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re: U.S. News 2017 Best Places to Live - #63 Baton Rouge #95 New Orleans

Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:05 pm to
Posted by lsu2006
BR
Member since Feb 2004
39983 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:05 pm to
quote:

You sound upset


Projection: How does it work?
Posted by AbitaFan08
Boston, MA
Member since Apr 2008
26642 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:07 pm to
quote:

Take LSU out of Baton Rouge and that number drops significantly


What an idiot argument.

Take Uptown out of NOLA and that number drops significantly.

See? I can make up stupid hypotheticals too.
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
32121 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:09 pm to
quote:

In the midst of a post-Hurricane Katrina renaissance, New Orleans charms visitors and locals alike with its music, diverse cuisine and a stubborn refusal to abandon its cultural traditions. But what is truly wonderful about the Big Easy lies at its heart, beyond the casual tourist's swaying Mardi Gras beads and late-night strolls down Bourbon Street. The residents of New Orleans are infused with a resilient and welcoming spirit that celebrates eccentricity, draws out the timid and steadfastly resists outside influences that seek to homogenize them.

Living in New Orleans isn't quite like it is portrayed in television shows and movies. New Orleans residents generally don't speak with Southern or Cajun accents, and Carnival parades are not debauched flesh-baring spectacles but rather family-friendly community celebrations. New Orleanians are, however, excellent hosts who are proud to show off their region.

The metro area can be frustrating and even forbidding due to infrastructure and crime issues, but those who have spent any time living under its spell find the thought of resettling in a region where Mardi Gras is just another Tuesday unbearable.


quote:

1,239,697
METRO POPULATION

$43,360
AVERAGE ANNUAL SALARY

78.2° / 61.1°
AVG HIGH/LOW TEMPS

37.4
MEDIAN AGE

$188,497
MEDIAN HOME PRICE

62.5 inches
AVG ANNUAL RAINFALL

5.6%
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

$916
AVG MONTHLY RENT

25.5 minutes
AVG COMMUTE TIME


quote:

The cost of living in New Orleans is roughly on par with the national average, although home prices and rental costs have risen steeply in recent years. Since Hurricane Katrina, home prices have jumped 46 percent. Lower-income and historic neighborhoods, like St. Roch and Treme, have experienced gentrification. Also, increasingly scarce housing has driven up rents in the metro area and priced out many working-class residents.


quote:

New Orleans is a metro region where it seems like everyone knows everyone; the area has one of the highest percentages (73.2 percent) of "homegrown" residents in the country. The population of New Orleans has risen steadily in recent years, nearly returning to pre-Hurricane Katrina numbers.

On average, the population in New Orleans is slightly older, with a fair number of residents approaching or having already arrived at middle age. More than 60 percent of New Orleans households qualify as family households, and more than 40 percent of those include children 18 or younger.

Politically, the metro area is an island of blue in a red state, voting heavily Democratic in recent presidential elections, while the Republican candidate won the rest of Louisiana.

Nearly 30 percent of the New Orleans population lives below the poverty line. Over a third of New Orleans children live in poverty. That rate has climbed since Hurricane Katrina, a rise experts blame primarily on the low wages parents earn.


New Orleans

The worst in the ranking was San Juan, Modesto, Stockton, Bakersfield, Fresno, and New Orleans.
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:09 pm to
You want to remove a neighborhood?

People don't move to and live in New Orleans because of Uptown
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
32121 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:11 pm to
quote:

You want to remove a neighborhood?



You started the foolish hypothetical argument.

Without this, New Orleans would be......

Without that, Baton Rouge would be.....
Posted by 50_Tiger
Dallas TX
Member since Jan 2016
40155 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:12 pm to
Well first of all frick Austin and the "lil Cali" vibe its creating (bleh libs).

#15 aint too shabby :D
Posted by AbitaFan08
Boston, MA
Member since Apr 2008
26642 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:12 pm to
quote:

You want to remove a neighborhood?


You want to remove a University?
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:12 pm to
quote:


Without that, Baton Rouge would be.....


Alexandria
Posted by lsu2006
BR
Member since Feb 2004
39983 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:12 pm to
The point he's making is essentially "no shite". Of course if you take a huge, long-eestablished positive of a city away, that city's "quality" drops. LSU is in BR and has been since the 1860's.
Posted by MorbidTheClown
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2015
66355 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:13 pm to
quote:

Without this, New Orleans would be......

Without that, Baton Rouge would be.....



without all the bad shite, the bad places would be good.
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:16 pm to
I'm sorry I hurt your feelings.

Let's say this,take Exxon out of downtown Baton Rouge and that number is significantly higher.

You feel better now cupcake?
Posted by TH03
Mogadishu
Member since Dec 2008
171055 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:17 pm to
Dallas > Louisiana
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
32121 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:17 pm to
quote:

without all the bad shite, the bad places would be good.



If there were more than 100 cities in this list, New Orleans's ranking wouldn't appear to be so bad.
Posted by lsu2006
BR
Member since Feb 2004
39983 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:18 pm to
quote:

I'm sorry I hurt your feelings.

Let's say this,take Exxon out of downtown Baton Rouge and that number is significantly higher.

You feel better now cupcake?


"Psychological projection is a theory in psychology in which humans defend themselves against their own unconscious impulses or qualities (both positive and negative) by denying their existence in themselves while attributing them to others."
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
32121 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:19 pm to
quote:

wow its in the top 100.



Well, I didn't see Marksville on the list.....
Posted by AbitaFan08
Boston, MA
Member since Apr 2008
26642 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:21 pm to
quote:

I'm sorry I hurt your feelings.

Let's say this,take Exxon out of downtown Baton Rouge and that number is significantly higher.

You feel better now cupcake?


You made a dumb statement and got called on it. Trying to project that people are being sensitive because they pointed out your idiocy doesn't make your point any smarter.
Posted by LSUJuicer
Member since Jan 2013
3356 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:22 pm to
Atlanta beat New Orleans, yet all the hate.
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:24 pm to
It's dumb because you don't agree with it? That's your opinion bro. I have no problem with that.
Posted by X123F45
Member since Apr 2015
27479 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:24 pm to
quote:

The rest of America must be a lot worse than I thought if Baton Rogue


It is.

Learn to spell.

We are MUCH better off than most.

The northeast and out west are quite shocking from a poverty standpoint.
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
32121 posts
Posted on 2/8/17 at 1:25 pm to
quote:

Atlanta beat New Orleans, yet all the hate.



Austin, DC, Denver, Seattle are at the top of the list. I can agree that they have a high quality of life. So does Nashville, Dallas, Minneapolis, San Francisco...all highly ranked but getting dinged various things like costs of living.

Honestly it is difficult to argue with the list based on the criteria they used. Beyond that it is more about preference. I would prefer to live in Memphis or New Orleans than in Atlanta, but that's just me. Atlanta does have a better quality of life, amenities, opportunity, etc.

New Orleans offers a lot of crime, high housing costs, low wages, and poor infrastructure. It would score poorly on this list. It also has a very high % of residents that were born and raised there. To them, you can't quantify how important being next to family is to them or not having to move to a different city.

quote:

New Orleans is a metro region where it seems like everyone knows everyone; the area has one of the highest percentages (73.2 percent) of "homegrown" residents in the country.


Perhaps they should get out and experience other cities instead of putting them down because it doesn't feel quite like home. Hard to deny that this is a common New Orleans trait.
This post was edited on 2/8/17 at 1:29 pm
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