New Mexico - what's the Straight Dope on its name?

I grew up in California. I thought exactly that. When I was 5 or so. At about age 6 I got it right and haven’t been confused since.

So there’s one. Good bet there are more, some of whom are *real *slow learners. :slight_smile:

Well, now we have an Attorney General who seems unaware that Hawai’i is a state.

It’s funny that “New Jersey” is often elided to “Jersey” but this never happens with the other three “New” states.

I was born and raised in NM and our family did lots of vacations when I was growing up. I actually got asked if I had a passport once when we were back east, think it was in D.C. Another time, when I was older, someone asked (seriously) if I had a green card after I told them I was from New Mexico. I was in Florida at the time.

Slee

When I showed my New Mexico driver’s license to open a bank account in New York, they asked for a “domestic ID”. (I then showed them my green card which shows my nationality as “Canadian”, which blew their mind).

Mostly I don’t think it ever passes the level of “brain fart” – people see the word “Mexico” and think “foreign” immediately, but a moment’s thought leads them to the right answer. I’ve never experienced anyone insisting that NM is part of Mexico or anything like that past the initial mistake.

A shipping clerk at a former employer once asked me if “New Mexico” was part of the USA.

In related “That’s not in America!” stupidity, the District of Columbia will start going back to putting “Washington, D.C.” on their licenses instead of “District of Columbia”.

When I decided to flee the country after the election, I considered Canada, but settled on Santa Fe because the food is better and they seem to use US currency here. Are you all saying that I should have researched this move more carefully? I was a little surprised that the border controls seem so lax.

[QUOTE=Riemann;20153949 ]
. . .the food is better. . . .
[/QUOTE]

man, i miss green chile!

mc

México has had many meanings over the centuries:
Initially, the immediate environs of Mexico City-The Valley of Mexico.
In the early colonial period, the Spanish called the Aztec Empire the “Kingdom of Mexico.”
New Mexico was the “Kingdom of New Mexico.”
In 1821, Mexico became the name of the large “empire” formed from New Spain.

Also, New Mexico predates the formation of Texas as a colonial political unit by a good 90 years or so…

and, as the locals will happily point, out they’ve been in that area for over 400 years; long before there was the USA or Mexico.

mc

If someone asks where I was born I’ll say the District of Columbia just to see the quizzical looks on their face. I’m sure they’re mostly aware of what D.C. stands for but it’s rare to hear it out loud.

These people are idiots. What could be more American than Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman?

Just you wait. After that wall gets built you’re gonna be on the other side mister! Then we’ll see about who controls your border. :slight_smile:

Enjoy the 2 cents an ounce sugary drinks tax.

Seriously, I’m of the opinion that a large portion of the population of the state has no desire to ever live in Santa Fe. Maybe not that odd for most states. But you really couldn’t pay me enough to live there.

If the President & Congress come up against the Sante Fe Historic Board, I can tell you than the section of the wall around here will have to be made of adobe in pueblo style, and no more than 10% higher than the average height of the walls of contributing historic buildings within a 0.5 mile radius.

I once made up a trivia question along those lines:

What do Al Gore, Connie Chung, John Philip Sousa, Pat Buchanon, Samuel L. Jackson and Duke Ellington have in common?

[spoiler]Yep, they were all born in DC.

Now I can add TriPolar to that list.[/spoiler]