A political geography question for Virginians
Posted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 7:09 pm
For those on the Bored from the Commonwealth of Virginia, do you live in real Virginia or fake Virginia? --Bob
A home for the weary.
https://www.wwtbambored.com/
Flybrick wrote:I live in northern Virginia, the heart of the newly liberal area.
It is filled with upper middle and wealthy liberals who feel some guilt about themselves and think that voting for Obama is a way to atone for their sins of having been successful.
Of course, actually doing something like helping in homeless shelters or other community projects is beneath most of them. The ones who actually help out there are mostly the 'old style' Virginians - blue collar, hard working, the very anthesis of Obama's crowd.
At least those are the ones I've worked at those places with.
NellyLunatic1980 wrote:Aren't there a bunch of military bases in Norfolk and Hampton, two parts of the so-called "fake Virginia"?
Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
Ah!!! So anecdotal evidence = reality?Hello, Mini! wrote:Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
We got a guy going around the city of Norfolk with a gun strapped to his hip just waiting to be stopped by the cops so he can sue the city again.
We got Pat Robertson here in Virginia Beach.
Come on down to the Real Virginia and hang out a while before asking any more questions!
Dude--I live here. I read the paper every day. I know what the people here are like, because I live among them. Some are really like that, yes. Some aren't. It isn't 100% stereotypical, but no place is.Jeemie wrote:Ah!!! So anecdotal evidence = reality?Hello, Mini! wrote:Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
We got a guy going around the city of Norfolk with a gun strapped to his hip just waiting to be stopped by the cops so he can sue the city again.
We got Pat Robertson here in Virginia Beach.
Come on down to the Real Virginia and hang out a while before asking any more questions!
OK, I misunderstood. I thought they considered "real Virginia" to be anything west of Roanoke and "fake Virginia" to be everything else.Hello, Mini! wrote:NellyLunatic1980 wrote:Aren't there a bunch of military bases in Norfolk and Hampton, two parts of the so-called "fake Virginia"?
Fake Virginia is Northern Virginia. Norfolk and Virginia Beach are very south, like bordering North Carolina. NAS Norfolk is the largest air base in square miles, and Oceana here in VB is a Master Jet Base. Plus we have a huge Naval station with aircraft carriers and whatnot.
The Air Force is up in the Hampton area, but that's still Southern, or Real Virginia.
And I lived in the places Senator Obama was talking about when he made that statement.Hello, Mini! wrote:Dude--I live here. I read the paper every day. I know what the people here are like, because I live among them. Some are really like that, yes. Some aren't. It isn't 100% stereotypical, but no place is.Jeemie wrote:Ah!!! So anecdotal evidence = reality?Hello, Mini! wrote:
We got a guy going around the city of Norfolk with a gun strapped to his hip just waiting to be stopped by the cops so he can sue the city again.
We got Pat Robertson here in Virginia Beach.
Come on down to the Real Virginia and hang out a while before asking any more questions!
McCain has his anecdotal plumber and Obama has his anecdotal gun nuts, but they are real people.
There's a bit of a difference. Obama's remark was made off the cuff, and given the chance to retract it (or at least reword it), he did. Here, the McCain shill was given the chance to retract the description, and she stuck to her guns.Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
Right....Bob78164 wrote:There's a bit of a difference. Obama's remark was made off the cuff, and given the chance to retract it (or at least reword it), he did. Here, the McCain shill was given the chance to retract the description, and she stuck to her guns.Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
In other words, Obama didn't intend the uncharitable interpretation of his remarks. The McCain shill did. --Bob
As for Biden, I don't know to what you're referring. I haven't seen the exact Murtha quote, but I suspect he was making the factual point that his district has a bunch of racists. There appears to be at least some evidence to support that view. --BobJeemie wrote:Right....Bob78164 wrote:There's a bit of a difference. Obama's remark was made off the cuff, and given the chance to retract it (or at least reword it), he did. Here, the McCain shill was given the chance to retract the description, and she stuck to her guns.Jeemie wrote:Bob- maybe you can get your question answered if you answer the following question:
Are the people who live in "the real Virginia" bitter Americans who are clinging to their guns and religion, and don't like people that don't look like them very much?
In other words, Obama didn't intend the uncharitable interpretation of his remarks. The McCain shill did. --Bob
If you say so.
It's also not the only example...like Murtha calling folks in western PA racists or Biden hinting that race is playing a role in people who are still undecided about Obama.
Somehow, I think you wouldn't be digging up quotes on the internet defending his opponent if that opponent said things like, "Black people in Western Pennsylvania just don't like to go to college." Regardless of facts, a comment should be judged by how it is perceived, too.Bob78164 wrote:As for Biden, I don't know to what you're referring. I haven't seen the exact Murtha quote, but I suspect he was making the factual point that his district has a bunch of racists. There appears to be at least some evidence to support that view. --BobJeemie wrote:Right....Bob78164 wrote:There's a bit of a difference. Obama's remark was made off the cuff, and given the chance to retract it (or at least reword it), he did. Here, the McCain shill was given the chance to retract the description, and she stuck to her guns.
In other words, Obama didn't intend the uncharitable interpretation of his remarks. The McCain shill did. --Bob
If you say so.
It's also not the only example...like Murtha calling folks in western PA racists or Biden hinting that race is playing a role in people who are still undecided about Obama.