Worst town in America?

I live in Mililani, but I think I’m closer to Wahiawa (its our school and voting district). My guess is the developers opted to name our area Mililani, so people wouldn’t think they were buying a house in Wahiawa?

I wouldn’t count Wahiawa as the worst town in America (its no where even close to a Gary or Camden or East St Louis). I was just saying it is not the tropical paradise of Hawaii, and I wonder what new Army people think when they get their orders for Hawaii, only to end up here.

Especially compared to where the Marine base is in Kaneohe. The windward side of Oahu is one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever seen… and military members get to live there for free! I’d enlist just for that!

Siam Sam, I never thought Hilo was a bad town, it just has that reputation out here. I suppose it’s the constant rain and the fact that all the new development (etc) is on the Kona side, rather than the Hilo side.

Hilo and (to a lesser extant) Wahiawa are still nicer than most of the places listed in this thread. The scale is just different for Hawaii. A couple threads ago, I was complaining about the bad traffic in Honolulu. The general response “Shut up, you live in Hawaii” :stuck_out_tongue:

Well, they have a point. The wife and I have fond memories of living in Honolulu. People we knew elsewhere did tend to think, though, that we lazed under palm trees all day long.

Jackson, but not the one in Michigan, the one in Mississippi.

Poverty, white flight, racism, classism, jingoistic patriotism (of the kind you receive one to many glurgy e-mails that play music about), uber conservatism - not the kind you can have a reasonable conversation about, either, and the sort of nasty, “you’re gonna go to hell and I’m not” Christianity that makes me just cringe.

Even when they try for culture (New Stage Theatre, I’m looking at you) it comes off classist, elitist and very, very poorly done.

Grew up there, educated there (well, Clinton, anyhow), went to church there…fled there, became an atheist, no desire to go back. The thought of living there depresses me to tears. Nobody can see the poverty just on the other side of State Street. Nobody cares, or if they do, they are damn quiet about it.

I was offered a house (free) in Terry and in Jackson, said no to both and would not go back.

Its awful, and every time I go back to visit family, it seems a lot worse.

For those upthread defending the South, I must say that yeah, I’ve had some of the “wow, you’re from Mississippi, you don’t seem like that” attitude and it sucks. And maybe the whole South isn’t like Jackson, I dunno, I haven’t lived anywhere else in the South (well, Sydney now, that’s pretty southern :smiley: ) but Jackson sucks like a 10 dollar hooker offered a fifty.

On the other hand, I’ve lived in Michigan (but on the western side, Grand Rapids) and it wasn’t so bad. It was, however, about 7 or 8 years ago. If you could stomach Amway and the Devos/VanAndel clan and the old “if you ain’t Dutch, you ain’t much” attitude, it wasn’t bad at all.

Cheers,
G

Sorry to bring back this long-dead thread, but Philadelphia is in the book, too.

Just saw this:

Being a black American whose parents grew up in the South during the Jim Crow era, yes, I’m well aware of that. I’ve heard some of my parents’ stories* about what that was like. And I know that there are stories that they’ve never told because of memories they’d rather not revive. But I also know that the South that I experienced when I was growing up was very different than the South my parents experienced when they were young. And that the South I’m living in today is different than the one I grew up in. Hell, I’ve had my own experiences with prejudice and racism—although, interestingly, not so much as a child growing up in the South as a young adult living and going to school in other areas of the country. But I’d be a fool to try to equate anything I’ve experienced with what my parents and my grandparents (and so on) lived through.

The people who made these comments to me seemed to be willfully ignorant of the reality that the South—as a whole—has not remained frozen in time. Some parts of it, maybe, but that’s true of any other region of the country as well. Besides, these folks were of my generation and none of them had ever spent more than a week or two in the South. So their comments had little or nothing to do with bad memories, only with negative associations and stereotypes, the validity of which they seemed to have little interest in questioning or challenging.
*Interestingly, not all of them negative. Some of them, for example, about the stronger sense of community and connectedness among black folks prior to desegregation.

My brother lives about 25-30 min outside of Reading, towards Phil, and has told me the same thing. The % of crime per capita is unbelievable, and his wife doesn’t even feel comfortable going to the Old Navy store downtown during the daytime.

Technically a city: Taunton, MA
Depressing, dirty, and small-minded.
Residents of this dystopia possess the delightful ‘TA’ [taunton attitude] which consists of extreme clannishness and general snootiness to ‘non-townies’.
come to think of it, Middleboro, MA is the same way

Oh, come on…at least you have a nice mall… :slight_smile:

I used to live in RI and we drove up there all the time, just for the mall…

Philadelphia is a pretty nice city overall, I went there on a class trip, but some of the parts we had to go through to get to the Franklin Institute were pretty crummy.

plant city florida to many mexicans a shithole. big spring tx…a horrible town. dry and no grass. houston is big but very dangerous

MB

Rockford’s not all bad . . .

Raccoon City’s looking pretty bad this time of the year…

You should definitely avoid Houston.

To many Mexicans, it might be! But to other Mexicans, not so much.

:rolleyes:

Hey, I know this thread is old but my new boss is from Middleboro and one of my coworkers is from Taunton. Hmmm, maybe you have a point that there is no way either one of those makes the top 10,000 worst places list in the U.S. They are just barely trashy in that Massachusetts kind of way but not terrible. They are even sort of pretty.

I think he is truly underestimating the suck-ness of some of Nevada’s towns. Ely, Wells, Jackpot, and Pahrump are all, IMO, a lot worse than Battle Mountain. And then there’s Winnemucca, home of the yearly bedstead races (they literally race beds minus their mattresses and box springs down a hill in the center of town).

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Been to all of them. They do suck.

But the worst of all is Beatty, NV (down near Pahrump). I think Pahrump at least advertises a golf course, even if it is just mostly sand.

Try having a flat tire there on a searing-hot weekend evening in September with a family, including small kids who need to find some cold milk. Not $3 bottles of whiskey. Not cigarettes. Not cheap, digusting whores who look like they just escaped from a prisoner of war camp. Just a small bottle of cold milk.

An extraordinarily unpleasant place.

I’m thinkin’ Galveston. Livin’ in a place with the most radical of capitalists and republican anarchy that gets hit by reoccurring hurricanes…