Perhaps that is why business is doing well here...that ever cross your mind? You will waste a LOT of time and your LIFE waiting to be loved and approved of by everyone around you...stop worrying about who is trying to affect your **relationships** FOR GOD"S SAKE!!! Keep a gun by the front door...
Last edited by jmarkross; 09-15-2010 at 01:54 PM. Reason: addition
Disagree. There should be varying viewpoints. I'd say inner OKC is pretty moderate with liberal social views and more conservative fiscal views. From my experience people are pretty accepting of different viewpoints. If you need even more of a concentration of left of center Norman is a good place to live/work by OU. Austin, for instance, may be very Democratic in its inner city but its wealthy western and northern neighborhoods and suburbs are conservative, like the rest of Texas.
jmarkross is our new right-wing standard bearer, apparently.
It moved me away from extremes. Plus, I am back closer to my family and friends. People like you chastise people like me just because we don't have the exact same political viewpoint. Sorry to hijack the thread but this is a prime example of the negativity I saw while living in OKC.
Hmmm..going to try and get back on topic.
I agree with you 100%. It would benefit OK greatly if there was a new mandate for natural gas usage. The paradox is many in the O&G biz are quite conservative would be against any federal mandates that require that. OTOH, my experience with natural gas is that it hasn't quite "caught on" as a major fuel source. True its much cleaner and in abundance in the United States, but for whatever reason, the percentage of natural gas used in relation to other fuels is only up slightly in the past decade. Even right now, there is a huge surplus of gas in storage, which is why current prices are so depressed. Plus, the views of natural gas exploration with the feds has taken a hit b/c some idiots in PA and NY didn't know how to frac properly and suddenly, hydraulic fracturing under scrutiny.
I get the sense that the bump that will move gas to a more widely used source is the eventual return of $100+ bbl oil. Remember 2008?
Inner OKC may be more moderate, but it's far from being liberal. I know it's anecdotal, but most of my friends who stayed in-state for college and now live in and around downtown OKC are quite conservative. Norman is a conservative suburban town and OU is a conservative university relative to UT. The prayer on the front page of the newspaper, praying before Thunder games, the plethora of (giant) christian churches, the giant cross on I-35...to me, all of these small things add up to the entire city of OKC projecting a conservative Southern Baptist mindset.
Having lived in both OKC and Austin for long periods of time, it is not simply a matter of a little slice of Austin being liberal and the rest conservative as you seem to suggest by comparison to Norman. The city proper as a whole is liberal; for instance, Travis County (with over 1 million people) voted heavily (64%) Democrat in the 2008 election. Unlike what seems to be the case in Oklahoma County where Democrat votes mostly seemed to track low-income areas, large (higher-income) parts of inner south, west, central, and north Austin voted Democrat in the 2008 election. All told, there's a very noticeable difference in the overall attitude and political culture of metropolitan OKC and Austin, no question.
Yeah- a political discussion in The OKC Development section!
Different, yes, but not as pronounced as you make it seem. The hightech industry brought a lot of Democrats from California and coastal cities to Austin in the 90's and still does which reflects the higher percentage of Democrat voters. OKC does not have that same dynamic. The large university presence also greatly affects those numbers in Austin. Imagine if OU were more than twice its current size and you get UT, the second or third largest university in the nation. It's Texas, there are still plenty of conservatives in and around Austin. To relate to the thread, hightech has brought a lot of new residents and money to Austin just like oil/gas can do for OKC. Both are growing industries in a business-friendly region.
Congratulations! And if anybody tells you that a salary of 100K makes you a man of "modest" anything - they should be ashamed. If you are young, 100K is an incredible salary in this economy. I can't believe anybody would actually say that to you (it was said in another post). Again, congratulations. On second thought, if you are any age and making 100K then you are a successful individual. I'll match my salary with anyone here and it doesn't mean squat. 100K? Good on 'ya and good luck!
Generally--people are not gauche enough to drop salary figures around...for whatever reason...just a matter of good manners...BTW--I am not "ashamed", and hardly anyone in this life ever should be--in any circumstance..."shame" is usually a tool used to control others...
BG, I completely agree with you here. The inner city doesn't necessarily denote just downtown. People on the inner Southside and Northside I find are actually quite moderate to liberal. It's the suburbs and outlying areas that aren't so. And even if they are ideologically Conservative, most people here are generally accepting. I'm so tired of hearing this fight from other people when really OKC isn't as bad as liberal wants to make it, and I'm pretty liberal. I think you're spot on with this post BG.
Williamson County (Cedar Park, Leander, Round Rock) is heavily conservative and the northwest edge of the Austin city limits (like Parmer & McNeil area) bleed into Wilco, Hays County is pretty conservative as well. I know plenty of conservative types who live up there and more than you think live in Austin/Travis County just like more liberals live in OKC than most people think. Most of the California transplants that I have met here in Austin are far more conservative than your typical Central Austin type, I see a fairly even mix of political sign during the election cycle in my fairly close-in South Austin neighborhood. Many of the liberals that I know in OKC aren't politically active, they just vote for those they like and keep it to themselves and always have. Not everyone has to run off at the mouth about politics.
There are also plenty of those "big churches" here as well as some of the well known Christian artists have been based out of here like Chris Tomlin and Phillips, Craig & Dean.
It seems we'll have to agree to disagree. Having lived in both cities might allow me to make a more concrete evaluation of the differences and similarities between the two. Perhaps I am biased somewhat by living in central Austin. Regardless, based on my own observations the difference seems exactly as I suggested in my previous post.
From the perspective of political leanings, doubling OU in size certainly does not equal UT. The two schools have very different student bodies (based on, e.g., student achievement, political engagement, minority population) and again my opinion is a product of personal experience (and statistics) rather than speculation.
I'm not arguing against the fact there is a large conservative population in greater Austin; I also realize many politically conservative people are living in the heart of the city. I'm not trying to suggest that Austin is nearly as liberal as cities like San Francisco, either. I am, however, arguing that the liberal attitude that defines the central city in many respects permeates much of the city proper, just as I feel the conservative values of suburban OKC seem to define the political climate of a large part of OKC proper--but without a large liberal part of town to balance.
I'm conservative. Would I move to California if a job opened in my industry, yes. Who cares if everyone "hates" you (your views). I have some SUPER liberal friends, we know each other's views (almost 180 degrees on most issues), we get along flawlessly because we know friendship doesn't have to involve agreeing on everything, or ANYTHING.
If you can't get along with someone because of their political views, you need some help with your social skills. You have a choice on where you can reside, if you don't like it, move. You say, "But my job has me here." OK. Quit. If you can't make friends without pissing them off because you continually feel the need to correct and debate them on every issue, you need help. I disagree with a ton of things, but I know sometimes it creates more trouble than it is worth by arguing a FUNDAMENTAL difference with someone. I have different fundamentals than other people, so what makes sense to me might not always with others.
Tolerance goes both ways. People will be tolerant of you if you are tolerant of them.
Why do so many people who don't even live here come to our boards and stir up nothing but trouble???
Guys if you're out you're out. Let it go man. Leave Oklahoma behind, we'll be fine without you.
If you wanna stay that's cool too... but practice those good manners your mother taught you when in someone else's home.
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