Quote:
Originally Posted by someone123
I think Portland selects in some ways for people who actually don't want the big city experience.
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This is a big difference between Americans and Canadians.
Canadians are very self-conscious of their city being small or uncosmopolitan and constantly pump up their city as being worldly - and that can also be cringey - whereas Americans tend to be allergic to big cities.
A lot of it is racial animus, but this begs the question: if the US were Canada, wouldn't there be black flight, instead of white flight? Wouldn't white, professional Americans of the time have redlined black ghettos to be shantytowns on the outskirts, rather than flee valuable central city real estate?
Portland is one of a string of "it" cities in the United States that follows a familiar path. A predominantly white, midsized city with a bit of a quirky culture that presents itself as a small town but with a critical mass of people to support subcultures (and provide jobs) gets taken up, grows to be a big city, has big city problems, and people flee or the shine comes off. First came Portland, then came Austin and, now, I suppose, it's Nashville.