This would be more for people who don't want to live anywhere near a Democrat I think. Just a thought exersize.
Okay, now I get it.
Now that I get it, it sounds like a good idea.
You know, during the late 1930s, Nebraska was called the "white spot" of the nation, because of the near-nonexistence of state taxes. Advertised in full-page layouts in
Time magazine, and somesuch.
During the late 1970s, voters in one state senatorial district elected some kid wonder, some liberal whiz kid, who scoffed at this idea of being a "white spot," and so during his entire legislative and mayorial career, did his best to make us a "black spot."
I know the guy; he's an ass, he's unemployed, and he's wretched and miserable, as he well deserves to be. Paying child support to his first wife, and alimony to all his three former wives. Nobody pays attention to him anymore, and his ego's significantly bruised. Bad body odor too.
Anyway, he always sold the notion that no, or low, taxes meant a state wasn't worth living in; that one had to have high taxes to elevate the standard of life.
Even though a history major in college, he didn't know shit about history.
If he had known anything about history, he would've known that when Nebraska was the "white spot" of the nation (i.e., no, or low, state taxes) during the 1930s, Mississippi was the "black spot" of the nation (i.e., exorbitant state taxes).
If I had my druthers during the late 1930s, I would've sooner lived in Nebraska, than in Mississippi.