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| Best & Worst What's your best and worst experiance with a business? Share your thoughts with other members and discuss it here. |
Best & Worst Things about Oklahomathis thread has 50 replies and has been viewed 3524 times
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I grew up in VA right outside of DC.....Oklahoma is not in the South...Mason Dixon line..and down the coast..that is the true south...
I tell friends in DC about Oklahoma.. And it is simple Pros... Cost of living is cheap.. Cons... Cost of entertainment high... VS Washington DC area... Pros.... Cost of entertainment low Cons... Cost of living high.. When people from other states look at OK...there isn't much of a WOW factor to the state.. Same goes for TX but they hype it up in the press and people believe it... |
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Oklahoma is geographically a South, South Central State. If we can grow magnolias, drink sweet tea and grow cotton then by god we are the South. Even by our grammar, "Yall" lol that is most distinctive of the Southern States.
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I am appauled by the comments about trailer house comments. If you don't live in a trailer house that why is that offensive to you? A lot of classy people choose to live in a double wide rather that building a huge house with a lot of wasted space in the roof. I guess what I am saying is that I am proud to be the "trailer trash" that is so disgusting to people in Oklahoma!
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Southern plains is how I usually describe Oklahoma. It might not be accurate but south and midwest just doesn't quite do it. I tell people it is on the prairie and no one ever asks where the prairie is so sometimes that works. I don't think Oklahoma is anything like New Mexico.
There is no way I'd live in a mobile home in Oklahoma for obvious reasons. My mother insisted that there was some sort of magnetic field around "trailers" that attracted tornadoes. I didn't put much effort into trying to educate her on that score. Oklahoma is a wonderful place. At my age, I am not affected by any of the cons. |
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Those are just scare tactics. Current regulations make trailer living much safer than "you're gonna die" TV meteorologists would have you think. They're required to be tied down well enough they can withstand fairly high winds, probably EF1-strength tornado. That doesn't mean I'm going to hang out in my trailer house with any tornado headed my way, but the media makes it sound lots worse than it really is. That's how they get ratings. I'm fortunate enough to have an underground shelter nearby.
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Here is an article I just read about mortality rates of tornadoes when you are in mobil homes:
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/stor...-cleanup_N.htm Part of what it says is that: During tornadoes, the fatality rate for people who live in mobile or manufactured homes is 10 times higher than for those who don't, ... such structures "are prone to catastrophic failure at a lower wind speed." |
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In regard to Houston, I can think of worse places, but Houston's highways are really f*ed up. I don't know what it is, they just suck....badly. I grew up in Dallas, so I always called Arlington, TX the arm-pit of America. Why did you move? |
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. Or to put it in beer drinker's terms...You'll have to drink just over 7 Oklahoma Bud Lights to equal 6 Texas Bud Lights. That's not a whole lot when you're knockin' them back. Not that I condone drinking Bud Light either. BARF.Besides, I buy bottles of 11-12 "point" beer here all the time. Liquor stores carry the good stuff. You just have to plan ahead. |
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I also always thought Dallas was the armpit of the world - at least that is just how I described it. I'd still rather live there than Houston. Too steamy. Too crowded. Too far away from home.
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BTW...during the May 3rd tornadoes it didn't matter if you lived in a mobile home or not, the mortaility rate was high. |
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There are a lot more eyesore properties around this state than mobile homes. Maybe there is a stereo-type or something, I don't know. But whatever...Judgements prevent us from seeing the good that lies beyond appearances. |