There are no significant differences in blue/red state cities. Portland did allow things to get out of control and they have paid the price. If you want to see dystopian hellholes check out the hollowed our rust belt cities of red middle America or the ex-textile furniture cities of the South. |
Yes, and I don't want that to happen to Portland or Burlington, which is why I think blue cities should return to the commonsense policing methods they used before COVID. |
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It's a welcoming place, at least according to this ranking that just came out:
https://www.travelandleisure.com/most-welcoming-towns-in-usa-11971596?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us |
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I saw this article on FB and it is an interesting look at homelessness in Burlington
https://www.sevendaysvt.com/news/as-encampments-surge-in-burlington-two-men-address-problems-44219021/ |
And it is undeniable that a significant majority of rich white liberals in blue cities and states like Vermont are simply not having children. You can't sustain undesirable universities if your community isn't having kids. |
I am from Vermont and I can tell you that the lower birth rate is across the income spectrum, not just rich. It's hitting the poorest counties very hard, in fact. Lots of red states have lower birth rates FYI. Montana for example is pretty low. So is Nevada. Georgia and West Virginia aren't much above the national average. |
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12000 undergrads at UVM with a state population of 650K =1.8%
Penn State (main campus) = .03% Wisconsin = .06% Ohio = .04% That math only maths based on popularity of OOS students, which is waning for all of the reasons listed above (climate, trend toward Midwest and south, Burlington). The school needs to contract to survive, or make a hyper-compelling case to be desirable. |
This is an issue across NE. |
Of all the SEC schools, I would have only considered Texas and Vanderbilt for DC, as both Austin and Nashville are real cities outside of the college stratosphere. I guess Tennessee at Knoxville also applies, but I also hate the Deep South. If you're not big on sports, drinking, or frat/sororities, there's very little interest on or around the SEC campuses. I say this as a UF (SEC) and FSU (ACC) graduate who visited campuses of Kentucky, LSU, Auburn, and Bama, albeit many, many years ago. |
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All of this is fine but a few quick hits:
1. Vandy and UT are very competitive, so it’s not like one just chooses that versus, say, UVM. 2. I totally accept that many kids are not into sports, Greek life or drinking. But, the trends say that those kids are fewer and fewer. That trend might change in 5, 10, 15 years, but for now, the movement in popularity is toward the big SEC schools. The upward ticks from the Midwest B10 schools suggest that they might be next. In any case, and no intent to cast aspersions on UVM, but there is no heavy movement toward Burlington. |