How close is this being the truth in your state? I especially want to here from Texan's!
1 posted on
06/20/2014 5:07:40 PM PDT by
celmak
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To: celmak
PS: You’ll have to visit the site in order to find out if is accurate.
2 posted on
06/20/2014 5:09:00 PM PDT by
celmak
To: celmak
Burlington VT is pretty liberal, I would have thought Brattleborough would rank worse. Don’t know much about Norh Concord though.
3 posted on
06/20/2014 5:09:36 PM PDT by
Wyrd bið ful aræd
(Pope Calvin the 1st, defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades)
To: celmak
I want to know what state you are in before I answer.
5 posted on
06/20/2014 5:10:51 PM PDT by
Ditter
To: celmak
Comparing towns with less than 500 people to cities of 100s of thousands? This is a joke, right?
6 posted on
06/20/2014 5:12:07 PM PDT by
jjotto
("Ya could look it up!")
To: celmak
Prinsburg, Minnesota.
Population: 497
Never heard of it.
To: celmak
Texas is pretty simple. Just stay away from inner cities, Austin and the Mexican border towns.
10 posted on
06/20/2014 5:19:34 PM PDT by
Shugee
To: celmak
I don’t disagree with Baker, Florida as the most conservative as that area really is but they should have had a minimum size of say 5000 population.
Baker was a sawmill town and hardly more than a place on the map.
11 posted on
06/20/2014 5:20:57 PM PDT by
yarddog
(Romans 8: verses 38 and 39. "For I am persuaded".)
To: celmak
Colorado city az? Isn’t that where Warren Jeff’s was from? Just saying
12 posted on
06/20/2014 5:21:10 PM PDT by
Sybeck1
(Vote McDaniel June 24th Mississippi!)
To: celmak
To: celmak
This is a joke. Garden City, TX has 334 people and Sarita, TX has 238, most of whom are Mexicans.
My educated guess of cities with actual people in them would be Lubbock, TX as most conservative, And Austin, the BigBlue Anus of Tx,as most liberal.
To: celmak
The NE I-95 corridor is solid blue.
20 posted on
06/20/2014 5:34:22 PM PDT by
lightman
(O Lord, save Thy people and bless Thine inheritance, giving to Thy Church vict'ry o'er Her enemies.)
To: celmak
A few surprises: that Greensboro is more liberal than Asheville or any of the Research triangles... that Huntsville is more liberal than Birmingham... That East Hartford is the most conservative city in Connecticut...
21 posted on
06/20/2014 5:39:15 PM PDT by
dangus
To: celmak
Good Hope, GA - pop. 277 and 97% white
2.3 mi away is Monroe, GA - pop. 13,000 - 49%W/45%B
Map is worthless imo.
23 posted on
06/20/2014 5:43:46 PM PDT by
GAgal
To: celmak
Who wasted their time putting this together?
A more trenchant question is: who will waste any time trying to distill any useful information from it?
24 posted on
06/20/2014 5:45:23 PM PDT by
Belteshazzar
(We are not justified by our works but by faith - De Jacob et vita beata 2 +Ambrose of Milan)
To: celmak
Osage WV, population app. 250, is most liberal.
Maysville WV, population app. 2280, is most conservative.
THESE AREN’T CITIES! THEY’RE BARELY VILLAGES!
28 posted on
06/20/2014 6:00:37 PM PDT by
wvguy
To: celmak
Where I come from, church attendance isn’t a mark of conservatism.
To: celmak
Looks like a map of college towns and places I’ve never heard of.
To: celmak
East Orange NJ, liberal, urban, not safe to go into even in the daytime and run down.
Augusta NJ, conservative, rural, safe and beautiful.
Wow what a shock LOL.
37 posted on
06/20/2014 6:13:59 PM PDT by
XRdsRev
(New Jersey - Crossroads of the American Revolution)
To: celmak
Ahh Hume, also known as Hume lake. Population of about 300, I lived there for 16 years and let me tell you it is heaven on earth. It is primarily a resort community that hosts conferences for church groups. Although their population is small, 40 to 50 thousand people come through that town each year and encounter genuine Christian hospitality. I would say that Hume has an impact that reaches across the globe. It is private property in the middle of federal Park and forest lands and the federal government has been trying to get their hands on it since 1946. With this new report I’m sure it will renew their efforts, but nothing will happen to this town unless God is done with it I assure you.
39 posted on
06/20/2014 6:17:23 PM PDT by
weeweed
(Proud Costco University graduate)
To: celmak
The map is halfway to valuelessness as far as its portrayal of Texas is concerned. Yes, Garden City, Texas, which is essentially open range country, part of the Permian Basin Petroplex, inhabited by a few ranchers...yeah, it's probably going to be come out fairly conservative. That's not a surprise.
What is a surprise is that the illegal aliens on the run northward, who happened to be in the vicinity of Sarita, Texas (essentially a convenience store sitting on 0.052 acres carved out of the 900,000 acre King Ranch) actually stopped running long enough to A) whip out their smart phones long enough to locate this poll and B) participate in it. In fact, the people who answered this poll could be the only people in the history of Texas who have ever claimed to be residents of Sarita. Other than the convenience store/gas station and a Border Patrol checkpoint south of town, about the only other structure around is the occasional ramshackle barn. Well, there used to be a storage shed there at one time, but it blew away in a hurricane a few years ago.
In fact, if you held a contest for the one place that nobody, under any circumstances, would ever want to find themselves, at any time and for any reason, Sarita, Texas, would definitely be a finalist, and would probably the odds-on favorite to win.
44 posted on
06/20/2014 6:50:13 PM PDT by
Milton Miteybad
(I am Jim Thompson. {Really.})
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