The trip we took last week took us from Oregon to California, Arizona, New Mexico and then Texas. On our return trip it was everything in reverse. I had an opinion on what I thought I would see and I will say it wasn’t quite what I expected.
First of all, it was standard fair for workers in all states to be masked. As we headed south, I expected California to be similar to Oregon in customers wearing one. That was not always the case. What I observed was in rural California people were not wearing masks and suburban California they were.
As we moved into Arizona, I really didn’t see any mask wearing. We only made one stop in New Mexico both ways and it seemed as though masks were an afterthought. Finally, I would say ‘Dont Mess With Texas’.
Prior to 1836, Mexico occupied the Alamo compound as a fort. They abandoned it and some locals took it over, still technically Mexicans. The winter of 1836 the Mexican Army came back to retrieve a couple cannons that were left at the site a battle ensued. That was the spark of the Texas Revolution. The idea that Texans would submit to policy if it suits them is derived all the way back to this time period. Among the chief disputes that lead to the revolution were individual rights and taxes, sound familiar?
What I think I observed was a general consensus of will not comply rather than what I see here. If I could try to describe it I would say here there are two distinct camps, hard left and hard right. What I saw in Texas is an acceptance that we are just not going to comply. For instance, in all of my travels I did not see a single pick-up flying a ‘Fuck Joe Biden’ or ‘Trump 2024’ flag which I see on any given day here. What I did see were signs that ‘such and such city government requires masks to be worn in this location’ and no one complying.
To me this means that in the hard left states like Oregon pushes the opposition into extreme positions. It is like trying to block the daily tides, you might get lucky but that is really unlikely so all you can do is hope for a miracle. In contrast, in Texas there is a general ease that this is the way things are and doesn’t require people to go to extremes to promote one side or the other.
My overall impression was pretty favorable with Texas. I have lived in the south before and I would say that Texas attitude is more refined that of say South Carolina. Of course not everything is roses, there is high heat and humidity. Fire ants and cockroaches and other bugs and no real public land. But, you cant have everything.
End Your Programming Routine: Where I will come down here is that the real difference is the urban-rural divide. It is not necessarily state lines that define attitude and behavior but common values. If you are ever driving on I5, there is a barn between Yreka, CA and the Oregon border that has a roof painted the statement ‘The State of Jefferson‘. That has been there before I was in college (mid-1990s). Despite being in California that farmer shares more in values with Ozona, TX then the next closest neighbor in Ashland, OR twenty miles away.
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