
Originally Posted by
PoliSciGuy
I wonder how much of an impact length of time in OKC has on this vote. And if I'm generalizing please let me know, but I think it's telling that some of the stronger advocates of this deal are folks who have lived here longer. One of the more common arguments here is about just how bad OKC was before MAPS/Thunder came to town. There's lots of allusions to how dead the town was, how little there was to do and how overlooked the city was by the country writ large. For these folks, the fear seems to be that if the Thunder leave, we're right back to the 1990s and the bad old days, as there's nothing else to do around here and our city core will wither on the vine and we will be a national afterthought, or even worse, another Tulsa. I think the specter of this past has overshadowed just how much OKC has grown and developed outside of the Thunder in the last couple decades. I read posts about how we have nothing else to do around here or how the Thunder is the only thing we have and I wonder if we're even living in the same city.
Meanwhile, some of the folks more skeptical of the deal seem to be more recent transplants (myself included - I moved to the area in 2015). For us, OKC has a lot of trappings of a modern, growing midsized American city. Speaking for myself, I've been to a handful of Thunder games but I also take my family to Scissortail Park and the Famer's Market there, to the Zoo, the Science Museum, musicals and performances at the Civic Center, countless little festivals and weekends at the Paseo and downtown and up in Edmond. We have Olympic events coming before the end of the decade, a massive facility opening up on the waterfront with Okana and countless other developments. All that is to say, if the Thunder leave, OKC is in a much better place today to weather their loss than a couple decades ago. However, as recent transplants we absolutely lack the memory or context of what this place looked like in 1990s and as result we downplay or ignore those older voices. This also leads to us diminishing or overlooking how much this team means to the more long-term residents as a keystone of OKCs comeback story, and that value cannot be captured on a balance sheet.
Note that this isn't saying one side is more right than other or one side's votes should matter more than others, just an interesting dynamic that I think might be at play here. Maybe this'll help us understand the other side better.
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