| Yes I know a family that moved to FL a few years ago. After Trump was elected but before Covid. They are weird homeschoolers and the mom is a wannabe Disney blogger who tries to make friends with the college kids working at the live shows. |
Read the sub-thread you are replying to, dumbass. |
To be fair, FLA won't have those problems because it will be underwater. Also, enjoy Hurricane season, dying manatees, algae blooms, invasive reptiles in your backyard, and condominiums sinking into the beaches. Yeah, FLA sounds great. |
I just spit out my coffee . . . . MIAMI has loads of homeless people, hon. Witnessed with my own two eyes. |
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I know two different folks who moved to FL. Coincidently both to the gulf coast. One is a former co-worker who retired (and happens to be gay and single), the others were my BIL&SIL - one of whom was let go during the pandemic (and who are both Trumpsters and unvaxxed.) I think FL is a hodge podge of folks who like warm weather.
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| It’s a healthy family environment where the American dream is still possible and government interference is muzzled. |
um.. ok. Guess that depends on how you define 'healthy". Florida health systems aren't that great; childhood obesity is like 35%; infant mortality is fairly high; Desantis is meddling in education. I guess they are better off than, say, LA, but not compared to placesl ike MD. |
Eh... having raised two kids into college, and exposed them to classical culture out their butt - international travel, all the major museums, French wine/cheese making, architecture in Greece/Italy, Japanese temples, food tour from north to south China, I've come to the full realization that culture is anything that provides context to understand what's most important: the people. With that clarity, claims about sophisticated "culture" in big American cities become laughably naive. Art galleries in a big city do not communicate anything about most of the people living in the city - only a minority of the people frequent one. Similarly, Museums are more often visited by tourists than locals. Big fancy cathedrals and churches host only a tiny sliver of the population despite their significant historical significance. In this regard, the galleries, theaters, museums, and architecture are largely interchangeable between all the major US cities and none of it communicates anything about the people living there. "Culture" that does not provide context, does not further understanding between peoples, is merely a plaything for the privileged to claim a false facade of sophistication. |
Yea, but PP said "buuuurn". So enjoy the burn, I guess. |
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I posted earlier about moving back to Florida. It was never a consideration when my child was in school. I went to private school in Florida, and it sucked. The quality of teachers there was horrendous.
I do have concerns about the laws. I knew I’d likely have to travel back to Virginia to get my methotrexate RX filled. That is ridiculous, but my job prospects are concentrated in Florida, and my siblings are there. |
Hey guess what, you can do that in Florida, too. Jesus, how provincial are people on this free website?! |
the burn goes both ways, then.. one is literal, the other is figurative. CA weather is 1000x better than FL, though. |
I live in neither place so it's no burn to me, personally. |
My healthcare covers burns. So does the ACA. |
Um, yes it does. You just don’t see pictures of them hourly on Fox News. https://tampa.cbslocal.com/2022/05/24/experts-project-increase-in-tampa-homeless-population-hold-meeting/ https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/2022/03/22/the-need-is-great-orlando-nonprofits-struggle-to-help-growing-homeless-population/ https://www.jacksonville.com/story/lifestyle/magazine/2017/09/21/while-jacksonville-s-downtown-homeless-problem-has-been-around-years-solutions/15372834007/ https://www.miamitimesonline.com/news/the-politics-of-homelessness-in-miami/article_66e2bb08-7c2f-11eb-959e-ef743d6c9d46.html |