Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having lived in DC, Arlington, and southern Virginia, I'd say anything south of the James River feels like the
feels like the South. Anything north of that has some metro DC influence.
metro DC doesn’t necessarily mean ‘northern’. I remember when DC proper felt southern in the 80s. Even MoCo and Ffx are two different realms.
Anonymous wrote:The saying in Charlottesville is people from the South think they are up North. People from up North think they are in the South.
Please pretend I didn’t capitalize those.
Anonymous wrote:Right across key bridge
Don’t kid yourself
Anonymous wrote:Anywhere.
Signed,
Moco native living in Fairfax County
Anonymous wrote:South of Fairfax (Fairfax Station/Clifton)
Anonymous wrote:As a person from the actual south (Georgia)- not until Staunton/Roanoke/ south of Richmond. The people who say western Loudoun past Leesburg are wrong, that’s just rural. Charlottesville is a major college town. It isn’t southern, its identity is UVA. Nowhere within 50 miles of here for sure. Woodbridge isn’t “the south,” it’s just not suburban nova. And confederate flags aren’t the metric, those fly in every state because every state has racists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having lived in DC, Arlington, and southern Virginia, I'd say anything south of the James River feels like the
feels like the South. Anything north of that has some metro DC influence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a person from the actual south (Georgia)- not until Staunton/Roanoke/ south of Richmond. The people who say western Loudoun past Leesburg are wrong, that’s just rural. Charlottesville is a major college town. It isn’t southern, its identity is UVA. Nowhere within 50 miles of here for sure. Woodbridge isn’t “the south,” it’s just not suburban nova. And confederate flags aren’t the metric, those fly in every state because every state has racists.
No, you're from the Deep South. Virginia has always been Upper South. There is no such thing as "the actual south."
Anonymous wrote:As a person from the actual south (Georgia)- not until Staunton/Roanoke/ south of Richmond. The people who say western Loudoun past Leesburg are wrong, that’s just rural. Charlottesville is a major college town. It isn’t southern, its identity is UVA. Nowhere within 50 miles of here for sure. Woodbridge isn’t “the south,” it’s just not suburban nova. And confederate flags aren’t the metric, those fly in every state because every state has racists.
Anonymous wrote:Having lived in DC, Arlington, and southern Virginia, I'd say anything south of the James River feels like the