You've got your narrow minded bigots wherever you go, city, suburbs, or country. In the cities and suburbs, races and nationalities have become more "mixed' but life goes on. Most white supremacist and Nazi leaning groups are made up of "country boys" and by appearance and family lineage, that where I'd fit right in.
I still live in the same home where I was born. It was a farm back then but today it's in the suburbs as the city, over the last 80 some years, has crept to and around us. I wish it hadn't because I miss the open fields and woodland, much of which has disappeared. There was little crime in this neighborhood) back then and little today but while it was made up of "good old" white folks back then, it's much more of a mix today.
People are people. The city type thugs are matched by the countrified hateful white supremacists. Take your choice but don't presume that your choice (or mine) is better than any other. After all, it is a choice, not a fact.
City and suburban people behave the same way. No horses here, but when a dog gets lost we all join in the hunt. I don't know why there's a common misconception that only rural folks know or help their neighbors, but throughout my life I've found kind, helpful people living nearby.
I've lived in very rural areas, cities, and suburbs and have found people to be the same everywhere.
We are northwest of H Town...still a bedroom community to Houston, but with 12 wooded acres, its wonderfullyLove visiting my sister in the country. It is so quiet and peaceful. Only noises are farmers trying to get that last cutting of hay into the barns. BIL bringing in last of the maters before the expected freeze. I sleep all night long there when I visit. Here in Houston I sleep 2-3 hours at a time with the sounds of the cars flying by. Would love to move there but you have to drive at least an hour for medical needs. But I do enjoy the few days I can spend there.
I disagree. He made a sweeping generalization, never a good thing, and never the truth.Considering how this 'good' city person wrote a 'bad' rant on Twitter, I'm surprised at all the electronic "ink" he's getting for his venting. It's his opinion. It's pretty tame. It's not exactly his finest hour, but if this is the worst thing he does in his life,"unironically" he's headed for sainthood. I doubt that many farmers were driven to seek therapy over it. And I suspect there are some awkward twitters typed by rural fingers. I think we can put away the tar and feathers. We can let him live.
Maybe, I'm missing something. Is what he said was stupid, insensitive, naive, irritating, etc., etc., etc.? Yes!!! But should he be imprisoned for 99 years? I don't understand why some aren't dismissing his tweet as the rantings of a jackass?
Sometimes the hateful ones are openly expressing an underlying consensus. Sometimes they're just hateful idiots. This guy strikes me as falling between the two and that's disturbing.
Exactly. Getting his 15 minutes of fame.Hey, he's getting attention, isn't he? That's the main impelling force in making outrageous posts. If he had posted "I love kittens and raindrops on roses and warm woolen mittens and ā¦ā¦.", we wouldn't be talking about him. He got what he wanted. Mission accomplished.
I couldnāt agree with you more. When we moved to the country it was the best decision of my life. It was almost like living on another planet the differences were THAT obvious. Theres probably a lot more work to do but thereās a peacefulness thatās city life can never offer ( for me that is )