[AGL] Houston Retort
Jon Ford
jonmfordster at hotmail.com
Wed May 10 19:09:37 EDT 2006
Wayne J asserts: "I disagree with your comment about Austinites being the
"most self-righteous human beings ever gathered in one place." Surely most
people would argue that Palo Alto, CA stands head and shoulders above the
crowd in that respect. Ask anyone who lives there. One can have anything
one wants in Palo Alto.....except possibly a long conversation with someone
of...uh, "color".
Adding to the allure of Endearing & Everlasting Wealthy Whiteness are
satellite towns like Menlo Park, Woodside, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills and
Mountain View. If one has a "blue collar" in any of these towns, one
either doesn't live there or else it has some silly "signature" just above
the heart. "
Wayne is just as cuddly and lovable as ever-- However, I can't really agree
that Palo Alto is the most full of "self-righteous human beings." And I
don't think Austin is, either. Palo Alto may be the most full of
over-achievers and software hustlers, but Berkeley ,California surely takes
the cake for the most self-righteous (or maybe San Francisco, as Telebob
suggested earlier). I lived in Berkeley for nearly 15 years, and kept to
myself on a quiet street, but that place is self-righteous to the nth
degree.In contrast, Palo Alto is just a sleepy suburban town. It is lacking
in people of color (if by that you mean African-Americans),but our
population is pretty international , including many folks from India,Japan,
China, Vietnam, Iran, Latin America,etc. We also have plenty of homeless
people (I saw a bunch of them ordering vary complicated drinks at Starbucks
only an hour ago).Our local schools are considerably more integrated than
when Wayne lived here.
In the Southwest I have noticed that the races seem pretty much to keep to
themselves even though they may live fairly close "as the bird flies." In my
mother's neighborhood in North Austin, for instance, I have never seen a
person of color on the streets or in the shopping areas, except for service
personnel; of course, my experience is limited as I come to Austin very
seldom. So maybe we should avoid stereotyping one another and stick to the
verifible facts: Houston is a place of big mosquitos and muggy weather, but
has a lot of museums;
Palo Alto and the surrounding area have great weather (except when it floods
and houses wash off the hillsides), beach proximity, overly expensive homes,
and excessive numbers of rich people. We also have great museums, like the
Cantor up at Stanford, and wonderful cultural events almost every evening.
I'd say it beats living in the sticks in rural Virginia where Wayne lives,
or in most parts of Texas. Enuf said.
Jon
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