Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#46
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Most Village People think they’re “Better” than others that’s other developments not just locals and service people! And the majority of those Villagers are from one area of the United States which I needed say because they know who they are. I’d give $100 for the Readers Digest from the the early 80’s that invited people to the up and coming “Villages” in a advertisement…..
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War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself. John Stuart Mill |
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#47
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Not sure what age has to do with reaching out the others that don’t live in TV but work here. This would be one of the those entitled educational moments
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“Living is Easy with Eyes Closed” |
#48
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You’ve discovered why people describe The Villages as “living in a bubble”.
The attitude of the locals towards Villagers ranges from indifferent tolerance to downright hatred. How would you feel if suddenly a community of 145,000 self-interested, non-working, almost entirely Caucasian, wealthy northerners dropped into the middle of your modest, unhurried, rural southern community? We justify our existence by saying how much we’ve helped the locals by providing jobs and increased income and not thinking for a moment that the people who lived here liked it the way it was. I remember a young woman who had to deliver something to our house in Mallory shaking her head over the massive development and saying that when she was a teenager this was all pastureland where she and her friends would ride their horses for hours on end. Now she observed, all that is gone. That’s why Villagers often describe leaving the confines of The Villages and others who live here as “going off campus”.
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Politicians are like diapers--they should be changed frequently, and for the same reason. |
#49
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“Living is Easy with Eyes Closed” |
#50
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#51
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#52
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#53
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Unfortunately that is not always the attitude. Depending on the situation I have said I was from Wildwood or Leesburg rather than from TV. Sad but true. There can be a misconception out there of the people who live in our city, and a city is what it has become. It has just grown laterally as opposed to vertically (so far). |
#54
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_____________________ "It's a magical world, Hobbes, Ol' Buddy... let's go exploring!" |
#55
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If the Tri-County area is Rome then The Villages is Vatican City.... er maybe the Coliseum?
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#56
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I do the same thing, but it's just how I was raised. But to your point about "us against them," it was never more prevalent as when I entered the master gardener program many years ago. Back then, those from south Sumter pretty much despised those volunteers from TV. I bridged the gap with several of them, as we share a common southern heritage, but there were some that just were intolerant of us. What's funnier is that some of "them" were transplants from areas north of here but felt infringement into their rural lifestyle. I totally understand and empathize. But life's too short, especially at this stage! Just smile & go on.
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American by birth. Southern by the grace of God. |
#57
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#58
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I dealt with it decades ago. Far northern Minnesota, where my family lived, is prime hunting country (grouse, deer, moose). Sparsely populated to say the least: I remember times as a kid when being snowed in for four or even five days was not uncommon, but we made do. Each November however there was an influx of hunters from the southern part of the state: many had purchased land up there and had hunting "cabins" where they and their cronies would use we headquarters for their stay. We called 'em "Joe Cities". Stories abounded about their poor woodsmanship skills, bad marksmanship and the fact that some of them didn't wait for the hunting to stop to for the drinking to start. Some stories were probably true, many probably not or greatly exaggerated, but we took them as gospel. They weren't especially liked by the locals and they knew it. They pretty much kept to themselves. Never did learn what they thought of us, but I imagine it wasn't all that complimentary. Stereotypes may have their basis in truth but become highly exaggerated with time, and there were plenty of stereotypes back then. Not unlike here. |
#59
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Larchap49 |
#60
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Closed Thread |
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