| The Democrats biggest majorities (and places where they gained over 2016) are in high-income suburban counties. That's their base and Maryland has lots of those demos in and around I-95. |
Right, but those counties would be offset/balanced out by the red counties. The red counties in MD can't overcome the tidal wave of libs from Baltimore, PG and Moco. That is what tilts it. |
| Terrible maps. Should be scaled to pop size, not geographic. |
Let's face it, without THE PLACES WHERE MOST OF THE PEOPLE IN MARYLAND LIVE.... |
Let's face it, you can't handle the genius of "If we don't count the Democrats, then the state is red." |
LOL it is quite literally their argument. Without MoCo, PG, Baltimore city/county, Anne Arundel, Frederick, the I-95 cooridor......MD would basically have a Republican population the size of Montana. Aside from the Eastern Shore, there's barely anyone in the red districts of MD. |
No kidding. I live in a red part of Maryland. People overall are pretty decent, and we don't sit and talk politics all day, or much at all actually. I don't assume the older white guy who made my sandwich yesterday is a vile racist just because he has a Trump sticker on his pickup truck. I've been going to his shop for a while now, and he's a decent guy in my experience. Same for the parents in my kids' classes. Sure my daughter's friend's father was out on a hunting trip two weeks ago because deer season started, which never happened when we lived in the DC area. Hunting is not my thing, but so what? |
I grew up in a place like the red parts of Maryland; my family is people like that. I'm not hating anything I don't understand, but yeah I assume a guy with a Trump sticker on his truck is racist, even if he also seems like a decent guy. My family is full of "decent people" who are actually really racist. I don't cross the Bay Bridge and think I'm in "enemy territory," but I also don't kid myself about how people actually are. |
Isn't that the problem? Do you assume people of a certain race are criminals because of how they dress or the music they listen to? I judge people by their actions. |
Having a Trump sticker on your car is an action. It's not like race at all or even like musical or dress preferences. It's a statement of what you believe. You can judge people by their beliefs, that's not "the problem." |
Like.. how you dress and the music you listen to. That's signaling beliefs also, isn't it? |
True. Wearing a confederate flag or listening to Skrewdriver signals beliefs too. |
Sometimes. Generally speaking aesthetic preferences are just aesthetic preferences. In cases where they clearly signal belief though, I'd be fine with people judging off that. If I decided to walk down the street wearing a shirt that said "Pedophilia is awesome," I'd get judged for that, and it wouldn't be wrong. |
However, it is safe to assume that he does not consider the vile racism of others to be a deal-breaker. |
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Just like any other state in the whole country.
Maryland is very blue because it is very urban. Like imagine New York without all of NYC. New Jersey without I-95/the Turnpike Illinois without the Chicago metro area. The West Coast without the cities on the coast. Red states are not only more rural but often have relatively smaller cities and a more evenly distributed population across rural areas. Even there the cities are blue, but not enough to make up for the expansive rural red population. Look at Boise, Idaho, Jackson, Wyoming, and Bozeman, Montana. Lots of hipster migrants there turning those areas blue, but surrounded by blood red cowboy country. Vermont is the one weird example where it’s rural but very left leaning. |