Where would you rather live the US or Sweden

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  • benjs
    benjs Toronto, ON Posts: 9,367
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)
    '05 - TO, '06 - TO 1, '08 - NYC 1 & 2, '09 - TO, Chi 1 & 2, '10 - Buffalo, NYC 1 & 2, '11 - TO 1 & 2, Hamilton, '13 - Buffalo, Brooklyn 1 & 2, '15 - Global Citizen, '16 - TO 1 & 2, Chi 2

    EV
    Toronto Film Festival 9/11/2007, '08 - Toronto 1 & 2, '09 - Albany 1, '11 - Chicago 1
  • PJ_Soul
    PJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 50,662
    Canada
    benjs said:
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)
    FWIW, RYME has called me one of those miserable people before when we were having a disagreement, which I'm definitely not, so I don't think RYME is always a very good judge of that, lol. But in any case, I do agree that one must strive to be happy. Not everyone can be even then, due to circumstances beyond their control - not everyone is actually free to succeed in America or Canada or anywhere else. But for those who actually are, yeah, one can choose to appreciate what they have and make the most of it, or not. I've actually got a tattoo that includes the saying (not in English alphabet), which is the last sentence of Max Ehrmann's Desiderata: "Strive to be happy."
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • hedonist
    hedonist Posts: 24,524

    No shit, brother.  Really, no (more) shit.

    I'm happy where I am, all things considered.
  • RYME
    RYME Wisconsin Posts: 1,904
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.
    benjs said:
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)

    benjs said:
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)
    And Hallelujah benjis. =)   Maybe I should play the lottery this weekend.
    And I I have no idea when I told the pjsoul that he/she is miserable if I did I take it back but I have no clue.
    Trying to get a cheer up everybody here is like being tied to that Whipping Post.
    https://youtu.be/Wqg4taiLRRE
    Take it easy benjs


  • mickeyrat
    mickeyrat Posts: 44,344
    RYME said:
    benjs said:
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)

    benjs said:
    RYME said:
    I'm grateful.
    I work hard I play hard , play by the rules and I'm happy.
    I am free to succeed I am free to fail it is up to me.
    Happiness is a choice.
    You can choose to be happy and do the best you can with what you've got or you can choose misery. And if you're miserable you have the power to pick yourself up by your bootstraps and and fix it.
    I say this because some of the people who post here are obviously miserable and I actually feel verybad for them.  I wish it weren't so.
    I dedicate this song to those people who are just perpetually angry and unhappy.  
    Soulshine
    https://youtu.be/pDIQ7Otf1mw

    Now here's a post that I can get behind 100%. Thanks for the reminder to cheer up, RYME. I still am passionate about the challenges I perceive, but it's important to remember what we have and show gratitude for it. Allman Brothers always help, though I'm more of a Whipping Post kind of guy :)
    And Hallelujah benjis. =)   Maybe I should play the lottery this weekend.
    And I I have no idea when I told the pjsoul that he/she is miserable if I did I take it back but I have no clue.
    Trying to get a cheer up everybody here is like being tied to that Whipping Post.
    https://youtu.be/Wqg4taiLRRE
    Take it easy benjs


    Soulshine is better when sung by Warren Haynes.....
    No slag on the Allmans....

    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

    Not today Sir, Probably not tomorrow.............................................. bayfront arena st. pete '94
    you're finally here and I'm a mess................................................... nationwide arena columbus '10
    memories like fingerprints are slowly raising.................................... first niagara center buffalo '13
    another man ..... moved by sleight of hand...................................... joe louis arena detroit '14
  • mrussel1
    mrussel1 Posts: 30,879
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.
    Statesboro, Canada?  Statesboro, Sweden?  no.. oh yeah, Statesboro, GA! 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezPZxfS1jys

    Post edited by mrussel1 on
  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
  • mcgruff10
    mcgruff10 New Jersey Posts: 29,111
    U.S.A.
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
    Meatpacking district?  Red hook?  East 161 street?
    I'll ride the wave where it takes me......
  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.
    mcgruff10 said:
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
    Meatpacking district?  Red hook?  East 161 street?
    Chelsea.
    LOL! And no to E 161st Street. I’m an National Leaguer 
    Post edited by Renfield on
  • PJPOWER
    PJPOWER Posts: 6,499
    U.S.A.
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    U.S.A.
    PJPOWER said:
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
    And it would be my pleasure to show you around the big 🍎 
  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.

    I guess I should have voted before I commented in this thread.

    So USA it is, born & bred, but I’m scared shitless if Trumpolini wins again in 2020, I may need an exit plan. 
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,662
    Anywhere other than planet earth
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    Renfield said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    PJPOWER said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    jeffbr said:
    It's hard to generalize. I'd rather live in my state, than in Sweden. But I'd rather live in Sweden than anywhere in the dirty south. So wasn't exactly sure how to answer. In my state I can get beer, wine and liquor in every grocery store, and get weed legally from my corner pot shop, so I'm all set. Couldn't do that in Sweden or the dirty south.
    Seattle's a good place, even with the homeless problem. It's a fair bit like Vancouver, so I feel at home there. If I had to live in the USA and could choose where, my only two choices would be Seattle and NYC.
    Only 2 choices in the entire USA? Seems weird. I guess it’s probably you just don’t know enough.

    If I had to move to Canada, I don’t know enough to know where to move and where not  to. 

    I would think that Toronto and Vancouver would top my list. The east coast area would intrigue me. Montreal area would be pretty low on the list as well as remote areas.
    I don’t think I would ever want to live “in” Seattle or NYC.  East of Seattle somewhere in the mountains definitely and maybe somewhere close to NYC with a lot fewer people.  I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly...Seattle was somewhat that way last time I visited.
    I'm definitely a city mouse. NYC isn't dirty. It used to be apparently, but Ghouliani cleaned it up well, I'll give him that. I was impressed when I went there. A very beautiful city IMO. Now, of course their garbage pick up system is that all the garbage goes out onto the sidewalks throughout the day, and is picked up every night. This is because there is no other option. There are few back alleys in NYC, and most of them are fenced off (with barbed wire at the top of the fences) to prevent crime from happening in them, and to keep people from sleeping in them. So yeah, at least in warm weather, you can smell the garbage ... For me though, everything else that NYC offers easily offsets that minor (to me) issue. I do make a point of warning people who are going there and have never been though. I think seeing all that garbage out on the sidewalks can be a bit of shock if you weren't aware that is how it's done.
    I’d love to visit there sometime, but I’m definitely not a city mouse.  I wanted to be when I was younger, but the appeal is not there for me anymore.  I actually thought Chicago was a nice city when I visited and liked how most of their city operations were done underground.  Chicago was fun in the day and frightening at night...it was like all the crazy from the underground came out once the sun went down.
    I laughed out loud reading “I’ve never actually been to NYC, but I hear it is dirty and smelly”  NYC has a lot more to offer than dirt and smells.
    If you ever have an interest to visit a big city with an extensive list of cultural events, top museums, endless amounts of bars & restaurants, NYC is one of the world’s leading metropolises for art, fashion, food and theater, plus a whole lot more.
    Yes, there is a ton of garbage generated in NYC (about 12,000 tons a day). During the day, the Dept. of Sanitation picks all the trash up from NYC residents. At night, private waste removal services come for the trash generated by businesses. But don’t let that deter you, it’s a wonderful, exciting place to visit.
    Can you guess where I live?
    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
    And it would be my pleasure to show you around the big 🍎 
    I've been to NYC three time- 1965, 1975, and 1988- and was always impressed by the wide range of culture, the energy, the excitement.  It really does seem like the center of the known universe.  A part of me wishes I had the energy and youth to live there.  But as it is, at this stage in the game, a quite little place not too far from the seashore is more my speed.  :smile:
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • mickeyrat
    mickeyrat Posts: 44,344
    mrussel1 said:
    Statesboro, Canada?  Statesboro, Sweden?  no.. oh yeah, Statesboro, GA! 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezPZxfS1jys

      now you've gone and done it.

    listening to the record on google music to start my night off down to cincy.....
    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

    Not today Sir, Probably not tomorrow.............................................. bayfront arena st. pete '94
    you're finally here and I'm a mess................................................... nationwide arena columbus '10
    memories like fingerprints are slowly raising.................................... first niagara center buffalo '13
    another man ..... moved by sleight of hand...................................... joe louis arena detroit '14
  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    edited July 2019
    U.S.A.
    brianlux said:
    Renfield said:

    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
    And it would be my pleasure to show you around the big 🍎 
    I've been to NYC three time- 1965, 1975, and 1988- and was always impressed by the wide range of culture, the energy, the excitement.  It really does seem like the center of the known universe.  A part of me wishes I had the energy and youth to live there.  But as it is, at this stage in the game, a quite little place not too far from the seashore is more my speed.  :smile:
    Nothing wrong with a quiet place near the seashore 🏝 Being near the water is wonderful.  I grew up on the beach in Miami Beach, great as a kid but not for me as an adult. 

    How was your NYC visit in 1975? I think of the urban flight, recession, high crime, seediness and general disrepair the city was going through in the 70’s would have made it a frightening place to visit.
    Post edited by Renfield on
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,662
    Anywhere other than planet earth
    Renfield said:
    brianlux said:
    Renfield said:

    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
    And it would be my pleasure to show you around the big 🍎 
    I've been to NYC three time- 1965, 1975, and 1988- and was always impressed by the wide range of culture, the energy, the excitement.  It really does seem like the center of the known universe.  A part of me wishes I had the energy and youth to live there.  But as it is, at this stage in the game, a quite little place not too far from the seashore is more my speed.  :smile:
    Nothing wrong with a quiet place near the seashore 🏝 Being near the water is wonderful.  I grew up on the beach in Miami Beach, great as a kid but not for me as an adult. 

    How was your NYC visit in 1975? I think of the urban flight, recession, high crime, seediness and general disrepair the city was going through in the 70’s would have made it a frightening place to visit.
    '75 was interesting.  My best friend back then and I were in our early 20's.  We were both fans of a 60's TV show called "Route 66" which was inspired by Kerouac's On the Road and was about these two guys who were on this on-going road trip broken up by staying places for a while to work and make some money and then hitting the road again.  We though, "Hey, that's cool!  Let's do THAT!"  We hitched my buddies little beater to the back of my Malibu and hit the road, taking turns driving.

    Well, by the time we made it clear cross country we went to JFK thinking we could land jobs with one or other of the airlines.  Only problem is, we were darned near broke, really bleary from too much drinking and smoking along the way, and really, really road weary.  The few places we inquired at kind of looked at us like, "Ah, you want a job... yeah... right."  So then we decided to go into the city to see some sights but took a wrong turn and found ourselves in Harlem.  1975, two pretty much clueless white guys in my buddies beater (we had left the Malibu at the airport for the day).  Ah, no, not a good idea.  We high tailed it out of there, drove around a bit more, were wowed by the excitement of the city, but also beginning to feel very defeated.   Between the two of us we had $40, which back then was enough money to get us back to California... just.  So we hitched up the beater and blitzed our way home and arrived with a bit of pocket change and a lot of fatigue.  If nothing else, it was a good lesson and one of those growing up kinds of experiences!
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • hedonist
    hedonist Posts: 24,524
    We used to spend summers in NY, mostly on Long Island and in Queens, but our visits to the city were the best, especially as a kid.  It was so exciting!  The people, music, THE PIZZA!!!, buying Italian ices, just the madness and color of it all.  From my eyes as a child, it was like a dream.  Magical.

    Last time I was actually in the city was over 20 years ago, for my uncle's funeral who had just passed.  It was just before Christmas.  We walked down Fifth Avenue and were wowed by the splendor of the air and decorations, something we don't really get here in Los Angeles.  And it snowed lightly on us as we strolled.  It was third time I've ever been in falling snow and was absolutely beautiful all-around.
  • PJ_Soul
    PJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 50,662
    edited July 2019
    Canada
    What I LOVE about NYC is that all you have to do to have fun is step outside and walk around. The energy of the city and the people is palpable IMO, and everywhere you look something is happening, someone is doing something interesting, and if you feel like having a good conversation with someone or have a laugh or a weird moment, there is pretty much always an opportunity for that no matter where you happen to be. I can't imagine having a boring moment in that city.
    Post edited by PJ_Soul on
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,662
    Anywhere other than planet earth
    This feels like New York to me:

    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • Renfield
    Renfield NYC NY Posts: 1,054
    U.S.A.
    brianlux said:
    Renfield said:
    brianlux said:
    Renfield said:

    I’ll take a local’s word for it :). Definitely a place I want to visit some day for the cultural significance.
    And it would be my pleasure to show you around the big 🍎 
    I've been to NYC three time- 1965, 1975, and 1988- and was always impressed by the wide range of culture, the energy, the excitement.  It really does seem like the center of the known universe.  A part of me wishes I had the energy and youth to live there.  But as it is, at this stage in the game, a quite little place not too far from the seashore is more my speed.  :smile:
    Nothing wrong with a quiet place near the seashore 🏝 Being near the water is wonderful.  I grew up on the beach in Miami Beach, great as a kid but not for me as an adult. 

    How was your NYC visit in 1975? I think of the urban flight, recession, high crime, seediness and general disrepair the city was going through in the 70’s would have made it a frightening place to visit.
    '75 was interesting.  My best friend back then and I were in our early 20's.  We were both fans of a 60's TV show called "Route 66" which was inspired by Kerouac's On the Road and was about these two guys who were on this on-going road trip broken up by staying places for a while to work and make some money and then hitting the road again.  We though, "Hey, that's cool!  Let's do THAT!"  We hitched my buddies little beater to the back of my Malibu and hit the road, taking turns driving.

    Well, by the time we made it clear cross country we went to JFK thinking we could land jobs with one or other of the airlines.  Only problem is, we were darned near broke, really bleary from too much drinking and smoking along the way, and really, really road weary.  The few places we inquired at kind of looked at us like, "Ah, you want a job... yeah... right."  So then we decided to go into the city to see some sights but took a wrong turn and found ourselves in Harlem.  1975, two pretty much clueless white guys in my buddies beater (we had left the Malibu at the airport for the day).  Ah, no, not a good idea.  We high tailed it out of there, drove around a bit more, were wowed by the excitement of the city, but also beginning to feel very defeated.   Between the two of us we had $40, which back then was enough money to get us back to California... just.  So we hitched up the beater and blitzed our way home and arrived with a bit of pocket change and a lot of fatigue.  If nothing else, it was a good lesson and one of those growing up kinds of experiences!
    Yikes!! Quite a different Jack from your original intent...
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gOWKbPDRdKw
This discussion has been closed.