There's an obsolete English word "swasivious" that means agreeably persuasive.
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An interesting thing I didn't know until today
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Originally posted by Sporting View PostHah!
Has there ever been a thread here on the best and worst US States to live in? The criteria would be very wide-ranging and extremely subjective but as always the posts would be more interesting than the results.
Except maybe Rhode Island. I’m not sure if any part of Rhode Island is rural.
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He missed the memo
It had been officially named the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations since the colonial era, but came to be commonly known as "Rhode Island". In November 2020, the state's voters approved an amendment to the state constitution.]
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It's not really about individual trees, it's about forests all of different colours. I guess they have that in upstate new york, but it's probably just as easy to get to Vermont as it is to Albany or wherever from NYC.
It is fucking spectacular to be fair.
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Yeah. I don’t know why they go leaf peeping in Vermont rather than the finger lakes or Adirondacks, but it seems to be the thing. And is spectacular across New England. I laughed at the leaf condition forecast the first time I saw it, but concede it’s actually meaningful now.
Last year I had a lovely meal in a farm in rural Rhode Island. It’s not that small and there’s space between the towns once you’re off the interstate.
Obviously you all know which I think the overall best (and most varied) state is. But most of them have lovely bits and shit bits and their own redeeming features one way or another.Last edited by San Bernardhinault; 02-05-2023, 07:20.
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Originally posted by Sam View PostI like that the last of those reasons basically boils down to 'lots of Ohioans have served in the US Senate because lots of Ohioans have been elected to the US Senate.'
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Originally posted by Lymeswold Snork View Post
Well, yes, but I think the point is that Ohio is more likely than other states to prefer senators who were born there, while other less fussy states end up with a sprinkling of Ohio natives. Don't any states have rules that senators have to be natives?
Nor are the residence requirements very taxing, as illustrated by New York's long history of carpetbagging senators (Bobby Kennedy, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Hillary Clinton, etc).
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I learned that this museum exists in Rochester and now I think I need to go to Rochester.
https://www.museumofplay.org/
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Originally posted by San Bernardhinault View PostYeah. I don’t know why they go leaf peeping in Vermont rather than the finger lakes or Adirondacks, but it seems to be the thing. And is spectacular across New England. I laughed at the leaf condition forecast the first time I saw it, but concede it’s actually meaningful now.
Last year I had a lovely meal in a farm in rural Rhode Island. It’s not that small and there’s space between the towns once you’re off the interstate.
Obviously you all know which I think the overall best (and most varied) state is. But most of them have lovely bits and shit bits and their own redeeming features one way or another.
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Rochester holds the distinction of the being the 'destination' for the short-lived Toronto / Rochester high speed ferry; a wildly expensive proposition that connected two cities with absolutely no other relationship that anyone could fathom. A Lyle Lanley-esque idea if there ever was one.
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They both have AHL and pro Lacrosse teams now
The bigger issue is that Rochester isn't really on the lake, and there are actual falls between it and downtown
Last edited by ursus arctos; 02-05-2023, 19:16.
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