Gallup Poll: people looking to flee liberal states

P@triot

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2011
61,489
11,691
2,060
United States
The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea
 
The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea
Really, do they need boxes or help packing? See ya dirtbags.
 
The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea
Really, do they need boxes or help packing? See ya dirtbags.
I will help you pack for your move to Cuba.
 
The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea

An we are changing the former jesusland states Blue! The crackerchwayans are dying off in the red states
 
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The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea
Really, do they need boxes or help packing? See ya dirtbags.
I will help you pack for your move to Cuba.
Give me ten years and I might take you up on that. I've always to see the place and I'll be ready to sit on the beach by then smoking some of favorite cigars, which stupidly, I can't legally get here.
 
What sucks is that they bring their foolhardy progressive politics with them.
You can have the lower middle of the US. We'll keep the parts that can actually think.
Off it. You know nothing of thought.
See if you can manage this handbag, would you really mind living as two nations with an interesting border? You could have your way, and we'd bail you out when it really got bad, which it would. What say you, and do try to think on it for a minute.
 
The results are predictable - people are trying to leave the misery created by liberal policy. Meanwhile, people in flourishing conservative states are content...

According to the poll, the states most residents would be willing to leave include much of the northeast. Illinois tops the list with 50% of respondents saying they would move, followed by Connecticut (49%), Maryland (47%), Nevada (43%), Rhode Island (42%), New Jersey (41%), New York, (41%), Massachusetts (40%), Louisiana (40%), and Mississippi (39%).

Interestingly, while Illinoisans are most willing to leave their state in a general context, 20% of Nevadans said they are extremely, very, or somewhat likely to leave their state in the next 12 months. Illinois came in second on that list with 19% of respondents saying they are likely to move in the next year.

On the contrary, Montana, Hawaii, and Maine are the states where the fewest residents would leave if they could. Just 23% of residents in all three states said they would move. Oregon, New Hampshire, and Texas were close behind with just 24% of residents answering yes, followed by Colorado and Minnesota at 25%, South Dakota at 26%, and Wyoming at 27%.

What percent of residents want to move out of your state? This map gives you an idea

An we are changing the former jesusland states Blue! The crackerchwayans are dying off in the red states


Like a fucking broken record. :(
 
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You can have all of the red, to do with as you please, so long as you move there and leave where you are now, if you aren't already in the red, to the decent and real Americans. Deal?
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You can have the lower middle of the US. We'll keep the parts that can actually think.
Off it. You know nothing of thought.
See if you can manage this handbag, would you really mind living as two nations with an interesting border? You could have your way, and we'd bail you out when it really got bad, which it would. What say you, and do try to think on it for a minute.
Take your condescension and stuff it where the sun don't shine, lizard brain.
 
Off it. You know nothing of thought.
See if you can manage this handbag, would you really mind living as two nations with an interesting border? You could have your way, and we'd bail you out when it really got bad, which it would. What say you, and do try to think on it for a minute.
Take your condescension and stuff it where the sun don't shine, lizard brain.
That all you got? Pathetic, but hardly unexpected.
 
See if you can manage this handbag, would you really mind living as two nations with an interesting border? You could have your way, and we'd bail you out when it really got bad, which it would. What say you, and do try to think on it for a minute.
Take your condescension and stuff it where the sun don't shine, lizard brain.
That all you got? Pathetic, but hardly unexpected.
What makes you believe that anyone should address such a supercilious jackass as yourself in a serious manner?
 

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