Anonymous wrote:We are considering moving from a very large liberal city where our kids attend a very diverse school. We are looking for a place that would be politically diverse and where people are generally open minded and not up in arms if you are not woke enough or don't uniformly recite CNN and/or liberal outlets or vice versa, we don't discriminate. We are likely to live in the residential or suburban area as we want more space and outdoors. I really dislike wokeness in general, so a woke neighborhood would not be a good fit, neither would be predominantly hard core republican or religious area. I am hoping DC metro is a mix due to it being the seat of power and variety of political views represented. Is this true?
Most of the DC area is blue, but different shades of blue. You have navy, teal, aqua, etc... So the hard core red areas are further out, past the Beltway in the exurbs.
It's hard to judge a city or even a neighborhood based on some enthusiastic 'politics is my hobby' type folks. Because they are all over the place. It's the enthusiasts who are the teachers who organize the kindergarten BLM or anti-gun march around the block. They are on the neighborhood email list. They are no more a reflection of the whole neighborhood as the guy who goes on and on about preserving trees (even the ones with roots that screw up your plumbing). But some neighborhoods may have more of those types than others and it is hard to tell just based on voting patterns.
But good news, you have the power to let those types in your life, or not. You can limit your interactions to superficial topics or to just waving 'hi'. Make friends with those worthy of your friendship.
On schools. How do you define diversity? The answer is for you, not me. I'm some rando on the internet who cares what I think. If the type of diversity in the school you want is important to you, then your city/town/ unincorporated area/ neighborhood search might be based on school boundaries for the type of school you want.