Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scented candles are trashy, as are heels paired with jeans, but trailer homes are not.
Interesting, DCUM.
Interesting.
None of those things are trashy. They are only trashy to obnoxious assholes.
Anonymous wrote:Scented candles are trashy, as are heels paired with jeans, but trailer homes are not.
Interesting, DCUM.
Interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing. Unless there is a tornado.
I wish we had a clap function! I am in total agreement with you.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is absolutely nothing wrong with it at all.
I live near a place with some trailer park communities, though, and the reason they get a bad name around here is that they are filled with racist scum. The kids are exposed to that, and my neighbor's lovely adopted black kids have had a hard time in their local public school from harassment from the trailer park kids. I won't send my kids to those schools because I don't want them to pick up that way of thinking. So there is that.
I am this PP -- and to be clear, lots of nice people live in those trailer parks too, but there is a reason they have a bad reputation. People like those picking on my neighbors' kids cloud the perception for all the perfectly lovely people who also live in double wides. If you look at the crime map in my area, for example, the trailer parks are hotbeds. Doesn't mean there aren't lots of really nice people there or that trailers aren't just fine, but if needed to live in one I would try to get one out in the country near real houses and not in a park.
May be filled with racists where you are, but not where I grew up. and I think "trailer trash" is one of the most offensive, classist phrases in the world. Literally calling people trash because of their financial limitations. Disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP.
It's not the same as those trashy trailer parks like in the movie "8 Mile."
I love double wide trailers. I would much rather reside in one of those than my crappy apt.
At least I would have no shared walls and it would be detached from my neighbors. I could have my own washer and dryer and front porch and private parking area.
The trailer parks around here even have a swimming pool, playground and community room.
Anonymous wrote:I prefer living in a van down by the river
Anonymous wrote:My parents have a place in a retirement community in Arizona where all the homes are technically trailers. They bought a nice double-wide model and they split their time between their very nice (non-trailer) home in the midwest and the AZ place. Dad's a retired exec with a masters degree.
They like to mess with me because they know the image trailer parks have in some parts of the country, so they'll joke about how their double-wide is my legacy. I just roll my eyes.