![]() |
Quote:
No place I've ever visited has touched me more. The Dakota's are one of America's best kept secrets! The people I met were wonderful. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Have to agree with the Dakotas - everyone I've ever met from there is super-nice, down-to-earth and genuinely a decent person. One of my neighbors is from N.D. and is one of the most grounded guys I've ever met.
Of course I could never, ever live there - the absence of terrain and frigid winters makes that a distinct impossibility, but I'd certainly visit again during the summer months. |
Quote:
I'll add Wisconsin in there too, for nice places- Many Scandinavian descendants in that area. I think the Carolina's (good or bad) were heavily populated with Scots. |
[QUOTE=72doug2,2S;3462170...I think the Carolina's (good or bad) were heavily populated with Scots.[/QUOTE]
I didn't know that about NC...my lineage is Dutch, German, & redneck :) |
As for generalizations - bad weather makes good people. All that snow and wind and ice builds character or something... I am sure even Florida pre air-conditioning was a better place.
|
I disagree. Coming from New England (home of some of the worst weather imaginable) I can personally attest to what a large number of *********s there are from that area. Some nice people too (like anywhere) but as a general statement, New Englanders LOVE to define themselves through their misery and suffering, and look down upon anyone that doesn't embrace a difficult way of living. It's ridiculous - sort of like one might think of residents of Siberia, just with less vodka.
Some of the biggest jackasses I've ever met were from back there - one of the reasons I'll likely never return. Sure there are jackasses everywhere, but I certainly saw no evidence of "bad weather creating good people" - it tended to just create miserable, wallowing, self-pitying people that did nothing for six months a year other than complain and get fat porking up on Dunkin' Donuts. . . Chicago wasn't much better when I lived there (three years). Some great people, but lots of miserable, complaining gripers. |
Almost every New York family has the cousins who moved to Florida. You see them 10 years later at a wedding and are like:eek:
|
I would like to add that living in a state that hands out free money every October seems to really bring em out of the wood work. Eventually, it seems, all the wierdos and wackos some if not most with some kind of criminal background make their way to Alaska. Isn't there something you guys can do to keep them from leaving?
|
Quote:
rattlsnak, ND is a great place to be from! ;) |
Terry makes a good point. You can be a criminal/bum anywhere, would you rather do it in MN at -30, or FL at 75 on the beach?
|
Quote:
basically most places east of where I am and then north are high ashhole concentrated areas:eek: I am the only guy where i live who clears the snow from the elderly neighbors..you'd think that they would thank me...nope, they expect it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
If you are from the Carolinas, you might find the link above interesting. Is there any good Scotch Whiskey made there? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
BTW, statistics don't distort. At least, the math involved is pretty objective. The data used can be biased. That fuks up results. Or.....legitimate results can be improperly interpreted. Like when folks see that liberalism has a positive correlation to level of education, and then conclude that all liberals are smarter than all conservatives. That conclusion, of course, is incorrect. But statistical brute facts remain, and one of them is this relationship between education and political orientation. I have always found excellent entertainment in conservatives' conclusion that educators and media professionals, the professional information traffickers in our society........are ignorant. That's ALWAYS funny. Oh, and this thread. It's about statistical generalizations. Well, not even that. It's about perception. |
Quote:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/support/smileys/pray.gif Do the Scots in the Carolinas make any Whisky? I don't like the spiced sweet stuff. If it's in America is it Whiskey and not Whisky? My spell check doesn't like that "ky" spelling. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Don't worry, I won't hold it against you. :D I can't find a Single Malt Whisk(e)y distillery in the Carolinas. California on the other hand does quite well. Closest I found to the Carolinas was in Virgina... Wasmund's Copper Fox Distillery, Sperryville, Virginia. St. George Single Malt Whiskey St. George Spirits, Alameda, California. Peregrine Rock California Pure Single Malt Whisky St. James Spirits, Irwindale, California Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey Denver, Colorado McCarthy's Oregon Single Malt Clear Creek Distillery, Portland, Oregon Old Potrero, Anchor Distilling Company, San Francisco, California Woodstone Creek, Woodstone creek Winery and Distillery, Cincinnati, Ohio Templton Rye, Templeton Rye Spirits LLC, Templeton, Iowa Notch Whiskey, Triple Eight Distillery, Nantucket, Massachusetts Charbay Whiskey, Domaine Charbay Winery and Distillery, Spring Mountian, Napa, California Hogshead Whiskey, Edgefield Distillery, Troutdale, Oregon Obviously this is off topic for the thread, but if anyone can provide corrections or more additions to the list I would be grateful. I can tell you that you're right about the 'e'. American whiskey, Irish whiskey, but Scotch whisky. Ok - back on topic! |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 03:45 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website