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Not that you'll ever want to visit it again. The state that bleeds more residents each year then it takes in. Just waiting for the big one to knock it into the ocean once and for all which doesn't matter because it serves no purpose as you can see from this map. If you live in one of the lucky Red state that is taking in these locust refugees use this map to see what part they came from....

Not that you'll ever want to visit it again. The state that bleeds more residents each year then it takes in. Just waiting for the big one to knock it into the ocean once and for all which doesn't matter because it serves no purpose as you can see from this map. If you live in one of the lucky Red state that is taking in these locust refugees use this map to see what part they came from....

(post is archived)

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I wish we could: I have long thought that the Nevada state line should have followed the crest of the Sierra Nevada mountains.

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I would love to live in the Owens Valley, in a city like Bishop or Lone Pine. The scenery is absolutely voluptuous, and there aren't many people around. Unfortunately, I have medical issues which would require being closer to a larger city like Victorville or Palmdale in the High Desert.

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Yes there is a nice small hospital in Bishop and some decent doctors, but medical specialties are indeed limited around here, I drive north 3-1/2 hours to go to appointments in the Reno area sometimes. Lancaster/Palmdale and Victorville, unfortunately, have become hell-holes.

[–] 0 pt

Curious, is Lancaster what the map is calling “slab city”?