible thumping preachers have a lot to do with the low public acceptance of homosexuality. thomas, Danny-Darko, + Just Chuck and 1 other 4
+ azdr0710 Posted Tuesday at 06:39 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 06:39 PM Yes, important to remember that state legislatures rarely reflect the general population very closely. Of course, rural vs urban is a wide swing in many states and even adjacent suburban cities can swing widely (in my area, Tempe is next to Mesa and are nearly day and night in tolerance) + Just Chuck, pubic_assistance, thomas and 3 others 4 2
+ Pensant Posted Tuesday at 07:11 PM Posted Tuesday at 07:11 PM 32 minutes ago, NJF said: Bible thumping preachers have a lot to do with the low public acceptance of homosexuality. Although one wouldn’t be surprised by the antics of their “youth” pastors! + Charlie, pubic_assistance and + Just Chuck 1 2
Danny-Darko Posted Tuesday at 11:27 PM Posted Tuesday at 11:27 PM (edited) 23 hours ago, pubic_assistance said: Based on my travels - this map makes sense. Although I am confident in my guess that much of the negative feelings toward homosexuality in States like Pennsylvania and Florida is coming from regions that you wouldn't be caught dead in, anyway....😆 True, and in Florida at least, even in urban sectors in seems to come from its vast immigrant population that come with and keeps their uneducated and narrow mentality from their native country. Edited yesterday at 01:35 AM by Danny-Darko + DrownedBoy, Luv2play and pubic_assistance 2 1
Lotus-eater Posted yesterday at 12:30 AM Posted yesterday at 12:30 AM (edited) 1 hour ago, Danny-Darko said: True, and in Florida at least, even in urban sectors in seems to come from it vast immigrant population that come with and keeps their uneducated and narrow mentality from their native country. Considering how poorly that sentence is written, what exactly qualifies as uneducated? 1. "in seems" → should be "it seems" Error type: Wrong pronoun used. 2. "it vast immigrant population" → should be "its vast immigrant population" Error type: Incorrect pronoun form. 3. "population that come" → should be "population that comes" Error type: Subject–verb agreement. 4. "come with and keeps" → should be parallel in form Error type: Faulty parallelism. 5. "their uneducated and narrow mentality" Error type: Pronoun–antecedent agreement. 6. "mentality" (possible pluralization issue) Error type: Word choice/number consistency. 7. "from their native country" Error type: Number mismatch (country vs. countries). Edited yesterday at 12:33 AM by Lotus-eater thomas, pubic_assistance, + sync and 3 others 1 1 4
NJF Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM 14 minutes ago, Lotus-eater said: Considering how poorly that sentence is written, what exactly qualifies as uneducated? 1. "in seems" → should be "it seems" Error type: Wrong pronoun used. 2. "it vast immigrant population" → should be "its vast immigrant population" Error type: Incorrect pronoun form. 3. "population that come" → should be "population that comes" Error type: Subject–verb agreement. 4. "come with and keeps" → should be parallel in form Error type: Faulty parallelism. 5. "their uneducated and narrow mentality" Error type: Pronoun–antecedent agreement. 6. "mentality" (possible pluralization issue) Error type: Word choice/number consistency. 7. "from their native country" Error type: Number mismatch (country vs. countries). Are you making a living by teaching English? lol. pubic_assistance, + DrownedBoy and Danny-Darko 1 2
+ nycman Posted yesterday at 02:09 AM Posted yesterday at 02:09 AM 1 hour ago, NJF said: Are you making a living by teaching English? lol. Or by just being a twat? grin mike carey, Danny-Darko, pubic_assistance and 1 other 1 1 2
Cooper Posted yesterday at 11:38 AM Posted yesterday at 11:38 AM Administrator’s Note Gentlemen, Let’s stay on topic. You have an interesting subject here. Let’s discuss it and not any member. 👍🏼 + Charlie 1
+ Just Chuck Posted yesterday at 12:33 PM Posted yesterday at 12:33 PM I stopped at a fast food restaurant in ULTRA CONSERVATIVE Memphis, Texas a few years ago. The high school-aged young man behind the counter was wearing every rainbow-patterned accessory I could imagine. I ate the whole meal thinking "to be that brave and out in this community means that young guy is TOUGH emotionally and maybe physically." pubic_assistance, thomas, Danny-Darko and 2 others 3 2
pubic_assistance Posted yesterday at 01:42 PM Posted yesterday at 01:42 PM (edited) 1 hour ago, Just Chuck said: to be that brave and out in this community means that young guy is TOUGH emotionally and maybe physically." Many young people often defy the standards of social expectations even when it puts them at risk of expulsion and torment. I grew up in a socially conservative religious community. I chose to keep my homosexual tendencies to myself and instead of challenging anyone's viewpoints, I simply left and never moved back. I applaud the brave young people who stayed there, and pushed back on public opinion enough to change perceptions to the point that its no longer unsafe for gay couples to run a bed&breakfast there, publicly declaring their relationship without taunting or attacks. Edited yesterday at 01:44 PM by pubic_assistance grammar thomas, Danny-Darko, spidir and 5 others 6 2
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