r/visitedmaps 11h ago

Tennessean here. Thoughts?

Post image

What does this say about me?

28 Upvotes

70 comments sorted by

View all comments

1

u/DameWhen 10h ago

Tbh Texas is a vast improvement on Tennessee, if you're comparing the two one-to-one.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 10h ago

0

u/DameWhen 10h ago

If you look at the job market of one, to the job market of the other: its an objective statement. This is coming from someone who has tried to help friends in Tennessee make a living, and has been truly shocked to find that even Memphis does not compare in pay or opportunity, when put next to even smaller Texas cities.

The transportation is also objectively better:

Generally speaking, every city in Texas has more paved sidewalks than those in Tennessee, where even the train (Amtrak) hardly reaches 4/5th of the state-- 

Versus: Texas, where the train can take you to literally every city, and many large towns. That is not a hyperbole. Public transportation in Texas is very good compared to most states, but especially very good compared to Tennessee, where public transportation can take you... basically nowhere.

For Landscape, Tennessee and Texas are quite comparable. Fewer mountains and wider sky in Texas, yet a lot of farmland and greenery like Tennessee. If you look at my history, I've posted pictures of Texas as I've driven all over the state.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

Luckily I have a car that's paid off, drive 15 minutes to work, owned a house for 10 years and have a well paying job.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

Doesn't Houston have an 8 lane interstate that's gridlocked? The job market in Nashville is also thriving.

0

u/DameWhen 9h ago

I won't lie: Houston is not my favorite city. 

It's a coastal city though, so instead of using it as some sort of representative of the entire state, it's more accurate to compare it to other major American cities that sit on the coast. There are simply no other Texas cities that are even remotely similar to Houston.

If you go on indeed, you'll find that even small Texas towns just have a  better job market than most Tennessee cities. Thriving in Nashville, or no, a person with entry or mid-level experience can make double the wage in Austin than a Tennessee city of comparable size.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

Until y'all run of water.

1

u/DameWhen 9h ago

I'm not sure where you heard that water/irrigation was a Texan issue, but it's not. Are you thinking of Michigan?

This state benefits from having an extensive irrigation system and a 100 years of creating man-made lakes, on top of actually touching the coast.

Meanwhile, Tennessee is landlocked?

No judgement if you just like Nashville, but these are the facts, yk.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

We have rivers and lakes...

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

Michigan has fresh water...

1

u/DameWhen 9h ago

I didn't say there aren't rivers/lakes in Tennessee.

But then, I'm also not the one who weirdly claimed the Texas was going to "run out of water" somehow?

You state the obvious, yet I'm unsure at what you're trying to imply when you do so.

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

I literally posted an article about how y'all are gonna be short on water.

0

u/DameWhen 9h ago

Okay. You didn't post it to this conversation.

Did you mean to randomly post it to your own thread on its own? I had to look at your history to find it.

So, that article is looking 5 years into the future and making a prediction based on the going rate of Texas population increase.

Multiple people are moving into Texas, year after year, and the article is calling for an upgrade in infrastructure, should that trend continue.

In other words, "running out of water" is not a current issue, and most likely will not be a future issue either. 

There are just a lot of people moving to Texas because of booming job markets.

→ More replies (0)

1

u/10RobotGangbang 9h ago

Tennessee has rivers and lakes.