I'd say Tas is more like the south... We are often mocked for inbreeding, the fact we are convict descendants, etc. Some of that is at least partially true. Essentially we are an island of rednecks, or bogans as they are known here. I used to be ashamed of this, back when i was a young lefty. Now I'm redneck and proud.
I 100% understand. We live in south Louisiana. My parents' first language was French. When they started school, students would have their hands rapped with a ruler if they spoke their native language. For a long time, Cajuns were made to feel less. Happy that this has changed.
It's sort of heading in the other direction, though. The young people that leave for the mainland, or go to one of the big cities for uni end up looking down on the rest of Tasmanians as bogan and backwards. Our university system is full of woke professors and university culture here leads invariably to a bunch of wokies running around with dunning-kruger effect, thinking they are experts on progressive political issues. I'm not against higher education, obvious, but our higher education produces a predictable sort of programming. I used to be one of these people myself.
we're really not that commie in Tas. Hobart is, a bit, with its university student population. Most are apathetic, slightly right of centre.
Thank-you for this information. Sounds like California. We have friends there who have said that it's really more conservative than people think.
I'd say Tas is more like the south... We are often mocked for inbreeding, the fact we are convict descendants, etc. Some of that is at least partially true. Essentially we are an island of rednecks, or bogans as they are known here. I used to be ashamed of this, back when i was a young lefty. Now I'm redneck and proud.
I 100% understand. We live in south Louisiana. My parents' first language was French. When they started school, students would have their hands rapped with a ruler if they spoke their native language. For a long time, Cajuns were made to feel less. Happy that this has changed.
It's sort of heading in the other direction, though. The young people that leave for the mainland, or go to one of the big cities for uni end up looking down on the rest of Tasmanians as bogan and backwards. Our university system is full of woke professors and university culture here leads invariably to a bunch of wokies running around with dunning-kruger effect, thinking they are experts on progressive political issues. I'm not against higher education, obvious, but our higher education produces a predictable sort of programming. I used to be one of these people myself.