Well, it probably means that needing to shop on Saturday instead of having the option of shopping on Sunday isn't deemed some sort of tragedy or cause to feel like a victim. There are worse things than not getting hysterical at the lack of humanity evidenced by apathy on the subject. I can't recall any conservative I know in real life particularly concerned the law will change or not change. Last I checked, there was no big groundswell of Conservative soldiers trying to block this. Pretending this is even a deal to the right, much less blaming them for being backwards or - gasp! - Christian - is dumb. Sure, there is always someone they'll stick a mic in front of but for most conservatives, it ain't broke. There are plenty of bigger issues. The implication that that makes them less progressive or stuck in their ways is just a progressive hammer looking for a conservative nail.
As far as the car dealers not being open on Sunday, I am against that to. One could argue I am biased on that, but whatever. The government should not be regulating who can be open when.
I believe a poster on here said at one point or another, the reasoning behind that was car dealers shouldn't be open on a day of worship; is that true?
Since everything under discussion here is all in various minds . . .
May I suggest a back-to-back reading of;
"Homegrown Democrat" (Garriison Keillor) and "The Mark Iniside" (Amy Reading")?
Between the two of them, it would definitely be a good collection of ideas and concepts pointing in the direction of a "better" OKC
Without simply giving it (OKC) the Finger . . . as Noobs and Temps are prone to do.... =).
PS: It's too damn hot here. I'm glad I found a shady spot. GeeZ.)
One of the very few "original" thoughts I've ever had--with a tip o' the proverbial hat t' Jimmy Buffet a long time ago was--"It Ain't Where you are At, It's Where YOU 'are at'."
I actually met an actual "Quilting Law Practitioner."
It was in a suburb of The Cities, about an hour north of there.
She was a nice person and not offended by my grumpy, know-it-all attitude.
When we conversed, I thought of you.
(as my wife purchased some fabric for a quilt she has yet to make. =)
The coolest part of all is the name of their little tiny place of business
Just off the old Main Street of Town: Quilterati.
OKC needs spots like that. To make it better and help it to 'run with the Big Dogs . . ." =)
(and somebody needs to file a complaint with whomever to lower the temperature, fer cryin' out loud, doncha know . . .)
It looks like Arkansas may beat Oklahoma to the punch when it comes to establishing truly progressive, modern laws. It helps that the state has a couple of progressive bastions in Little Rock and Fayetteville - something Oklahoma does not have. It will be interesting to see if this passes. The rural areas of Arkansas in the western and northern part of the state are extremely conservative with a population largely holding firmly to the idea that all alcohol consumption is sinful and should be banned. Those areas of the state are also where most of the dry counties are. You can bet pastors will be getting their flocks out to vote against this constitutional amendment.
Arkansas Voters May Get to Decide on Minimum Wage, Alcohol Sales | Arkansas Business News | ArkansasBusiness.com
Sinful. Really? What's your proof of this?
Wow.... Oklahoma really needs to get with the times here.
True. Arkansas is fortunate to have small pockets of cultural liberalism and diversity. However, go to Harrison, not far from there, and its a far different story. The most conservative part of the state is the areas surrounding Fort Smith (which might as well be Oklahoma). Go to Fayetteville near the college or much of inner-city Little Rock however and you can forget you are in a maroon-red state.
On what punch is Arkansas beating Oklahoma? Arkansas has true dry counties where package sales are illegal. Oklahoma has no dry counties. Retail package sales is legal in all 77 counties, and always has been. County option package sales was rejected the year Oklahoma repealed prohibition.
What Oklahoma has are counties where liquor by the drink is not legal.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
I think it's much ado about nothing. Are our liquor laws the best? No. but it doesn't take a genius to plan ahead for a cold beer.
It's not degrading to our quality of life, even in a minor way. Germany has a great overall quality of life in spite of the fact that there are so many things you can't buy on Sundays that it's easier to say what CAN be legally sold on Sundays.
No.
... which goes to prove my point.
The independent baptist movement may have played a major role in your upbringing, but in no way does is it anything more than a blip on Oklahoma's political radar. It's like a small blemish on a nice piece of furniture that is noticeable, but still just a small part of the overall product.
Quality of life is highly subjective. Personally I feel Oklahoma City's quality of life suffers due to many small negatives - little things that by themselves don't really matter that much with liquor laws being just one of them. I don't know that much about Germany, but while they may have backward laws, they also have beautiful scenery, rich history going back thousands of years, amazing walkable cities, a livable temperate climate, etc. Another place that has backward liquor laws is Sweden, but its highly considered to have a very high quality of life for a multitude of other reasons.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks