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9 answers

Oregon :
Easy going, definitely coffee is a BIg deal, lol ...
nature lovers, outdoor activities, informal,
friendly, down to earth,

2007-01-15 13:13:16 · answer #1 · answered by Pichi 7 · 0 0

-Oregon: Never been there, but have heard mixed reviews on the problem
-New York: well, I only know about Manhattan. Surprisingly helpful, but people prefer to mind their own business, and rightfully so. They just want to go about their everyday lives.
-Florida: chock full of jerks, they're called yankee transplants
-Kentucky: I live here. It's almost as bad as Florida, except the natives are meaner than the newcomers. Not very progressive thinking (some people don't know what a DVD player still is!!!), a lot of really self-righteous types.
-Maine: Never been there.
-Georgia: The only Southern state of these listed! Outside of Atlanta, people enjoy their sweet tea, grits, home cooking, and have a more laid-back and mellow outlook of life. My favorite of the ones you've listed here!

2007-01-16 15:36:43 · answer #2 · answered by BlanketyBlank 1 · 0 0

Having been a resident of 18 States only one of which you mentioned. Florida is a divided state. South Florida is mostly retired people from NY and NJ with a lot of Cuban/Americans. The North half are basically "southern" and are quite laid back. The other 5 you mentioned I have only traveled through and don't want to speculate.

2007-01-15 11:10:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Generalizations?
-Oregon: "granolas"/environmentalists/laid back people who like coffee and the outdoors, who wear Chacos in the summertime (or all year), who like the rain. I have a lot of friends in Oregon, and this really doesn't fully describe them. But coffee, coffee is definitely up there.
-Georgia: I have lots of friends here, too, but they aren't from Georgia. In general, Georgians are your typical Southerners, they enjoy their sweet tea, they are really laid back, and just really well-mannered.

2007-01-15 11:06:14 · answer #4 · answered by Jdogg1508 3 · 0 0

I live in Florida and it's hard to make a generalization about such a diverse population.

We have the ever stereotypical geriatric population.
We have lots of transplants from everywhere.
We have lots of International transplants.
We have seasonal transplants from mostly north of here.
We have natives (like me).

So generally speaking, there is no generalization.

2007-01-15 11:05:32 · answer #5 · answered by doublewidemama 6 · 0 0

returned up on that 'no income tax' in Texas. there is IRS income tax.. purely no State income tax. would not % you to get into something you weren't attentive to. Texas is solid.... warm summers, and easy-weight winters. besides the undeniable fact that, the hill country gets lots greater ice than east and south Texas. San Antonio is solid... in case you do not ideas intense-tailing out out of a hurrican's direction each few years. San Antonio's River stroll is a appropriate charm. an somewhat historic city in Texas' history.

2016-10-31 05:09:13 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I can only answer for Oregon.
Independent and strong willed.
The state is divided by the Cascade Mountains, geographically and politically. The West side is liberal and the East is generally conservative.
Oregon is one of only two states that does not have sales tax and where there are still gas station attendants that pump your gas!

2007-01-15 11:05:22 · answer #7 · answered by Rich 3 · 0 0

i gotta read the responses on this one! oh stereotypes are interesting, given i'm from ny, i'd say new yorkers are rough and tough, unfriendly, paranoid even! lol
down south, i hear and have experienced the whole red neck culture and that southern charm

out in maine, i believe it's more snobbery, you know that whole colonial, we got Harvard up here deal...been to Bar Harbor-beautiful get away and lots of porcupine islands and opportunities to go whale watching...

oregon, i'm not sure...

2007-01-15 11:04:58 · answer #8 · answered by ria k 2 · 0 0

They all share the following classification:

People who speak 3 languages are Triliguals
People who speak 2 languages are Bilinguals
The rest are Americans! ;)

2007-01-16 00:25:30 · answer #9 · answered by Pabs 4 · 0 0

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