hey i am a new jerseyian and i ain't got no attitude
2006-11-30 07:56:09
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answer #1
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answered by Savs P 1
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there are incredibly some issues incorrect with what you assert. a million. you're comparing one city to an entire state. this is an rather limited view. 2. many human beings in NYC are from New Jersey. 3. universal, NYC has greater money going into it than Northeastern NJ. 4. Are you comparing each and every of the countless sections of NYC to all of NJ, or basically are you comparing the sections of NYC which you're in lots to the sections of NJ which you have seen? I stay in south jersey so I take offense to what you assert. on the least, differentiate south jersey from north jersey, we like it that way : ) . i'm very pleased with the place I stay. I stay interior the pine barrens and as nicely chilly winters, i does no longer desire to stay everywhere else. there is way much less hustle bustle in south jersey than north jersey, too. reckoning on the area, too, many human beings in NYC are there for artwork or maybe tourism, and don't easily stay there. That brings money and categories of folk into the city that NJ does not have. And NYC does not "artwork and NJ does not" you basically % it that way on account which you're biased.
2016-12-10 19:14:30
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answer #2
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answered by claypoole 4
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This stereotype is an old one and is not as true today as it used to be. Nowadays, most people in NJ/NY don't have attitudes, but people around the country still think we do and associate our accents with having an attitude.
However, the reason for the stereotype is a very true one. NY and NJ became the home for millions of immigrants. These immigrants came with little or nothing, many of them didn't know any language but their own, and all of a sudden everyone is trying to make a living, competing for jobs, food, etc. So the way of life in this area became one where you had to "fight" for what was yours. Early on, this meant that you often had to physically fight to take care of yourself and your family. As time went on and things improved, you still had to fight, but not so much physically as with words or in other ways. For a long time there were many opportunistic people who sought to take advantage of others, and the best defense against such people, who could be anything from con artists to outright muggers, was to have an "attitude", to show people that you were not one to be messed with.
Things are not hard today in this area, it's very affluent. But the mentality still exists a little, and it's part of our accent and the way we act, even though we no longer are looking to intimidate with an attitude. That's why I say most of us don't have an attitude today. Especially people of my generation and younger (I'm 38). My dad came to this area in the '50's and '60's, and he was an immigrant, and until the day he died last year he had the same attitude I described above. But his life was a constant fight, he had a foreign accent and had to fight for things to give us a good life. It wasn't his imagination, he really faced a lot of adversity which wasn't fair and had to fight against it. But for me and my generation, it's different, we have it easy here. So we don't have the same attitude, but we have remnants of it, and to people from other parts of the country it probably seems like we have a LOT of attitude here.
Hope that helps explain it! :)
2006-11-30 08:32:38
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I LOVE and LIVE in Jersey I am 10 min from NYC. I have lived my whole life here. I tend to show my attitude toward what we call "road rage" but that is my extent. Driving on 80 - 46 - 3 Parkway / Turenpike can cause that.
2006-11-30 10:36:54
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answer #4
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answered by bob 2
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we do have attitudes, You got a problem with that ?
New Yorkers live in the greatest city on earth But it is a tough city to make decent living in and the only way you can do that is to hustle. Now some people hustle to make an honest living and some hustle to make a dishonest living . The people that make an honest living have to defend themselves against those who would hustle them out of it and that requires toughness and attitude. Stand up for yourself and don't take crap from anybody -ever.
New Yorkers are some of the nicest people in America But you don't f**k with them
2006-11-30 08:32:47
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I think it all stems from the Ellis Island immigrant neighborhoods. The immigrants all settled in neighborhoods with similar people from their own homelands and distrusted the other people. The latest immigrants to arrive always got picked on by the more established immigrants. Thus they all developed territorial toughness and attitudes against one another.
2006-11-30 07:54:03
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answer #6
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answered by Signilda 7
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Because you have to be tougher in the big city. There are more people who want to take advantage of you than in a small town.
2006-11-30 07:55:38
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Sometimes it's because we literally don't have time for b.s. and have lost a lot of patience for naivety.
2006-11-30 08:42:44
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answer #8
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answered by Pico 7
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Careful now don't show your attitude, or we'l ask where your'r from.
2006-11-30 07:59:16
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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because people expect us to, so we have to live up to their expectations. actually, most people i meet/know are really nice. i try to be nice to people also. my other explanation: we dont give a damn about anyone else, we dont need to be in anyone's business, so we keep to ourselves and people perceive it as rude.
2006-11-30 09:17:08
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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