[lbo-talk] Is Iphone mostly white?
Eleutherios
eleutherios.rizooto at gmail.com
Mon Sep 24 16:26:15 PDT 2012
Missouri is an interesting mix and is trending more southern from
earlier stronger Midwestern influences. It's certainly solidly Bible
Belt. Roughly the northern third of the state is Midwestern with a
southern tinge whereas the southern half to two-thirds is quite
southern. That's the Ozarks and most akin to Arkansas. Kansas City is a
Plains western town with a Midwestern element whereas St. Louis
especially shows the change from more Midwestern to more southern over
time. Todd Akin is from a conservative suburban area of St. Louis. St.
Louis and Kansas City do not have local control of their police
departments dating back to the Civil War when Confederates dominating
the bulk of the state were concerned that the more abolitionist urban
areas would seize the armories for the Union. Important decisions
preceding the Dred Scott SCOTUS case took place at the old
federal--state courthouse, where earlier slaves had been sold, in front
of the Gateway Arch.
On 24-Sep-12 17:46, Joseph Catron wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 10:33 AM, Dennis Claxton <ddclaxton at earthlink.net>wrote:
>
> Except in Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma, West
>>>> Virginia, and Missouri.
>>>
>> Oh yeah. Forgot Arkansas.
>>
> I use "the South" in the classical sense. I'll grant you the first four,
> plus Arkansas; the other three aren't us (unless we want to reopen the file
> on the Constitutionality of West Virginia:
> http://www.wvculture.org/history/statehood/cabinetopinions.html).
>
> I know the Confederacy lodged a spurious claim to it, but doesn't everyone
> consider Missouri Midwestern? As for Oklahoma, if you're going to stick us
> with that, you might as well go all the way and give us Nevada too! Arizona
> and New Mexico would make more sense (but don't get any ideas).
>
> Florida's pretty much its own planet these days, but I guess it's
> nevertheless ours.
>
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