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Originally Posted by
Spartan
Easy enough, we can agree to disagree. I certainly agree with money talks at the end of the day, especially when we're talking about real estate here. I'd even go a step further here and argue that Dallas has a ton more worth in it than even faster growing spots such as Las Vegas, which really is truly a worthless urban environment.
The funniest thing is when we get a wave of new posters, and the process they go through in coming to grips with OKC's development progress. Inevitably that's what we all come to this forum to learn more about and share our interests in, and it's a shame that we get so abrasive sometimes. Perhaps I'm a little sensitive just because I'm on a first name basis and occasionally drink with most of the long-term posters here, a few more than others for sure. But with these newer posters it's funny how they all think their initial phase of discovery involves unique thoughts, and perhaps it's equally ironic that us long-term posters (who generally have grown more as urbanists) ever think our thoughts are unique because admittedly they probably aren't. That said, I too was once a new poster who idolized Dallas and skyscrapers and yearned for skyline changes. This was long before Devon, too, so you can imagine the pain.
Similarly, it's not unusual to get a new transplant over the years (or even a distant poster from Seattle or Texas) who are constantly turning discussions toward the city that they love (seemingly more than OKC at times). So Charlotte is just the latest there, which is cool. That is at least more unique than getting a new wave of bright, young posters who constantly idolize Dallas and quickly accomplish voluminous post counts just by fantasizing over Dallas and Dallas alone.
The thing I've learned, from my own experience, from watching others over the years, and from graduating, leaving, returning, and becoming a community development professional is that Dallas is a phase that fades, much like the city's own boom-bust cycles that are iconic of its culture: big freeways, big skyscrapers, big sky, big houses, big malls, big hair, big cars, big trucks, big signs, big traffic, big, big, big, and more big. At some point I grew up and realized that the key isn't big but rather better. OKC can never out-big Dallas, but there's not much we can't do better.
That's the OKC Talk experience I've experienced myself and seen work its wonders on other posters over the years. The more you stick with us, converse with us, teach us, learn from us, etc - the more we'll make you a believe that OKC can and will do better.
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