This, but don’t move there. You’ll just be another tourist enjoying cheap housing in your gated, gentrified, LGBT-friendly housing complex with no real connection to the land or the people that live there.
There’s no place else in Mexico that’s going to accept them so they wall themselves off with the gringo remote work expats. If you like living around insufferable liberals that order in and scoff at brownies before they butt-fuck each other, be my guest.
Washington >Bellevue (getting flooded with H1B streetshitters tho) >Richmond >Mercer Island >Spokane
Idaho >Coeur d'Alene >Boise
Pretty much anywhere in Idaho is gonna be nice and livable
New Mexico >Santa Fe >Los Alamos
Utah >Entire state minus SLC proper and West Valley City
Sadly people are leaving the LDS church in droves and becoming the most insufferable redditors you can imagine. The only place I saw more BLM signs than SLC was in Berkeley.
Wyoming
Whole state is pretty meh tbqh unless you're a billionaire and can afford Jackson Hole
Oregon >Bend
Nevada >Henderson >Any of the towns around Lake Tahoe
Colorado >Golden >Evergreen/Conifer/Aspen Park >Colorado Springs
There's a lot of cool little mountain towns in CO but they're basically tourist traps and not especially livable
(getting flooded with H1B streetshitters tho)
Every chinese person that works in tech wants to live in Bellevue
When moving to Seattle, I drove through Spokane and it seemed comfy. It was just after the cascade snowstorms and I didn't get to stay the night, but it caught my attention.
Do you have more to say about it?
d'Alene
On that same drive, I was near Coeur d'Alene, but to the north in Sandpoint. The northern Idaho landscape was pretty awesome, even though the driving conditions awful. Would either of these Idaho towns be a good spot for a 30 year old man to meet a fit, white gf?
What are the guiding principles of your list? What makes you like a place vs dislike it?
How much "city" do you want? I really like Jackson County, Oregon, but the Medford metropolitan statistical area (includes Medford, Ashland, surrounding areas) is about 220k, which is something but not exactly a big city.
>livable cities
do yourself a favor and move to a college town with a big school
these places are set up for students without cars, and for the most part aren't infested with decaying boomer shitheads and homeless addicts
You have no idea what you are getting into moving into these incredibly dry states. Your skin will crack, your nose will bleed, you will have to clear your throat constantly from all the extra mucus compensating for the total lack of humidity. The nature is brown and dead. The people are weird. Wildfires in a lot of areas. Can’t wait to escape this Colorado hellscape
Mexico
This, but don’t move there. You’ll just be another tourist enjoying cheap housing in your gated, gentrified, LGBT-friendly housing complex with no real connection to the land or the people that live there.
sounds nice except for the lolgaybtfo part
There’s no place else in Mexico that’s going to accept them so they wall themselves off with the gringo remote work expats. If you like living around insufferable liberals that order in and scoff at brownies before they butt-fuck each other, be my guest.
The irony of gays creating walls around themselves to keep out Mexicans.
Arizona
>Scottsdale
>Chandler
>Gilbert
>Flagstaff
Washington
>Bellevue (getting flooded with H1B streetshitters tho)
>Richmond
>Mercer Island
>Spokane
Idaho
>Coeur d'Alene
>Boise
Pretty much anywhere in Idaho is gonna be nice and livable
New Mexico
>Santa Fe
>Los Alamos
Utah
>Entire state minus SLC proper and West Valley City
Sadly people are leaving the LDS church in droves and becoming the most insufferable redditors you can imagine. The only place I saw more BLM signs than SLC was in Berkeley.
Wyoming
Whole state is pretty meh tbqh unless you're a billionaire and can afford Jackson Hole
Oregon
>Bend
Nevada
>Henderson
>Any of the towns around Lake Tahoe
Colorado
>Golden
>Evergreen/Conifer/Aspen Park
>Colorado Springs
There's a lot of cool little mountain towns in CO but they're basically tourist traps and not especially livable
Montana
I don't know anything about Montana
Lol, anon chose to pick all the white Phoenix suburbs and white, hippy, Flaggstaff.
Oh look, it's another insecure shitskin who spends his life whining about White people
>stating demographic facts is whining
Is English your first language?
>move 6000 miles across the planet to live in a White country
>spends the rest of his life whining about White people
Why are they like this
>whitest cities are the nicest
yeah
(getting flooded with H1B streetshitters tho)
Every chinese person that works in tech wants to live in Bellevue
When moving to Seattle, I drove through Spokane and it seemed comfy. It was just after the cascade snowstorms and I didn't get to stay the night, but it caught my attention.
Do you have more to say about it?
d'Alene
On that same drive, I was near Coeur d'Alene, but to the north in Sandpoint. The northern Idaho landscape was pretty awesome, even though the driving conditions awful. Would either of these Idaho towns be a good spot for a 30 year old man to meet a fit, white gf?
What are the guiding principles of your list? What makes you like a place vs dislike it?
Stay in commiefornia. The surrounding states do not want you and you are not welcome anywhere else. Canada is your only friend.
How much "city" do you want? I really like Jackson County, Oregon, but the Medford metropolitan statistical area (includes Medford, Ashland, surrounding areas) is about 220k, which is something but not exactly a big city.
>which is something but not exactly a big city
and that's a good thing
I'm using the broad definition of "city"
>livable cities
do yourself a favor and move to a college town with a big school
these places are set up for students without cars, and for the most part aren't infested with decaying boomer shitheads and homeless addicts
Surprised no one said Missoula yet. Best option even with a the Cali-trash moving in.
You have no idea what you are getting into moving into these incredibly dry states. Your skin will crack, your nose will bleed, you will have to clear your throat constantly from all the extra mucus compensating for the total lack of humidity. The nature is brown and dead. The people are weird. Wildfires in a lot of areas. Can’t wait to escape this Colorado hellscape
I lived in Colorado and didn't have any of the dryness effects you listed.
I know people get them, but they never appeared in me in Denver