I described a distrust of motive in the minds of some southerners that continues today. It is a perception, not a lawsuit or a headline in the WSJ. I thought I made that very clear. The example that I was responding to, "thats where you yankees..." also depicted an emotional situation based on perceptions of some southerners.
Here's one you can ponder however...
http://amarillo.com/stories/2004/07/22/bus_dropbar.shtml#.VTBGL5MhN6IThis seems a small thing, unless you are Mr. Bode or his patrons in LaVernia, Texas, but when you lay it alongside the wisps of collective memory of the Restoration it can rankle some folks. Like me.
There's no need to correct my geography. Texas Roadhouse is a Kentucky-based brand, but it's a helluva lot closer to Cincinnati than it is to Austin. The Texas Roadhouse restaurant on Hwy 281 North in my hometown folded. I guess they suck. Nobody I know ever bothered to go there.
I know many people in Texas and in North Carolina who prefer to do business with local financial institutions rather than 'Yankee Banks' who have tarnished their reputations through manipulation and greed in the last 10 years (federal bailouts?). These are the same banks that peddle credit cards to unemployed underclassmen even on the sacred ground in Norman and at other universities across the south. If that isn't a modern manifestation of exploitation I don't know what would pass muster.
My point was about some lingering attitudes of the 'little guys' I know and was not intended to hurt feelings. Especially the feelings of Zoney who's known to be sensitive and it seems his cartoon self-depiction is weeping for some reason.
I concede only that it was stupid of me to comment on this BBS.