Guest
"Jim Thompson" <To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-Icon@My-Web-Site.com> wrote in
message news:qi13i2h1if9jgqkpidmdk6ron9v06o9u6j@4ax.com...
York, Boston, Chicago, northern New Jersey (it's essentially all one big
city) and LA were such awful places, since they're all very rich cities.
They are certainly counterexamples of your theory, as read correctly. In
any case, I think there are many major cities in all four of the high/low
income/rudeness quadrants.
Eric Lucas
message news:qi13i2h1if9jgqkpidmdk6ron9v06o9u6j@4ax.com...
Oops, I didn't read carefully enough. I thought you were explaining why NewOn Mon, 02 Oct 2006 21:25:06 GMT, <lucasea@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
"Jim Thompson" <To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-Icon@My-Web-Site.com> wrote in
message news:cct2i212ak2vq714ussr88s3f1tb2kram9@4ax.com...
We have our rude cities... NYC and Boston come to mind, though Boston
has gotten much better in recent years.
When I was in grad school in the late 80s, I struck up an unusual
friendship
with my 80-year old crusty born-and-bred Bostonian landlord. He once
confided in me that, when he was younger, Boston was a much more pleasant
city to live and especially drive in. His take was that their economic
success in the 60s - 80s lead to a large influx of non-Bostonians. I have
experienced this before, and it does tend to make a place much less
friendly, since the populace has fewer emotional ties to the area, and
thus
less interest in making it a pleasant place to be. That, and maybe the
Boston press have finally gotten that chip off their shoulder about "The
Curse".... :^)
I've often pondered if
rudeness is inversely correlated with personal economic health.
Maybe, but I've spent lots of time in several large US cities, and San
Francisco and San Diego are both among the wealthiest and also among the
friendliest.
Eric Lucas
You prove my theory... "_inversely_ correlated": high income => low
rudeness ;-)
York, Boston, Chicago, northern New Jersey (it's essentially all one big
city) and LA were such awful places, since they're all very rich cities.
They are certainly counterexamples of your theory, as read correctly. In
any case, I think there are many major cities in all four of the high/low
income/rudeness quadrants.
Eric Lucas