Why Vermont Hates Outsiders

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • The audiobook version of Toby Dog of Gold Shaw Farm is now available. Go here to grab it: adbl.co/3LbXaFp
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Комментарии • 872

  • @EyeOfTheWatcher
    @EyeOfTheWatcher 10 месяцев назад +274

    The fact that someone said Toby dog was a trained killer was laughable and sums up how crazy the whole outside debate can sometimes be. Also, old guy forget that his ancestors were not native to land that we call Vermont today, so I don't understand why he is trying to infringe on your right to move and lived where every you want.

    • @Kymberlee_W
      @Kymberlee_W 10 месяцев назад

      Because many old white men believe that they created America, not comprehending that the USA did not exist before 1776 and many, many people called it home for 20 thousand years before people with white skin showed up.

    • @naterises
      @naterises 10 месяцев назад +21

      Toby is a lady killer alright. 😂

    • @EyeOfTheWatcher
      @EyeOfTheWatcher 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@naterises the only thing Toby is killing is with kindness.

    • @JamesMBC
      @JamesMBC 10 месяцев назад +10

      I agree. Also, they didn't realize that it only made Toby sound cooler.
      I would reply: he's only trained to kill trespassers, so it's actualy a patriotic dog.

    • @nixonesport1998
      @nixonesport1998 10 месяцев назад +4

      So if his ancestors were native to the land you would agree with him? Lol. You people are weird

  • @margodoyle3557
    @margodoyle3557 10 месяцев назад +144

    I left the city for the Scottish Highlands and lived beside a beautiful loch for 9 years. The locals could not afford to buy properties and the beautiful houses were only occupied for a few weeks each year. I rented to help the economy. I too have to say I resented the summer visitors. I wanted the peaceful lifestyle all year. Best wishes from Scotland .

    • @arx3516
      @arx3516 10 месяцев назад +9

      It's baffling how this countryside-peope/city-people opposition is almost totally absent in Italy, mainly because here we are both city-people and countryside-people at the same time. Many of the people that work a day job in a big/medium city go back to their old town in the countryside after the shift ends. And the towns that don't allow a daily commuting to a bigger city are all dyng, with their populations reduced to a handful of old people. For these towns gentrification is the only alternative to death.

    • @jamielandis4606
      @jamielandis4606 10 месяцев назад +1

      You are smart! I’d move to the UK in a heartbeat if I could.

    • @Kymberlee_W
      @Kymberlee_W 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@arx3516 this is exactly the reason that Italy's dying towns have begun to implement programs that offer homes for ridiculously low prices. There are obviously catches, I've heard all sorts of interesting ones but the one that is difficult would be the ones that insist you live there for 10 yr minimum.
      Switzerland and even some areas of Canada are doing the same thing.

    • @estycki
      @estycki 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@arx3516not sure how long the drive is in Italy to the country side, but I’m in Canada and just drove 7 hours last month from the city to visit my boyfriend on his new property in a remote area. I considered flying but it was $75 of gas or $750 plane ticket and then I have no car in the middle of nowhere…

    • @fifinoir
      @fifinoir 10 месяцев назад +2

      I live in a densely populated part of Scotland just on the edge of the highlands. So wishing I had the money to move somewhere in rural highlands, especially near water. unfortunately I don’t have the money or energy for that. So I’m very jealous lol. Hello from south of you ❤

  • @matthewm3912
    @matthewm3912 10 месяцев назад +276

    I am gonna take a minute to tell my relatable story. We came from southwest FL, Fort Myers to be exact. I had wanted to move to TN for years and finally got my wife on board after covid, and she finally opened up to my homestead dream. We started our home search in East TN and lost out on offers on 13 houses to cash buyers. We finally found a house, and were so burnt out we made an offer, sight unseen. We ended up purchasing our home in middle TN, a small town called Hilham filled with hollers and hills near Dale Hollow Lake. Everything started out great. While the house was smaller than we wanted, everything checked out and we loved the land. The guy we bought it from owned the home next door, and the 100 acres surrounding us. We started off friendly and we met his family and he would hunt the land around us. No problems at first. We were definitely outsiders though, and our intentions were pure. So we started getting more and more animals, chickens, ducks, turkeys. We eventually wanted pigs(which we got) and to raise a steer each year for food on our 2 acres. So, we decided we were going to fence OUR property and pasture. Well this is when things went bad. Fencing our property cut off a driveway he had to his home next door(there was no legal easment, he had no right to it)which we had let him use anyway. Well once the fence went up the problems started. During all this, he had rented his house next door out to an older woman he was friends with. He had started using her as a poking stick to push us out. She took me to court over my chickens going into her yard. She went outside on 2 occasions and shot at my chickens while my kids were outside playing(not directly in there direction). We would get into screaming matches, it was a night mare. There is so much more to the story. But after i called the cops on her for shooting at my birds, and the cop turned it around on me and made me the bad guy i knew something was really going on. Well come to find out, the sherriff was high school friends with this guy. We were literally in one of those small town horror films where everyone turns against the main characters...it was CRAZY. We eventually sold for a PROFIT THANK THE LORD. and we moved an hour south to Cookeville. It just sucks because we let someone else ruin our homestead dream. Now we are stuck renting and the market is so INSANE we can't afford anything else. Unless its a crappy double wide on 2 acres for 400k! I feel your pain!

    • @RoBA7
      @RoBA7 10 месяцев назад +7

      I made similar experiences though far less dramatic as I stay for myself wherever I can. God bless you!

    • @nametag4277
      @nametag4277 10 месяцев назад +6

      Was that driveway the only access he had to the house?

    • @matthewm3912
      @matthewm3912 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@nametag4277 Nope, and he wasn't even there full time. He used that house next door as his "hunting cabin" until he rented it out to the psycho. It had its own dedicated driveway. In fact, it was OUR actualy driveway. It just peeled off to the right towards that house. It was between the two houses.

    • @nametag4277
      @nametag4277 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@matthewm3912then it seems like he overreacted.

    • @freedomishavingachoice3020
      @freedomishavingachoice3020 10 месяцев назад +7

      We would be better policed by the military who need to leave their state for training. It requires the humanization of those they do not know. The Standford Prison Experiment was not a fluke. Checks and oversight MUST be in place or all of us suffer for it. Your story was moving and the police aspect just reminded me of a solution to that issue. Thank you for typing it all out!

  • @jeanieschrag5378
    @jeanieschrag5378 10 месяцев назад +55

    It's everywhere. My mother was a Newfoundlander (Canada). I grew up in upstate New York and ended up living in Newfoundland for 20 + years. I was considered a mainlander until I left. They are friendly and welcoming to people as long as you don't move there.

    • @FeedMeSalt
      @FeedMeSalt 10 месяцев назад

      What a Crock of shit. My sister and her family set up on the point.
      We have never once been treated as anything other then family.
      Hell last summer I got handed beer EVERY single day, and a bag of weed twice. By people I have never even met.
      Idk what you did to not be accepted, probably being uptight about cocaine or you had to much money.
      But they are not like that as a people.

    • @twiztedsynz
      @twiztedsynz 10 месяцев назад +4

      Oh WOW; yes, absolutely to this! Newfoundlanders are great if you're 'a visitor' or if THEY move off the Island, but if you move there...
      I am from New Brunswick; we moved to NFLD when I was 8, stayed 3 years and that was too long for me. We were never accepted because we were "Mainlanders". I got beat up for it.
      Wonderful to visit, to tour, but unless you're from there, don't live there.

  • @RealFarknMcCoy
    @RealFarknMcCoy 10 месяцев назад +26

    Moral of the story: Be a decent human being. Thank you for all the hard work you put into this channel, Morgan. You are very much appreciated.

  • @eugenehatin.420
    @eugenehatin.420 10 месяцев назад +90

    I’m a native vermonter born and raised and I’m a huge fan of your channel and love the fact that your here and doing what you do! Those old guys are all just mad bc they used to getting their own way and you stood up to them!

  • @westcoast9285
    @westcoast9285 10 месяцев назад +41

    Crazy to me how folks who claim to be red blooded Americans can treat their fellow citizens like outsiders whether it’s rural on city folks or city on rural folks. Be good to each other, God loves you and we’re all Americans and different.

  • @carolinedudek12
    @carolinedudek12 10 месяцев назад +47

    Love this! I really appreciate the thoughtful conversations, and the two different perspectives. I've been in VT for 44 yrs, originally came as a student at UVM, and I saw much of the issues that students and out-of-staters can bring. I went to the School of Agriculture, so I really appreciate the states working farms, and everything that comes with them (like opening the window in Spring and knowing the farmer around the corner is "spreading" his fields). The pandemic has put a lot of stress on our VT communities with the influx of people moving here. Many can financially afford to pay cash for homes, and pay much more than locals. There's a huge increase in second homes which helped to create a housing crisis. I especially loved how Alfred stressed the importance of participating in your community...... I'm originally for a part of PA that was mostly farms, but due to the area's proximity to NYC, the area has been "discovered" by New Yorkers. They built their Mac Mansions and then complained about the farm noise and smells, and systematically changed the zoning (the noise and smells where only some of their complaints). With the the increase price of land and zoning changes, most of the farms are gone. The area now looks like the generic suburban place they originally moved from.... I hope VT can find that balance between welcoming new residence, and the new comers appreciating what VT already has to offer (and what makes it special) while adding new ideas...... My advice to people moving to VT; appreciate VT for what it is, don't turn it into where you left.

  • @andersanden3221
    @andersanden3221 10 месяцев назад +35

    This makes me think my hometown in Sweden. When my parents moved they came from Stockholm. The locals wasn't happy. They didn't like outsiders. After 30 years we help the community, we have become stars in the community.

  • @monbearpig
    @monbearpig 10 месяцев назад +113

    We moved to a small town in Wisconsin and we were treated like outsiders the entire time we lived there. Everyone who lived there had lived there all their lives and we just didn't fit the bill.

    • @pcarnold9
      @pcarnold9 10 месяцев назад +1

      What town? Possibly moving to Sheboygan lol

    • @nikkireigns
      @nikkireigns 10 месяцев назад +3

      Not all of us are like that! It’s okay to not fit in, the spice of life eh

    • @monbearpig
      @monbearpig 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@pcarnold9 Sheboygan is not a small town lol
      I'm referring to Viola WI (300ish people)
      I've lived in other parts of Wisconsin since I was 18 but that was my first experience of a "small town"

    • @XaviersFinest
      @XaviersFinest 10 месяцев назад +8

      I live in a small town, but it's also a college town, so people of all walks are the norm. It was a weird realization that such intermingled diversity is not the norm 😅

    • @HD6SOCCER
      @HD6SOCCER 10 месяцев назад

      Ye that’s because it’s because it’s fake white people in the north. Southern people are the actual welcoming kind

  • @eyelite7
    @eyelite7 10 месяцев назад +116

    "I'm not interested in becoming a prop in someone else's vision of what New England living is." You Go, Alfred!!! 🎉❤

    • @ElaineOpper
      @ElaineOpper 10 месяцев назад +9

      THIS resonated with me a lot, and I've seen this here in mid-appalachia (Ohio/West Virginia)- especially when they were scouting for locations for Hillbilly Elegy.
      Rural places can be idyllic, but they need to be respected as places that people actually live- not a real life oil painting that doesn't exist when visitors leave.

  • @jmacd8817
    @jmacd8817 10 месяцев назад +27

    Alfred's comment about not being a figure in someone's snow globe was solid.

    • @MorganJohnston
      @MorganJohnston 10 месяцев назад

      That quote stuck with me too. At first I almost took it to be him objecting to being objectified by outsiders as just some caricature of rural Vermont, but then I realized it's a much more practical (and thus more Vermont IMO) rationale. He doesn't care about outsider expectations of him, he just needs them to not interject their expectations and leave him to do what he needs to do to live a productive life in his home.

  • @frfuchs4884
    @frfuchs4884 10 месяцев назад +29

    Hello from northern Germany. For me, this video is easily one of the very best I’ve seen from you so far. I really loved the conversations and most of what was said, I can apply to my own experiences. Communication is once again the key and nothing works without respect. Liebe Grüße

  • @ebthepurple
    @ebthepurple 10 месяцев назад +18

    "It's not about the opportunity to make a buck, it's about the opportunity to help." HERE HERE, well said alfred!

  • @ginacirelli1581
    @ginacirelli1581 10 месяцев назад +39

    I moved to the NEK four years ago, and I was warned that folks would react negatively because I'm a flatlander. People haven't gone out of their way to welcome me, but I haven't experienced any harassment. Now I'm on the local planning commission, and the NEK born n' raised folks on that commission tell me that they are happy to have me because I try to fit in and I seek to truly make this place my home. They have a problem with people they call "carpetbaggers", folks who ignore the local culture and are trying to make this town just like where they came from. Some move up here and don't even register to vote.

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 10 месяцев назад

      well I tried to fit in - to volunteer - to enjoy hunters on my property - to take some lemonade out to a farmer haying - but I am still getting HATE and called a flatlander - even though I grew up in mountain higher than these damn hills - my locals are the most cold, hateful, closed off idiots I have ever run across and my father was in the military - I've lived in many states and thu Vermont is one of the loveliest in natural beauty - the locals are like villains out of an 80s A-Team episode

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 8 месяцев назад +1

      They don't have to register to vote. Nor do they have to live by the local culture. A persons influence ends at their property line, they do not get a say. They can be upset, who cares, let them rot in their judgmental misery.

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 7 месяцев назад

      @@anarchostatist191 Did I say they were trying to take anything, BUD?!
      No, I didn't. I said someone moving somewhere doesn't have to listen to the existing locals in any capacity. If you reply again, you'd better reply to what I actually said.

  • @nancy12452
    @nancy12452 10 месяцев назад +58

    My husband and I moved to Italy 6 years ago, where he was originally from. He and his sister were sole heirs to many acres of land, and the house that we occupied.. He passed away a year ago, and his family basically cheated me out of his share of the inheritance. They knew how to cheat through their crooked lawyers and notaries and surveyors… and yes they are thick like thieves. And I was told by more than a few Italians that ,because I was an outsider, they would never let me get anything. The culture there is very clannish, and suspicious and jealous even of each other.
    This is human nature, unfortunately…people basically suck. It’s a territorial thing lots of times.

    • @wildbrookies
      @wildbrookies 10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s so disgusting !!!!!

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 8 месяцев назад

      They are pathetic, fragile and emotional people. Don't assign to human nature what can be assigned to assholes and morons, it's insulting to those of us that aren't like these 'people'.

  • @nonoririko2056
    @nonoririko2056 10 месяцев назад +19

    Having both a city and rural native's perspective really makes this video special. Great content!

  • @lonewolf025
    @lonewolf025 10 месяцев назад +5

    I always appreciate thoughtful respectful conversations between people who may not necessarily have the same views on a topic, but seek to find answers to topics people talk about.

  • @hathorthecow7146
    @hathorthecow7146 10 месяцев назад +9

    I'm glad you're hitting your goal of more podcasting episodes, Morgan. This was a fascinating topic, keep up the good work!

  • @patman147
    @patman147 10 месяцев назад +108

    I grew up in Boston area and I couldn't understand why some of the smaller NE states disliked us. Then I moved out West when I graduated from college, 30 years ago, and I saw first-hand how California invaded the smaller Western states. That really helped me understand Maine, VT, and NH being so territorial.

    • @BrokenCurtain
      @BrokenCurtain 10 месяцев назад +27

      That's still no excuse, though.
      How do they think their families got to Vermont? Their ancestors also migrated there at some point in history, most likely from one of the great port cities like New York or Boston. Back in the beginning, the "real Vermonters" spoke Wôbanakiak, Atikamekw or Mohican.

    • @blackwatch6649
      @blackwatch6649 10 месяцев назад

      California is the state that people from everywhere else move to. This "California Invasion" narrative that people love to spread is beyond ridiculous.

    • @VektrumSimulacrum
      @VektrumSimulacrum 9 месяцев назад +11

      You're either an American citizen or you're not. You can't "invade" a country you were born a citizen of. That mentality is a huge part in why things got to be the way they currently are. Yuri Bezmenov talked about this in 1985 when he defected. A lot of it had to do with pitting citizens against citizens like this. That was meant to persist for decades and clearly it has.

    • @Mulberrysmile
      @Mulberrysmile 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@VektrumSimulacrum
      That is true, but really, humans are just tribal. Distrust of outsiders is a normal reaction in places that don’t have outsider exposure. City dwellers suppress that tribalistic tendency, to a point, but you still see it in well established neighborhoods within a city. It can express as blatant racism, but it is basically survivalist instinct.
      My grands were all in NYC, lower east side, then in Astoria, in Queens. They ranted about the Puerto Ricans “invading” and were really closed minded and quietly hostile (vs overtly challenging.) It was interesting to observe from afar. My Ukrainian grands who were 2nd generation Americans and their Ukrainian community so quickly forgetting how it was to be the shunned immigrants.

    • @TheAutonomousReview
      @TheAutonomousReview 6 месяцев назад

      @@BrokenCurtainAren’t we supposed to respect cultures in areas we move into? This idea that Vermonters hate outsiders is such a strawman…Vermonters dont hate outsiders. They only dislike the ones who come in and act like they know better than the backwards country bumpkins. I think its more likely that outsiders hate poor generational Vermonters because they believe they stole the land from native american tribes. Its this idea that they somehow deserve to be squeezed into oblivion for what their ancestors did.

  • @noheapai4145
    @noheapai4145 10 месяцев назад +59

    As a native Hawaiian of a small town on the Big Island Hawaii, growing up watching our small town turn into a suburb and watching tourists take over and outsiders move in it hurts. Things just are not the same anymore and the very thing that brings people here is eroding away and disappearing. Ways of how our community worked no longer applies. So I understand the “ hatred” for outsiders.

    • @DarkXessZ
      @DarkXessZ 10 месяцев назад +3

      Same ur not the only one, who understand the hatred for outsiders. I am a Taiwanese/Chinese born Canadian who once lived in BC Richmond for nearly my whole life since i was born, which is about 25+ years and living in Canada was great. I moved out because of family troubles and the economy. My family, cousins and I adapted to the culture there by learning english and respected the people who just lives there. Richmond was once a Town that is transitioning to somewhat a city. At first we had no problems with Tourist, immigrants etc etc. Lately there is SPECIFIC type of immigrants/Tourist, who we and the community started to hate. They are the mainland Chinese immigrants/Tourist because they bought up the house and they barely ever use it, which jack up the Housing prices. Then some mainland Chinese immigrant on a youtube video dare say she is bringing positive benefit to the economy, but what they brought was inflation to living expenses. They are also disrespecting a lot of etiquette and laws we had there. LOTS of Car crashes was result of mainland Chinese people are stuck with their old habits in China where they dont give a F how they drive. They dont even try to learn to speak English.

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 10 месяцев назад

      seems this is happening everywhere - so there is a fundamental Flaw in the System - not Hawaii - or rural Vermont - something is wrong when people THINK they need 2 homes 4 cars and an outfit for every single day of the month .... it is a sickness - so let's not just talk about things - but vote the old foggies of both parties out - the old folks created this - so we don't need to listen to them on how to fix it ... they want more of the same

    • @Sovereignty3
      @Sovereignty3 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@DarkXessZyeah, part of me is like they should be renting them on the cheap with a 6 or 9 month rental agreement if they aren't owner occupied and are only doing it to have financial ties.
      Particularly if they are doing it to lots of buildings. Either in your country or outside it. (Exclusions for extended family members living they though.)
      And it's also good because occupied building don't get trashed, and you don't find out until a year later.

    • @XliquidDream001X
      @XliquidDream001X 9 месяцев назад +1

      I usually don't agree with this. If you really didn't want tourism in your town or cities than you wouldn't of opened up that mcdonalds or that hotel and so on. You all are the reason your town is full of a bunch of people. There's plenty of town that will push this away.

    • @DarkXessZ
      @DarkXessZ 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@XliquidDream001X tourism isn't the problem as I said. Entitled tourist are. If you are a guest or outsider, act like one instead of think they own the place. Everywhere has different culture, etiquette and rules, people have to follow. If you don't, well it's his problem that he gets hated by the community. Certain people give every tourist a bad rep.
      Of course, there are some unreasonable stuff like Morgan experienced, which isnt really Morgan's fault. Morgan and the hound hunters just dont see eye to eye.

  • @samwisegamgee5601
    @samwisegamgee5601 10 месяцев назад +19

    Loved the video! I recently moved to a small town in Indiana (less than 1600 people) from a larger suburban outside of Chicago. I must've been lucky and had the completely opposite experience. The town welcomed us with open arms and have been so helpfully with everything we needed. People out here will help you out without you even asking for the help.

    • @beevie4081
      @beevie4081 10 месяцев назад +2

      I mean, who wouldn't go out of their way to welcome Samwise Gamgee after all he has done for Middle Earth?

    • @readyfuels17
      @readyfuels17 10 месяцев назад +1

      Midwest hospitality is like no other

  • @marekknieshtschav6391
    @marekknieshtschav6391 10 месяцев назад +11

    No matter where you go, you will be considered outsider and likely looked down upon. It's just easier to blend in with the vast population of a big city. On the other hand, city folk do have that holier-than-thou vibe when they move to countryside, often trying to turn the place they moved to, into a place they came from.

  • @patriciaposthumus6684
    @patriciaposthumus6684 10 месяцев назад +17

    As I watched further in, I can relate to what you all are saying and feeling. I live in what used to be 20 yrs ago, a small farming community in California. I live in Lodi in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley. We grow everything in this very fertil rich valley. Though I have watched people moving up from the cities buying up the houses, causing the house and rental prices to skyrocket. When I first moved here 20 yrs ago, the people were so friendly that you knew most of the people living here and they were very helpful to each other. I want to say that within the last few years, I've watched whole Vinyards and orchards be ripped up and sold off to build houses. Houses that a Nirmal middle-class person just can't afford. It breaks my heart to watch our small town just disappear to corporate greed. So yeah, I can totally understand. Though it's not just a Vermont thing. As I said, I'm in California, and it's happening here as well. I just want to know where all these people are coming from. If what the news says is true and people are moving out of California in droves, where are all the people coming from to buy all these $450,000. to millon dollar homes.

    • @brob-zy8zi
      @brob-zy8zi 10 месяцев назад

      They are coming from LA, San Francisco, NYC, Chicago and every other cesspool city across this country that they've successfully voted to destroy. Sad part is as soon as they settle in other places they try to change them into the very septic tanks they created and left behind.

    • @Debbie_Bcool
      @Debbie_Bcool 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm from California raised in San Fernando valley spent most of my life in the LA area. I had to move to another state in 2012. I'm getting older and living on social security can't afford the rent or buy a house there. It is heart breaking to have to leave everything I know. Would like to go back some day my son and granddaughter live there, but don't know if I will be able to afford it. Luckily my daughter lives with me now she is going to nursing school. She will be going back to LA in about 3 years she can make more money as a nurse there then were we live now. I think people are able to express how they feel about it more so it's more noticeable then before because of the internet. California daring my great grandmother's time was nothing but a real small town maybe similar to Vermont. My husband is from vegas he talks about when he was a kid how small it was. His grandparents were farmer's in Vegas, now it is a big city. Change is always going to come even though we don't like it sometimes.

  • @Fiona2254
    @Fiona2254 10 месяцев назад +6

    We moved to East Texas 2.5 years ago and our neighbors received us with open arms. We met them all the first day we spent here and they have been lovely even though they are all life long locals. I think it helped that we made it clear we were going to live the rural small homestead life.

  • @tonylopez6213
    @tonylopez6213 10 месяцев назад +13

    As a US citizen that grew up in Mexico I am reminded once in a while that I should go back to Mexico; this phrase usually comes out when I disagree with their view or criticize an aspect of our country or our culture. I think the argument of "outsider go back where you came from" is a last ditch effort of trying to win an argument that they have lost. I would say, it is the last argument of ignorance!

    • @Tascountrygirl
      @Tascountrygirl 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, agree! As an Australian, with many decades of immigrants from many other countries, these arguments 'Go back to where you came from' are commonly heard. There was even a tv program made so that Australians (all of whom were originally 'immigrants' in contrast to the original First Australians) could actually go to other countries from where some of our later immigrants travelled and experience why they needed to migrate.

    • @ShiveredOne
      @ShiveredOne 9 месяцев назад

      According to George Washing, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and the many other founding fathers, you're not an American nor can you ever be. How do you get around that?

  • @jrsf222
    @jrsf222 10 месяцев назад +8

    Great to hear the Alfred story…you two are greater friends. Your life in Vermont improves the areas nearest you because of your supportive selves as human beings.

  • @PiscesPrincess87
    @PiscesPrincess87 10 месяцев назад +9

    I’m sorry I know this is a serious video. However, every time I hear the audio about Toby being a killer dog.I can’t stop laughing.

    • @urkiddingme6254
      @urkiddingme6254 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah. I wasn't sure if that guy was kidding?

  • @Gala-yp8nx
    @Gala-yp8nx 10 месяцев назад +77

    My family has been in VT since before it was a state, but I originally grew up in CT. So when I moved to Southern VT I was more than a little amused by the xenophobia. Whenever people would give me a hard time about being an “outsider”, I’d point out that my family helped found the town they lived in.

    • @gkdvrcb
      @gkdvrcb 10 месяцев назад +15

      Same thing for me, the amusement when I name off my Vermont ancestors from the 1700s, towns they founded, where there are cemeteries full of them, and still standing structures of theirs, then the stories from the revolution. The grumpy old men forget the original intent of Freedom & Unity

    • @anarchostatist191
      @anarchostatist191 7 месяцев назад

      This is like a person moving to Ireland because "their great great great grandpa's cousin's dog was Irish" And trying to pretend they're a local. No one cares about your ethnicity.

  • @tonywilliams6037
    @tonywilliams6037 10 месяцев назад +5

    I have moved into a small Portuguese community in rural, conservative, olive-farming Portugal.
    Even with a significant language barrier, I have been nothing but included by neighbors, locals and shop-owners.
    I made some effort to make friends, and participate with them ( especially during harvest times) and support their causes.
    I feel completely at home, more so than anywhere else I have lived previously.
    Best decision I have ever made!

  • @TheSuzberry
    @TheSuzberry 10 месяцев назад +5

    “Change is good. You go first.” My favorite motto.

    • @craigduddles5650
      @craigduddles5650 10 месяцев назад +1

      Isn't that the truth! Funny and true.

    • @mr.x2567
      @mr.x2567 16 дней назад

      One of the many reasons why I hate people.

  • @JoeyBlogs007
    @JoeyBlogs007 10 месяцев назад +9

    I thought that guy was a bit of a nutcase, but maybe that was just his RUclips character persona, but he spoke very well and got his point across quite clearly.

  • @seemyworld1
    @seemyworld1 10 месяцев назад +9

    This was a great pod. Jonny seems like a nice guy and is very well-spoken.

  • @johnj.fitzpatrick7148
    @johnj.fitzpatrick7148 10 месяцев назад +8

    This guy rocks. I would suggest and request for him to be a monthly report master. He is very wise at 30. I’m 67 so the 3 generations of you ,he and me is fun.

  • @meenha1976
    @meenha1976 10 месяцев назад +9

    Well done for speaking out Morgan, its when a person stays quiet is the one who gets bullied the most. I bet you will be the one who changes the hunting laws and private properties, you will go down in history, kudos to you ❤❤❤

  • @jcisar
    @jcisar 10 месяцев назад +6

    My parents moved to Vermont from New Jersey in the 80s. We went native and didn't try to New Jersey-up Vermont politically. That's the ticket to acceptance.

    • @vtbrian3252
      @vtbrian3252 17 дней назад +1

      100% don't make where you left where you are moving too. You came here to live like the people here.

  • @MarcCoteMusic
    @MarcCoteMusic 10 месяцев назад +7

    I really appreciated this insight into Alfred and his personality and character...
    The man has layers to him I had yet to see in any of his too-infrequent appearances on the channel.
    It's interesting how the challenges and problems of an ever-changing world seem magnified or at least far more evident in a small town or rural community than in a much larger city. Many of the same problems exist in larger cities but the sheer size and population makes them harder to spot, I think.

  • @meenha1976
    @meenha1976 10 месяцев назад +3

    This is a smart kid you're interviewing today, he's nailed it, love him, spoken as it should be

  • @beevie4081
    @beevie4081 10 месяцев назад +12

    Really interesting topic, and reminded me a lot of my hometown in cottage country. The cottagers had a reputation like the tourists described here, rolling in with fancy boats and seadoos and occasionally trying to change the bylaws. The mutual resentment could boil over sometimes. One day the grocery store was really busy because the cottagers had rolled in for may long weekend. While in line for the cash, a cottager suggested that maybe the grocery store should be open for cottagers only during times that are known to be busy. The local woman in front of her turned around and just decked her in the face. It was quite a scene.
    However, I worked in a marina as a teenager and learned how generous and welcoming many cottagers were if you just had a good conversation or two. People love it when you show genuine interest in them. Offer to help them load up their boat, and next thing you know they're offering you a ride on that fancy seadoo.
    I've been small town hopping for the past 20 years, and have never felt like an outsider. I am not sure exactly why, but Alfred's commentary about chipping in provides some insight. You don't even have to be as skilled as Alfred, just shovel an elderly neighbour's driveway, or offer to board a dog while someone's away and presto, you're on the inside. It also helps if you have a cute, friendly dog to start up conversations.

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 8 месяцев назад

      I hope that the local woman was charged and found guilty of assault. Was she? What an absolute psycho to just deck someone over words.

    • @beevie4081
      @beevie4081 8 месяцев назад

      @@smithynoir9980 I think she was charged, but don't remember 100%

  • @Dovietail
    @Dovietail 10 месяцев назад +7

    You may be an "outsider," but you've done more for the benefit of Vermont than many people who live there for ninety years!

  • @meljordan220
    @meljordan220 10 месяцев назад +8

    I have always taught my children to leave a person place or thing better than they found them. If everybody would adopt that mantra, there would be no problems with tourists visiting and wrecking places or ruining the atmosphere or the lifestyle of the locals. Everyone would just get along and be kind and living.

  • @jamieloughner5542
    @jamieloughner5542 10 месяцев назад +5

    I loved Alfred's description of of the importance of mutual aid rather than a capitalist transaction for every need. Mutual aid within a community is vital to maintaining community health.

  • @Rocwallaby
    @Rocwallaby 10 месяцев назад +7

    I’m from Australia and I think these are common problems. I’m really glad to see that you included discussion about the native people. When I hear people here complain about immigrants and “not speaking the language”, not fitting in, wanting to change “our” culture I often wonder if they give 5 seconds to think what it might have been like for any of the native peoples, not just in Australia, when the British, French, Spanish or other Europeans arrived.

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 8 месяцев назад +1

      The entire disliking "outsiders" is entirely based in fear and emotional irrationality. You're asking a reasonable question that requires them to think when they really aren't capable of doing so.

  • @krisdraper793
    @krisdraper793 10 месяцев назад +3

    As a Mainer, who sees this "flatlander" situation as well; the entitlement of "people from away". Working in Emergency Management, a male from away called to threaten to sue because he had been without power for more than 48 hours because where he was from, this is unacceptable to be without power this long.
    ....it's Maine
    ....we're on the 3rd day of massive storm - there are people trapped in their homes because of trees on powerlines
    ....do you own a generator or did you call the rental shops to see if they have one - this excited him until he was told no, we will not be paying for him to rent a generator.
    Then, when asking if he had asking if anyone in the house had a medical condition that requires power for durable medical equipment, he was so offended. 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 10 месяцев назад

      but he is loud fool - I moved here and within a month had my power out for 4 days due to the first snow storm - I wasn't even unpacked - I dragged the couch to the woodstove room - and read books and just had FUN .... I got animals - so I have the noise and the smell - and still I am lonelier than I ever have been - and yes - I volunteered on planning commission and at the library - I mentored 2 kids - I used to buy locally ---- and I am still shunned because painted with the same brush as that idiot you mentioned.

  • @jmth1974
    @jmth1974 10 месяцев назад +2

    I attended Middlebury College in Vermont in '93-'97. Kind and nice people. Got to know the cleaning staff and got invited to their homes for barbeques. Good times.

  • @michaelmcgrath7712
    @michaelmcgrath7712 10 месяцев назад +3

    Lived in Barre and Burlington in the 90s and you hit the nail on the head. Great discussion!

  • @vannee2426
    @vannee2426 5 месяцев назад +1

    We are not wealthy we are finally taking a trip to Vermont and it is our first family trip ever. We feel very fortunate and look forward to our trip this summer ❤ take care all

  • @sosuemetoo
    @sosuemetoo 10 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up in the suburbs, got married and moved to my husband's hometown in rural Illinois.
    It's been 37 years and I still "Ain't From Around Here," in this town.
    Folks don't want new people or businesses, but complain when the old ones shut down. 🤷‍♀️

  • @murrrriel
    @murrrriel 10 месяцев назад +3

    'Without them, we would be New Hampshire'
    The burn OMG
    🔥🚒

    • @Jazzinthedark84
      @Jazzinthedark84 10 месяцев назад +1

      That made me laugh and I don't know anything about New Hampshire, except that it's named after a county in the UK.

  • @lydias2012
    @lydias2012 10 месяцев назад +10

    This is true all over. Moved to central Oregon in 91 from California, a more rural area outside LA. Bend OR changed while I was there for 25 years and changed even more dramatically for the people who lived there all their lives. The influx of Californians made their blood boil. Plus it a resort town. Visitors playing while you are working did stink but what a beautiful area.

  • @AshGreen359
    @AshGreen359 10 месяцев назад +4

    In the town of Coati California, there were chickens loose in the streets. They were loved by the locals.
    People moved there and complained about roosters crowing.
    I think they've all been removed now.
    I'm tempted to buy the flightisest, hardest to catch chickens and release them there.
    If you don't like roosters crowing, don't move to where there are chickens.

  • @wezul
    @wezul 10 месяцев назад +9

    When I hear people complain about towns getting bigger and property values/prices going up, I think "Isn't that everywhere, though?" Like literally everywhere, property values are going up over time because there's already as much property as there's ever gonna be, there's no more to be made. Not at the same rate everywhere, obviously, but I believe the trend line is upward across the board.

    • @E.lectricityNorth
      @E.lectricityNorth 10 месяцев назад

      Other than maritime volcanoes constantly creating new land

    • @wezul
      @wezul 10 месяцев назад

      @@E.lectricityNorth Okay, ya got me. Some new land pokes above the waves. Some of it sinks back into the sea. I'm sure you're not insinuating it's enough new creation on human time-scales to counteract the increase in property values in populated areas.

    • @anarchostatist191
      @anarchostatist191 7 месяцев назад

      It is, but Northern New England is skyrocketing. House prices have pretty much doubled in the past 3 years. Nobody young can afford to live in the region anymore and it's reflected by our demographics becoming older and older. Then it's only exacerbated by all these people who treat the place like a playground coming to our town meetings to block every new construction and infrastructure project. And despite what you claim, there's still plenty of states in the U.S. with affordable housing. It's just that those are "icky, boring, hick flyover" states that these transplants wouldn't dream of moving to.

    • @wezul
      @wezul 7 месяцев назад

      @@anarchostatist191 yes there are still affordable places- and the prices are going up there too. The two aren't mutually exclusive. I don't know that there is a single place (in the USA) where it's now cheaper to live than it was 10 years ago.

    • @anarchostatist191
      @anarchostatist191 7 месяцев назад

      @@wezul "I don't know that there is a single place where it's now cheaper to live than it was 10 years ago"
      They are absolutely not rising all the same amount all across the country. If you think house prices in someplace like the midwest (where you can still buy single family housing inside a city for 100K) are "just as bad" as the rest of the country that's simply not true at all. Places like that specifically don't experience the rising prices like we do because the transplant retirees think it looks icky and has too many hicks. Then they'll go on to talk about how some farmer living in his barn with a collapsed roof is the type of "New England charm" they love to support, and then block any new construction so no one else can build.
      Take your "10 year" sentence and replace it with 1 year, then make a new one each Christmas, and that's been New England since 2000. There are other places that have experience it as bad as New England, but those places are also going to shit.

  • @anthonymiller8979
    @anthonymiller8979 10 месяцев назад +1

    Alred hit the nail right on the head. As my Amish friend always says, "we are here for each other".

  • @TheOneTwitchingDeadGirl
    @TheOneTwitchingDeadGirl 10 месяцев назад +4

    I love that you got both the rural & urban/suburban perspectives. Lots of good points, talking about how people have no respect/home training to leave things as you found em. Too true. Alfred gets it tho, most NC locals are suspicious but bc anyone can get in a bad spot & good people, recognize that theyll be the first to help ya if it's needed. Education on respect comes in all forms but leading by example over online wind pissin, is more effective.
    'Ya gotta look out, fer the cook out'.👏🏼
    In my experience, it takes about 10 to 20 years for people to see you as more than a 'transplant' & respect what you're trying to do.
    Planning to be guest speaker on starting a homestead for long term sustainability for our local scouts, and honestly... its the first tine we've been invited to participate in community activities in 25+yrs.

  • @Stoddertwork
    @Stoddertwork Месяц назад +1

    I was born in Burlington, but grew up in New Haven. My uncle invited me to move back and be with family. At every job interview I was asked if I ski, and what hospital I was born in. My uncle who had masters degree in education explained to me that those two questions got me disqualified even at IBM as they showed I was not a native.
    Some of the characters I met at UVM were totally nuts. In one instance a recent graduate with a degree in social work exploded in my face after she asked why I looked so down. I explained that I had just learned over in Winooski that a man was exploiting young boys for sex and paying them off with drugs and the police could do nothing till a parent complained, if they did at all. Her explanation - there was noting wrong being done, he had not hurt them.
    Several people natives and non-natives told me the usual life cycle of the inhabitants was a couple would marry shortly after high school, have kids, get board, have an affair.
    One day a politician walked into a small coffee shop where we were eating. The politician had to introduce himself as the governor as most did not recognize him. The owner could not stir himself to come out of the kitchen.
    In another instance I rear-ended a kid from the university. This was witnessed by a cop. He came over and asked for the usual paper work. I showed him my Vermont motorcycle license which showed a local address, not a dormitory. The kid I hit grew up a few miles from where I did in CT. Any way the cop was compassionate and let the kid I hit off with a warning.

  • @donatellonabotti2299
    @donatellonabotti2299 10 месяцев назад +32

    Distrust of outsiders is best defined as evolutionary baggage. At one point in our species' journey it was beneficial to be wary of outsiders. Our fight or flight instincts are rooted in these same survival instincts. Fight and risk losing essential members of your group, or flee and lose valuable territory and resources. The backlash from the locals that you've experienced is just how we modern chimps establish what we consider a threat. When I say "we" I mean that as a species, not one particular group.

    • @Elger77
      @Elger77 10 месяцев назад +1

      Spoken like a true academic!

    • @virginiawitting8686
      @virginiawitting8686 10 месяцев назад +2

      We are just primates after all.😂

    • @amicableenmity9820
      @amicableenmity9820 10 месяцев назад

      Ew evopsych. Stay away from that trash science please.

    • @donatellonabotti2299
      @donatellonabotti2299 10 месяцев назад

      @Elger77 Thank you, but, no. I'm far from an academic. I hold no degrees. I don't think I'm intelligent, I'm just curious. Been this way since childhood and after 50 years I get little "AH HA" moments. I think that racism is also rooted in that point in our evolution. Thank you again for the compliment though.

  • @lisam5744
    @lisam5744 10 месяцев назад +4

    We moved from the city to the country in Florida. My husband is a native Floridian...so no issues with outsider nonsense. But the one thing I've noticed in a lot of rural communities is that people move there because they want the 'country life' but once they move there, they don't want to hear/see/smell their neighbors livestock animals. They fight to have the rules changed to reflect what they want rather than what the community needs. Basically bringing the city to the country. Sometimes they win and ruin the community. Or family farms are inherited and not wanted, sold to developers (OMG...developers can ruin an area faster than anything!) and suddenly there's a 2000 home development going in. I like what Alfred said...be respectful of the community that's already there and don't try to change it just because.

  • @LBetsy326
    @LBetsy326 10 месяцев назад +5

    Great topic! I lived in a small rural town in Central PA for college and then for 2-3 years after the fact. The experience was so different as a "local" and it was weird to see how many locals blamed the college kids for all the problems ironically, very few of cared about town that much besides what new store was coming, what new restaurant etc. What's interesting is how much work my college did to really build a positive relationship with the town and community including sponsoring a farmers market, hosting arts festivals with local vendors and more. I mean it's a must as campus was integrated into downtown. What was strange is that if i mentioned i went to college there, I was shunned. The moment i said i lived in town and choose to live there, the perception completely changed. I currently reside in a suburban town with a medium sized college and its amazing how much of the culture is for profit...esp in regards to rents. Our town has really restricted access to rental properties except for a few places and it creates a bizarre divide between locals and the college kids. However, i get it b/c you don't want to destroy the culture of a nice family friendly suburb. I get both sides. *sigh*

  • @RomeoG39
    @RomeoG39 10 месяцев назад +3

    Great interview! Jonny seems like a stand-up guy! Much respect!

  • @HisSecretSmile
    @HisSecretSmile 10 месяцев назад +2

    Seven minutes in and this man is SPITTIN! gotta love an educated comedian. makes things more funny

  • @jennifergriffiths42
    @jennifergriffiths42 10 месяцев назад +3

    This has been quite thought provoking and i really enjoyed it. Thanks for this! 💖
    Also, I have to say, the Molly Murder Mittens commercial for the Toby Dog book is fantastic!

  • @Mr44magnum0706
    @Mr44magnum0706 10 месяцев назад +1

    I absolutely love this video and this format. Hoping to see more interviews.

  • @OriginalNethead
    @OriginalNethead 10 месяцев назад +2

    I live in central Connecticut. My niece is a freshman at Champlaign College. We don't see many tourists here but do have of people moving in from elsewhere. The area has changed out of all recognition in some ways in the last 40 years. Local shops gave way to regional chains and then to national behemoths. My town used to have a bowling alley, small stores, a movie theater etc. Now the center of town is all apartment monstrosities (most locals loathe) and medical offices. Lots of medical offices. I totally understand local Vermonters wanting to protect the way things are. The pharmacies are two massive chains instead of locally owned. Gotta say, Vermont is looking better and better.

  • @DallasD_
    @DallasD_ 10 месяцев назад +5

    @JonnyWanzer It's nice to see this side of you. You are extremely articulate, thoughtful and intelligent. Your channel does clearly convey this between-the-lines, But this interview makes it very much more clear. You should definitely incorporate more of this side of you into your channel and add segments that exhibit this into vids every once in a while. @Morgan, thanks for makin this vid! I have friends in Burlington and am there often, and thus a strong connection, love it there :)

    • @JonnyWanzer
      @JonnyWanzer 10 месяцев назад +2

      I definitely have had ideas for side content that’s serious BUT… I love being a goofball too much. We will see

    • @DallasD_
      @DallasD_ 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@JonnyWanzer yea i hear ya, its what you feel the most connection with that drives you. Your current content will pull in people your age. But i mean this in all seriousness. You are wise beyond your years if you dont already realize this. I think @Morgan def. picked up on this, and is why he interviewed you. he's def. no dummy :) . A broader range of people will be able to connect with your content if they can relate to your intelligence and not brush you off since they cant relate to the humor of your generation. Im (a young) 50, and bc i saw you talk w/ Morgan, you caught more of my interest and respect since i saw how articulate you are beyond you current channel. Maybe slip in some commentary other gen's can relate to. They may not make you go viral, but will certainly build concrete connections and respect that are lasting. Specifically in the community, as well as youtube. I'm no social media expert, but Morgans vid showed me a different side of you and an understanding of Burlington that i am socially curious about since visiting so many times.

  • @micheledix2616
    @micheledix2616 10 месяцев назад +1

    This has been such an interesting post. What Morgan's interviewee's have had to say is so correct. Especially about expecting holiday makers / visitors to treat where ever they holiday/ visit as respectfully as they expect their own home to be treated. Excellent post Morgan thank you

  • @ninawill8053
    @ninawill8053 10 месяцев назад +1

    As someone that was a tourist in Vermont two years ago, I must say that it was most pleasant experience and probably my favorite state so far. That being said I think you guys touched a point that rings very true when it comes to visiting really anywhere, don’t be a jerk, I can’t imagine trashing or destroying a place as a visitor and I think that it definitely goes back to how are we raised . I don’t trash my own town or state or house and I approach others home same way.. Love this episode and I find one thing to be true in all states that I seen so far and also different countries,it’s about community ,that’s what makes places special, all places have that thing in common.

  • @patricianorton3908
    @patricianorton3908 10 месяцев назад +1

    Morgan, this was your best yet! Growing up, did you ever dream you’d become an award winning/earning writer, content creator, producer, editor, interviewer, narrator, and patient uploaded? All while developing critical animal husbandry skills and perfecting those early childhood goals of "gets along with/works well with others"? This was truly a civics lesson for all current generations. Also, got to say that Molly's input was terrific for a first timer! From NH, Patricia 👵🏻 🤗

  • @RJ-go3sn
    @RJ-go3sn 10 месяцев назад +12

    Morgan, I love your addition of film clips to your videos! You must have an amazing library of movie "stuff" in your memory!
    Having said that, I'm sorry that this happened to you, or happens to anyone, but I know it is what it is. People are truly threatened and fearful of those things they don't understand. It's a human characteristic. Kudos to you for trying to learn about this! And sharing it with us!

  • @kc4941
    @kc4941 10 месяцев назад +14

    What if the community members spent less time villifying all newcomers and showed real neighborly welcoming by mentoring and leading by example those attributes they want Vermonters to have?

    • @Lonesome__Dove
      @Lonesome__Dove 10 месяцев назад +2

      Thats too much like right. People need a boogeyman.

    • @smithynoir9980
      @smithynoir9980 8 месяцев назад

      Your asking fearful conservatives to stop othering. They won't. It's foundational to the conservative mindset, if they don't other and have someone to compare themselves as better than to feel good about themselves, they'll fall apart.

    • @kc4941
      @kc4941 8 месяцев назад +2

      Isn't that what you're doing? I'm a conservative.

  • @charlottemajewski5992
    @charlottemajewski5992 10 месяцев назад +1

    Here in Pensacola we are the cradle of naval.aviation and the home base of the Blue Angels. We have jet aircraft flying overhead all the time. Love that sound. Really fun to watch when the Blues practice for the 4th of July show.

  • @Marilyn12346
    @Marilyn12346 10 месяцев назад +1

    Morgan…your barn is absolutely gorgeous ❤

  • @FrederickMc
    @FrederickMc 10 месяцев назад +5

    Tobydog is born and raised in Vermont 😎

    • @Libbathegreat
      @Libbathegreat 10 месяцев назад +1

      He was actually born in Maine, he's a transplant 😂😂

    • @EyeOfTheWatcher
      @EyeOfTheWatcher 10 месяцев назад

      and the only thing Toby can kill is with kindness.

  • @jenniferjennings8
    @jenniferjennings8 10 месяцев назад +2

    Superb episode. 🎉 Well done, you.
    With appreciation from a long-time 🇨🇦 subscriber- 😊

  • @RuthAnnnMorris
    @RuthAnnnMorris 10 месяцев назад +3

    I grew up in Williams Arizona, “The Gateway to the Grand Canyon”…. Our main industry was forestry, ranching 🎉and tourism… the town still is a “tourist trap”… but locals are happy for the tourists dollars but outsiders can go to Flagstaff some 30 miles away and where Northern Arizona University is located. I appreciate both your guests opinions, but I really liked what Alfred had to say. Great video Morgan, Blessings….

  • @LuciusVulpes
    @LuciusVulpes 10 месяцев назад +14

    What he's explaining is exactly the same thing that's happening in Puerto Rico. Wealthy foreigners coming in and making things difficult for us locals, raising rent and house prices to ridiculous levels and generally just gentrifying neighborhoods.

    • @sswwooppee
      @sswwooppee 10 месяцев назад +4

      From what I read and hear, Puerto Rico’s situation is more akin to that of Hawaii (much more insidious) than Vermont.

    • @krisfinley6706
      @krisfinley6706 10 месяцев назад +1

      I knew this was the only thing that was going to happen after the hurricane🤬 and I feel so bad for you guys😟

    • @sswwooppee
      @sswwooppee 10 месяцев назад +3

      @SoundwaveSinus9 riiight. Because there’s no urban conservatives or rural liberals. Obviously…

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 10 месяцев назад

      @SoundwaveSinus9 LOL that you know of - because the ultra right are all shouting bullies - so who would bother to even try to befriends someone bellowing and turning red in the face ..... I'm liberal in social policies - conservative in fiscal matters, and very much for everyone owning a gun who wants one and understands the tool and has the mental capacity to use it safely. Locking people in labels really does you, your neighbors and any chance of building a good future a disservice.

  • @judymooney2993
    @judymooney2993 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for such a thoughtful and considerate conversation.

  • @gingerstorm101
    @gingerstorm101 10 месяцев назад

    Yay! I love Alfred's opinion on this question! Was honestly expecting him first

  • @marleneclough3173
    @marleneclough3173 10 месяцев назад +3

    I think it's the same everywhere. I was born in UK and when I was 4 we moved to a village where some families had lived there for centuries. I could never ever work out just how one was related to another and how!. We were certainly outsiders.
    I have lived in South Africa now for nearly 50 years. Much better weather!

  • @eloisebates7827
    @eloisebates7827 10 месяцев назад +3

    This whole podcast resonated with me, a resident of San Francisco for 55 years now, and some people still consider me a 'transplant.' San Francisco has always been a city drawing newcomers, and it's remade itself many times over. I find the folks who are most drawn into the "doom loop" of the City's demise to be the muti-generation residents, (many of whom fled to the far flung suburbs, BTW) with the newer arrivals seeing future possibilities instead of some rarefied Leave it to Beaver fifties myth.

  • @Debauchery_Tea
    @Debauchery_Tea 10 месяцев назад +1

    24:40 being an Orlando native, it certainly has felt like that for the past 7 years. This city has changed so much

  • @anitraahrens905
    @anitraahrens905 10 месяцев назад +3

    With the advancement of technology, more people have the option of remote work and entrepreneurship. I love your podcast videos and look forward to them. ❤

  • @journeybrook9357
    @journeybrook9357 10 месяцев назад +1

    Found a big difference over the years I was raised the way Alfred talks about. It has changed.

  • @fluffbuck3t
    @fluffbuck3t 10 месяцев назад +16

    Really appreciated jonny recognizing that trans people are being used as political distractions and scapegoats, when really we just wanna live our lives like anyone else. That really warmed my heart today

    • @JonnyWanzer
      @JonnyWanzer 10 месяцев назад +4

      The republican cycle can be a broken record of fear mongering

    • @brob-zy8zi
      @brob-zy8zi 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@JonnyWanzerSo too can the Democrat one. In fact all of politics can be now days. Just one end of the world crisis after another... Politics is a cancer on our society.

    • @JonnyWanzer
      @JonnyWanzer 10 месяцев назад

      i agree @@brob-zy8zi

    • @Ay-xq7mj
      @Ay-xq7mj 9 месяцев назад

      Nothing special same place as blacks, jews, women, the whole victimhood totempole. Entire western civilization is basically coopted by elitists and communists. Even violence is coopted now it can only be gov approved not even union busters are allowed. (Even if they were bad themselves)

  • @cshoffman4
    @cshoffman4 10 месяцев назад

    Such a great conversation

  • @newcjswift4516
    @newcjswift4516 10 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in a town that had been rural but was becoming suburbia as I grew up. One by one the farms, and sand pits went away and the woods got pulled down. It is now teetering on the brink of city status and I just saw new plans for yet more housing developments, probably condos as property costs go higher and higher. My dad used to see people build houses against cliff faces and other weird places and shake his head saying the same thing, that people come to a place and try to make it like where they came from. He was not from the area himself, but he respected and enjoyed what it was when he moved in and he, with my mother became active in the community fighting hard to keep it from being destroyed. It seems like we are losing.

  • @LoneTraveler-nc6rf
    @LoneTraveler-nc6rf 10 месяцев назад +5

    Living in a small college town myself, our student population is 30% of the total. I see many similarities. Unfortunately so much of the thinking has to do with distorted perceptions rather than reality. Our town would not exist without the income and industries created due to the University - the largest employer in the area. Additionally the presence of skilled transplants has increased the number of resources and services available to all who live in the community.

  • @mattrizzo7821
    @mattrizzo7821 5 месяцев назад

    Very insightful, very well done.. 👏 👍

  • @OW79
    @OW79 10 месяцев назад +3

    Whenever you think "genrification" and "cost of living going up", don't think about people moving in to the area, but about "investors" profiting off of that demand. That's the American dream.

  • @bobbyd6680
    @bobbyd6680 10 месяцев назад +1

    10:02. I live less than 5 miles from Selfridge Air National Guard Base here in Michigan. For 45 years I've lived near their flight paths. The base over the years has supported A-7 Corsairs in the late 70's, then they switched to the F-4s, followed by F-16s, until now they are supporting the A-10 Warthog fighter squadrons. Along with aerial refueling wings with large KC-135s and C-130 transports. Saying all that, myself and my neighbors never get bored with sounds. We considered it the sounds of freedom, as hokey as that sounds.

  • @andrewmcintyre9722
    @andrewmcintyre9722 10 месяцев назад +7

    Every rural area hates when a bunch of out of town is move in and change stuff that goes for Burlington that goes for Virginia. That goes for Florida that goes for Texas. Nobody likes it when new people show up and try to change stuff. Vermont is not a special case.

  • @poorwotan
    @poorwotan 10 месяцев назад +3

    37 years living in Puerto Rico and still I am often seen as the "gringo" - when in fact I'm now more puertorican in my life, thinking, mannerisms, even accent, etc. than most local born. That said, Puertoricans are the most welcoming people in the world (sure there are always the outliers like in any place) and I love living here. Unfortunately I will eventually have to move to the mainland as assisted living communities sort of suck here... That will be a hard day.

  • @yesyesseyes
    @yesyesseyes 5 месяцев назад

    absolutely loved that last bit!!

  • @WaddedBliss
    @WaddedBliss 10 месяцев назад

    Great to see Jonny Wanzer! He's a good lad and as funny as f***. Thanks, Morgan, for introducing him a while ago on your channel.

  • @Imohlaapohko
    @Imohlaapohko 10 месяцев назад

    Great interview! I really enjoy your videos. I even let my guinea pigs binge watch your channel. 😂Thank you for your content🤗

  • @flatbrookwildlifesolutions2033
    @flatbrookwildlifesolutions2033 3 месяца назад +3

    My wife and I are from Massachusetts and bought a chunk of land in the North East Kingdom, (Concord). We cannot wait to get out of Mass. it was the layed back small sleepy town, the beauty of rural Vermont, the raw land, vast woods that drew us to choose that spot. We won’t even have our land logged. We want it left exactly the way it is. We look forward to being part of the community and helping in any way we can to keep it just the way it is!

  • @pbbu173
    @pbbu173 10 месяцев назад +3

    It's the same across the globe... sadly so... important is that the local communities and authorities must support and take care of new neighbors who are mostly honest and kind.

    • @janw491
      @janw491 10 месяцев назад +2

      I don’t think the nasties are confined to Vermont. Rude and ignorant are everywhere!!

  • @myzacky96
    @myzacky96 10 месяцев назад

    It's good to see "My friend Alfred"!

  • @Debbie_Bcool
    @Debbie_Bcool 10 месяцев назад

    Morgan your buddy Alfred looked taller than I've noticed in recent videos. As he continued to speak about helping others he became even taller. You have a good friend there and a wonderful human being.
    You probably have figured this all out way before my comment. Thank you for sharing love every video you make.

  • @candymadigan9308
    @candymadigan9308 10 месяцев назад +3

    Grew up in 1960s West Virginia. I experienced the same thing.

  • @corringhamdepot4434
    @corringhamdepot4434 10 месяцев назад +2

    I moved into a street 40 years ago where everybody else were born and bred locals. Who had all grown up together. I figured out that some of them saw the "outsider" as the perfect target to take out all their frustrations on. As there would be no come back, like if they behaved badly to their friends or family.