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Useless? Well lots of states red and blue probably aren't all that useful. I'd opt for Oklahoma or Kansas with shitty politics, tornadoes and not a lot of cultural clout.
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I like bluegrass so I'll give the Appalachian states a pass. MS or AL have incredibly shitty politics, but there's interesting culture. Shitty? Well that's subjective - shitty weather, shitty politics, shitty culture, shitty environment? I agree that there's beauty in every state. It tops the chart on almost every negative measure, and consistently votes for people who will make it worse. by Anonymousīackwards has to be a poor red state, because voting GOP is undeniably voting against your state's best interests - so I'll pick Mississippi. Kansas right now is troubling, but it's not as much from the citizens as it is from the Republicans using Kansas as a testing ground for all sorts of shitty stuff, and Republicans are complaining almost as much as Democrats nowadays. When U of M students said they thought Klan members were on campus, I figured they might just be right - it's not like the Klan is losing membership nowadays. When I was a kid in the 1970s in Southern Missouri, the Klan was a prominent presence.
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Missouri, as I know from growing up there, is still a slave state at heart. It's been a century and a half but Kansas still has pockets of liberals in the same places it did back then. You may not have heard of the Marais des Cygnes Massacre or the Beecher Bible and Rifle Church, but you should have heard of John Brown at least, and the burning of Lawrence.
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Kansas fought hard to be admitted into the Union as a free state, while Missourians came over the border and massacred citizens on a regular basis, hoping to bully Kansas into being a slave state, which would help all the slave owners in Missouri. I was the first to mention Kansas and have the displeasure of witnessing their self destructive implosion from right across the border. The Southern states' employees were more conniving (or perhaps more hierarchical) and had their complaints go up their food chain and to the top of our leadership - thus making us look (personally) worse than if they just told us their problems to our face. In Boston & NYC, they just yelled at us directly when they didn't like something. There were a number of examples of this, actually now that I think about it. I think it is a cultural thing to be nice to people and then talk shit about them privately. The funny thing about all of the above is that the people were always friendly (to my face) - more so than clients in cities like NY or Boston. In Baton Rouge, The weather was incredibly hot, our office was disgusting (80 degrees + snake warnings on every door), the food was bad no matter where you went, and it was just a miserable place to be. I don't even know where the employees lived - nothing was around. The only food we had was McDonalds or Burger King. The worst two were a small town in South Dakota and in Baton Rouge, LA. The life goal of everyone I met there was to get out of Bentonville. It was still pretty dingy and dull there, but it wasn't a bad place to work because the whole town caters to business travelers (lots of fast food, easy to get everywhere, etc.). I was Bentonville (Wal Mart HQ) so that town is potentially an exception to what that entire state might be like (though it was 63% Trump.so maybe not). But, the only one on this particular list is Arkansas. I used to travel for work, and over the years I ended up in a lot of places.