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Thanks for the new thread, OP. Now on to the real questions that plague our region. Why does Oregon (and Portland specifically) have so many strip clubs?
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# ¿ Dec 29, 2016 22:06 |
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# ¿ Apr 28, 2024 13:59 |
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I was gonna say it's because OR knows how to party and WA is like the dad state.
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# ¿ Dec 29, 2016 22:16 |
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anthonypants posted:Human trafficking Goddamnit
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# ¿ Dec 29, 2016 23:14 |
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The idea of Portland and the surrounding area being a progressive wonderland is a pretty interesting one. Coming from a deeply conservative area, what I constantly call out isn't the "tolerance" of Portland or the neat things, but the systemic things that make Portland more progressive than South Carolina. Most of these things have to do with making legislative and municipal choices focused on an idea of collectivization vs. individualism. For example: Bus drivers are unionized. Public transportation is prioritized (even if it isn't perfect and doesn't go to places where it needs to) higher than private transportation, revenue generation tends to be favored over decrease in taxes (although this seems to be fading). Social progressiveness is a different beast. For what it's worth, I do find Portland to be more socially progressive than SC was - but it isn't consistent across the board. There are at least more places for Homeless folks to try to get help, and there are some programs, but it's not enough. Plus, the lack of black people means it's hard to gauge just how progressive our population is, and just how deep that goes. My feeling is that, like most of the rest of the country, Racism out here is still deeply ingrained. I mean, I know that's the fact where I actually live (which is pretty rural). I really don't think we are any more enlightened than SC though. For some reason, though, collective policies have won out here, and LGBT are considered part of the community.
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# ¿ Jan 2, 2017 18:25 |
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seiferguy posted:I've been trying to look for it, but there was an article / opinion piece ran in the Seattle Times after a major tragedy (I think the Charleston church shooting?) where the author basically patted himself on the back and said something to the effect of "other cities need to be like us when it comes to racial diversity." It kind of speaks to the mentality that we think we're all great at race relations because lynching didn't start here. Seattle and Portland has real racial issues, but I'd say they're different from the ones in the South. They seem to be crimes of omission and just forgetting about the population, rather than outright "gently caress you" of the South.
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# ¿ Jan 3, 2017 23:36 |
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anthonypants posted:It was mentioned briefly but a few years back we had a cop in Portland who built a shrine dedicated to Nazis in a public park, and then when he was eventually removed he sued the city and won, and the mayor signed a letter of apology to him and officially had all mentions of wrongdoing removed from his record. Woah really? Which episode of Portlandia talked about that.
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# ¿ Jan 4, 2017 01:42 |
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Are we seriously comparing Oregon to The South in terms of how racist they are? They're both loving racist as hell. The only reason Oregon didn't have systemic racist institutions is because: 1. Slavery was the most useful in manpower-intensive operations such as rice, cotton growing. 2. Slavery was the most accepted in the earlier parts of the US' history, when Oregon wasn't even settled by white people. 3. Oregon didn't have massive farms requiring thousands of workers, and when it did have manpower-intensive operations slavery wasn't super accepted. 4. Oregon was settled, in part, by people who believed in a white utopia. They purposefully excluded even free blacks. 5. This all led to Oregon having very few black people in the 1940s-60s, when much of the south was busy practicing separate but equal. I would be willing to put money on segregated everything here if there had been a large enough black population in that point in time. As it was, Oregon did a pretty drat good job of segregating out the Asian population without explicitly defining ghettos. That being said, the Modern Portland we know and love right now is very weird. There's a feeling of awareness that we treat minorities badly as a nation, but this doesn't seem to translate into Modern Portland being on the forefront of race relations. There's underlying racism vs. the Hispanic/Latino population (asians seem to be somewhat accepted), and we have a higher-than-average amount of white supremacists when you get out of the city. But where Portland does excel is in LBGTQ relations, which is focused on right now. I'd contest this is because of the concept of coming out of the closet. LBGTQ people were always in our families and friend groups (even for religious and conservative people), they just hid. Now that they're not hiding, everyone is realizing they were always part of the community. Some places, like the South, where religion holds sway, are fighting back against this and trying to explain it away as mental illness. For the most part, Portland seems to not be influenced heavily by religious institutions and is instead accepting those people (although trans folks not as much as LGBT folks).
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# ¿ Jan 4, 2017 18:15 |
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Eimi posted:In what ways does Portland lag behind in acceptance of trans people? I've always thought of the PNW as the closest to a left area in America, and I'm currently trying to save up to move there from the Midwest. I'm also trans so it's an issue I'd love to hear your take on. (Also your last statement had me giggle a bit, we are the T in LGBT) I have to admit I'm a bit ignorant on the trans stuff, since I don't have any close friends who are involved in it. Or if I do, they just suffer quietly. So I may, in fact, be talking out of my rear end.
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# ¿ Jan 4, 2017 18:50 |
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anthonypants posted:If you want to spend a lot of money on fancy donuts you should check out Blue Star. Here's an article about what it's like to work at Voodoo. Keep Portland Weird! Yeah if I want a top dollar Luxury Donut I'll go to Blue Star. They're really good. If I want an average donut I'll go to Heavenly or something.
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# ¿ Jan 5, 2017 02:07 |
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Prokhor Zakharov posted:Some fun Portland facts, a must read for anyone who's only lived here for 3 years or less! Good christ. This is amazing. Any sources for this crap? I wanna read more about how awful we were to black people.
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# ¿ Jan 10, 2017 17:39 |
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Lazy_Liberal posted:*Are Can't be racist when there aren't any black people around, right?!??
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# ¿ Jan 10, 2017 20:25 |
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I like this one better, it has less graphs.
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# ¿ Jan 12, 2017 00:19 |
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anthonypants posted:I promise to never close this thread in a fit of rage Your graphs are crap
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# ¿ Jan 12, 2017 17:57 |
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I'm convinced.
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# ¿ Jan 12, 2017 18:10 |
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What changed Civil Rights more: the LA Riots or King's peaceful protests that turned into Riots? Trick question, it was calm white people explaining things calmly.
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# ¿ Jan 20, 2017 23:50 |
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xrunner posted:Oh yeah. I thought he was referring to the post election ones. Didn't realize anything had really gone down yet. I'm probably heading downtown within the hour. Has anything even started yet? Yea, flag burning contest. http://www.portlandmercury.com/blogtown/2017/01/20/18803661/the-mercurys-live-updates-from-portlands-trump-inauguration-protests
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# ¿ Jan 21, 2017 00:06 |
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He had to go to work. Republicans in America: complaining that Obama took away all the jobs so they're all too busy at their jobs to protest.
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# ¿ Jan 21, 2017 00:17 |
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anthonypants posted:Have you heard about Right 2 Dream Too yet? I keep seeing that as I walk around. What exactly is it? Looks like a shanty town or something.
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# ¿ Jan 22, 2017 00:08 |
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anthonypants posted:Way back in the day, that location used to be an adult bookstore, but the city tore it down for code violations. The landowner decided that he could get back at the city by allowing homeless to camp there. Right 2 Dream Too was subsequently threatened with lawsuits from the city, and they told the city to gently caress off. Eventually the city relented. The city still wants them to leave because it's unsightly etc. (see also our attempts at a sit-lie ordinance) but they are doing an increasingly pisspoor job of actually finding a viable location. The first one that I'm aware of was under an overpass, but it was too close to the Pearl District (which, if you're unfamiliar with Portland, is the rich white snobbery part of the city) and some tenant association got hugely pissed off at the city so the city decided it couldn't be there. There've been a few other places, but they've never turned out for one reason or another. They've been at that spot on Burnside for around five years, and the city's still spending time and money vacillating over what they're going to do. In spite of everything, the city still believes that the camp needs to move. Ah, so it's a homeless camp with a rich history of saying "gently caress you" to Portland. I can kind of get on board with that. FWIW it seems well run, and has never bothered me at all. That area is where Central Concern is and such anyway, so it's probably a reasonable location for people that need to be able to have services and food in walking distance. It'd be nice if it could be a proper shelter though, with room for way more people. Is there any sort of organization that oversees it?
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# ¿ Jan 22, 2017 01:51 |
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anthonypants posted:They're like a self-governing entity, and considering how much people don't hear about it, I'd say they do a good job. Yeah, I'm thinking its one of their goals to fly under the radar and let people just live in peace.
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# ¿ Jan 22, 2017 02:02 |
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oxbrain posted:It's the only win for the Democrats, so they'll make as much of it as they can. What the gently caress can they even do? The Republicans hold every branch of government right now by a majority, and most State governments. And Republicans are using legislative tricks to keep filibusters at bay - they learned that from 8 years of having the Democrats do that to them. We may be a numerically larger group of people, but that doesn't mean poo poo in electoral elections or gerrymandered districts. Hell, we had one of the most massive marches in history and literally nothing came out of it.
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# ¿ Jan 25, 2017 04:41 |
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Javid posted:My only interaction with the portland police was them having a MAX train held at the station for the half a loving hour it took them to actually get there because a dude had a knife. Not like, was brandishing, literally a sheathed knife on his belt, standing on the train staring at the wall like everyone else on board. Nothing about that whole experience wasn't absurd. I saw a really pretty girl po-po sitting in her car in a parking lot. I think she was just writing a report or something. I said "Hi, I know there's a lot of poo poo going on but I hope you have a good day." because it was a couple of days after the election. That's my portland police story.
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# ¿ Jan 26, 2017 18:08 |
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Mr. Lobe posted:I guess but make no mistake they're still you're class enemies unless you rich Doesn't mean that I can't be nice to a fellow human being who is likely to have a really lovely time of it for awhile.
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# ¿ Jan 26, 2017 19:07 |
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xrunner posted:I don't advocate outright rudeness, but kindness and appreciation just helps them create their whole "the good citizens who I protect love me - it's too bad there are bad ones out there who need to be crushed." They need cold shoulders, shuns, and shaming. Yeah that's fair. On the flip side, being unkind to them makes them feel like the world is out to get them and that the only people who respect and understand them are the other cops around them. The correct answer is for me to be black and/or disheveled and/or angry looking and incredibly nice.
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# ¿ Jan 26, 2017 22:07 |
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anthonypants posted:A popular symbol in police iconography is "The Thin Blue Line". It is a blue horizontal line across a black field. The significance of this image is to show that cops are the only thing that separates the Good People from the Bad People. It makes no attempt at defining which side is Good or Bad; the only things it distinguishes are Cops and Not Cops. I know the symbolism well. I worked with a police force for about 6 months, in a rather large city. And I studied policing as my BS in college, and at the time most of the research ongoing into policing was around Community policing. So the divide between police/community was super well explored. That's why I know that if the community just gives police a cold shoulder, they'll look to each other for support. It's what happened during the "Professional Policing" period in the 80s, and resulted in the police being separate from the communities they are supposed to serve. Because po-po see their job as super stressful and hideous and they think no one respects them (even though they're wrong). If you press me for what the "right answer" is, it'd be "Bring back a focus on community policing" and "eliminate # of arrests as a metric" and "increase de-escalation training budgets and limit access to firearms while on duty".
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# ¿ Jan 26, 2017 22:34 |
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anthonypants posted:*extremely liberal voice* Actually I watched the first two-thirds of Serpico and it was based on a true story and that means there are still good cops The only realistic portrayal of cops is in C.O.P.S..
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# ¿ Jan 27, 2017 01:48 |
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Mr. Lobe posted:No actually the Keystone Kops is the most accurate portrayal. Also good
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# ¿ Jan 27, 2017 01:58 |
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generic one posted:JFC this is the PNW thread, we should be smoking some legal weed and talking about local issues instead of whatever this national election doom-posting thing is. There are already threads for that. let's talk about dory boats. they're great, right? how they ZOOM right up onto shore and people have to dive for cover
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# ¿ Oct 29, 2020 00:06 |
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Oscar Wild posted:Tough to say. There seems to be a lot of grassroots support for Sarah, but that is probably just my bubble. I expect Ted to win, but I am hoping I'm wrong. Well if the middle aged white woman in Walmart in St Helens whose son is joining the Marine Corps is any indicator, Sarah is "Crazy" and will destroy Portland so I hope she does not win.
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# ¿ Oct 29, 2020 00:29 |
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IM DAY DAY IRL posted:the guy in the fastener department at parkrose hardware told me that he 'has to vote for ted because that woman who is running against him is full-blown antifa' so who loving knows the HORROR from the way this woman was talking I fully assumed Sarah to actually be a 64 foot monster that would smash downtown with fire breath
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# ¿ Oct 29, 2020 00:42 |
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Bar Ran Dun posted:Ehh the aftermath of general is going to be a thing here. I’m expecting to see militia types again where I live, no matter how it goes. the only militia type I regularly see right now is a dude who has to use his grocery cart like a walker. I'm not terrified of him
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# ¿ Oct 29, 2020 00:48 |
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Everyone should be like me. Find the guy with the most trump poo poo on the block and leave him a nice little note letting him know he can borrow your trash can for a couple weeks after election if he needs a place for all the trump flags.
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# ¿ Nov 2, 2020 20:31 |
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# ¿ Apr 28, 2024 13:59 |
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no i believe you'll find that I'm offering some neighborly love
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# ¿ Nov 2, 2020 21:01 |