Alberta
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
Here's a tip for Americans, if you want to annoy a Canadian ask them if they're from Alberta, if they ask why tell them they give of Alberta vibes, if you're feeling sauce just say 'Berta vibes instead of Alberta vibes.
I donβt think Canada has an Alabama. As conservative as they are, Alberta is wealthy, highly educated, and they frequently vote for women and POC. They like βsmall governmentβ, but also have some of the highest paid government workers in the country. I just donβt see much similarity.
I think the comparison to Texas is more apt because theyβre both conservative petro states with center left suburban sprawl cities.
I've always heard that Alberta is the 'Texas of Canada' (presumably for the oil & being politically conservative). But since Canada only has 10 provinces, I guess that would mean each province needs to represent 5 different US states.
If Alabama and Texas are two of them, what are the other 3 for Alberta?
New mexico, Utah, not sure about the other
Most of the mid-west would be split between Saskatchewan and winnipeg
Rafael Cruz is from Alberta, so even got enough crazy to export.
Iranian here.
All of them.
That's the Saarland for Germany or some parts of Bayern (Bavaria) depending on who you ask
Bavaria is more like Texas and Saxony is Florida, the crazy swamp part, not the rich.
Tasmania for Australia. At least they are on their own island.
Tasmania, reputedly home of the diamond-shaped family tree
From one of the songs in the video game Redneck Rampage, "My family tree's a STUMP."
Ask anyone in the UK and they'll tell you the next county over from them
Yep. Norfolk, full of em.
I'm from Somerset which would be a classic answer but Norfolk is still considered the one county that saves us from being the goto joke inbreds.
It's a load of bs anyway... I'm barely related to my wife at all!
England.
The north, in France. Lille is the rumoured capital of cousin-inbreeding.
Les Chβtis
In the Netherlands it's Urk, although it's not a province but a municipality
Sardinia is something between Alabama and Scotland (π)
You misspelt England.
Every other balkan country except the one i live in.
In Australia it's Tasmania
For the Netherlands: Katwijk, even had a genetic disease named after it.
Loving all the Scots embracing the United Kingdom in this thread by describing England as a part of their country π
If they're gonna be forced to be part of the UK, they can also enjoy the privilege of shitting on it like the rest do.
EVERY SINGLE ONE. Marrying cousins is more than common, its prrtty much standard.
India?
Mexico: Nuevo LeΓ³n (specifically Monterrey)
Speaking only on the incest stereotype, Spanish Wells in the Bahamas. Theyβre known for strictly dating and marrying other fellow islanders, which at this point is basically one large family.
Edit to remove the double βat this pointβ
Podlasie in Poland, definitely. My friend's parents have both the same maiden name despite not being closely related. Their whole village has basically the same surname.
South mountain in Nova Scotia, Canada. There was (still is?) a family (the Goler clan) famous for poverty, sexual abuse, and inbreeding. A bunch of them were arrested for sexual abuse in the 1980s. Rumor has it, they inspired the Xfiles episode "Home".
The south. It's always the south.
The question is: does it flip after passing the equator or is the law universal for both halves of the globe?