Anonymous wrote:Hyattsville or Mt. Rainier.
Takoma Park is liberal but mostly nuclear families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Until your last line I was going to suggest a community with a relatively high BIPOC population. Generally speaking (and yes these are generalities!!) BIPOC have never stood to benefit much from compromising with moderates, or centrism, and they actually understand how to make progress thanks to their experience in activism and organizing.
But when you say you want the most vegan-friendly neighborhood or city, I dunno, I think that would be a pretty white place and white people have a sad reputation of advocating for progressive things until it doesn't serve their interests so often it's a lot of fake progressivism.
Is this why Ward 8 was the only Ward to vote against gay marriage? Socially BIPOC are more conservative than white people on average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Until your last line I was going to suggest a community with a relatively high BIPOC population. Generally speaking (and yes these are generalities!!) BIPOC have never stood to benefit much from compromising with moderates, or centrism, and they actually understand how to make progress thanks to their experience in activism and organizing.
But when you say you want the most vegan-friendly neighborhood or city, I dunno, I think that would be a pretty white place and white people have a sad reputation of advocating for progressive things until it doesn't serve their interests so often it's a lot of fake progressivism.
Are you sure? In all the places I lived with a high % of Blacks, especially working class/LMC Blacks, their vote skewed heavily toward moderate Democratic candidates, the people who've been around for a long time and know how to make deals. The community leaders in those areas are usually the older homeowners, small business owners and church leaders, and they define the voting patterns. You wouldn't see them on twitter, but they are a force.
+1. It is the moderate, issue-focused democrats in those neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Until your last line I was going to suggest a community with a relatively high BIPOC population. Generally speaking (and yes these are generalities!!) BIPOC have never stood to benefit much from compromising with moderates, or centrism, and they actually understand how to make progress thanks to their experience in activism and organizing.
But when you say you want the most vegan-friendly neighborhood or city, I dunno, I think that would be a pretty white place and white people have a sad reputation of advocating for progressive things until it doesn't serve their interests so often it's a lot of fake progressivism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hyattsville or Mt. Rainier.
Takoma Park is liberal but mostly nuclear families.
Just Mt. Rainier. Takoma Park is more traditional democrat, definitely less accepting of alternative lifestyles.
Anonymous wrote:This doesn't fit my political views, but there is a lot of progressivism in these cities I enjoy: Denver, Boulder, Ann Arbor (MI), Chapel Hill (NC), San Francisco, Traverse City (MI)
Anonymous wrote:There’s a co-housing community in Takoma Park that might fit you well: https://takomavillage.org/
Anonymous wrote:Actually unlike what one PP said Falls Church City is much like you describe although housing is very expensive there because most people move there for the schools and that will jack up housing prices a lot. If you have no need for the schools it might be a waste of a lot of money just for the political vibe.