[quote="TheRoguePrince"][quote="Regulus"]Think bigger. There is no 'Small Town,' Mississippi. There is no Mississippi. These are all just abstract ideas. There's no reason why 'Small Town,' Mississippi needs its own set of laws from 'Buttcreek Canyon Falls,' Missouri.[/quote]
Go visit San Francisco, and just the west coast in general, and then go to Louisiana, Alaska, etc. They are very different places, different people, different attitudes. Different ways of life. Those are the extreme. I live in WV. When I go to Florida or Ohio, I see some differences. North of the Mason-Dixon line can be like a whole new world. You’d be surprised what you learn when you get off your furry butt and into the real world

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I've lived in Florida for 3 years. I've lived in Virginia for 5 years. I've lived in North Carolina for 5 years. I've lived in Texas for a year. I've lived in California for a year. And I lived in Arizona for 3 years.
If there's anything I've learned about living in all these places, it's that they're all very similar. There are some differences, like the southeast being more religious, and the southwest having a lot of Hispanic influence. But all-in-all, we live in a very global world.
More than half of my teachers at my high schools were from states other than the one I lived in. My physics teacher was originally from New York. One of my geometry teachers was from Ohio, the other was from Iowa. My best friend in high school moved to Florida last year. My calculus professor right now isn't even from America. I had a teacher in High School that was actually a first generation immigrant from Germany. I knew a girl in one of my English classes that used to live in the UK. One of my other classmates was Russian.
We don't live in the 1800s anymore. Moving from state to state is actually rather common now. There's a lot more diversity, and the differences in locations are only going to lessen as time goes on.
Sure, the closest thing I can get to Mexican food is Taco Bell, and if I lived in Arizona, I wouldn't be able to get sweet tea at restaurants. But in the big picture, no matter where I live, there are so many things that don't change. There's always going to be Walmart and McDonald's. In any town, there's always going to be people that go to church every week, and there's always going to be atheists. There's always going to be criminals, and there's always going to need to be a police force. Every city has a power grid, every city has a water supply, every city has cars and roads and utilities...
The only exceptions I can truly think of are the few, rare cases. Like the Amish people. But for the rest of America, we all have very, very similar lives. We just don't realize it, because we get caught up in the superficial things, like accents. ZOMG THESE PEOPLE TALK DIFFERENT THEY'RE SO WEIRD!!!1111oneoneone!!!!111
[quote="TheRoguePrince"] Seriously, if you think the rich are going to hand over their money cause the government says so, you're gonna have a bad time.[/quote]
As long as Republicans are in office, yep.