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A similar thing happened in Georgia a couple years back (embarrassed by Chattanooga's loop) and has paid off well. I live in rural Carroll County and have 2 choices of fiber to my farm. Spectrum (in ground) and CarrollEMC (on pole) now. This is huge for me since I work from home 3 out of 5 days. Previously it took filing a complaint with the FCC to get dsl hooked up because the provider at that time wouldn't do the install (previous owners already had it installed).
Man, if Colorado could get permitless carry and a uniform gun law like Utah, I might consider moving there. They've been killing it with some of their laws lately. Right to repair mainly.

Edit: Upon further inspection, their gun laws are much worse than I thought. Nevermind.

For all that effort, why not just get a permit?
Not GP, but I would imagine it's mainly a privacy concern. Some people feel that the government knowing you have guns defeats the purpose of having them in the first place, as they can theoretically be taken at any time. A Concealed Carry Permit or similar is antithetical to that belief.
That makes sense. But presumably you don't have to permit the guns you don't carry around.

And it's a "well regulated militia", not a free for all. But sure, I understand people wanting more rights than they are statutorily entitled to. So do I, on other rights.

>That makes sense. But presumably you don't have to permit the guns you don't carry around.

Generally, it's not the gun that's permitted it's you as an individual.

You're telling the government "hey I have a gun and here's all of my personal information".

Even if you only carry one around it's not a huge leap to assume that more may exist and if confiscation were to happen they know you have at least one (and probably more than one) to seize.

Not to mention said information is stored in databases where the information can (and has been) stolen [1] which may lead to you becoming a more valuable target for theft.

I can legally (but not wisely) carry a firearm in the open in my state, but if I don't want everyone to know about it and "conceal" it I have to tell the government and be put in a database that may get leaked.

>And it's a "well regulated militia", not a free for all

There's plenty of debate over that term (and if it's just some antiquated terminology or not), but it is followed by "the right of the people" (not explicitly just some "militia" for what that's worth).

I'm not in favor of it being a true free-for-all and there's plenty of restrictions on who should be able to have guns which are seemingly reasonable (with appropriate due process), but realistically that only affects those who comply with laws.

>I understand people wanting more rights than they are statutorily entitled to.

I want as many rights as possible for the most amount of people. Of course this one is one of the most contentious given the risk of harm (which should be acknowledged in any honest argument), but in my estimation if you consider it a right (which not everyone does clearly) you should defend it because there's no shortage of governments wishing to remove rights from its people.

>So do I, on other rights

Without going too far down the slippery slope, which other rights are you willing to compromise on with the least generous interpretation?

Or would you rather prefer the strongest interpretation that maintains the most personal protections at the risk of a safety over freedom?

2A aside, I think there's a bunch of rights including speech and privacy rights the government would like to bypass for the supposed sake of perceived safety. After all we have to stop the terrorists and protect children, the ends justify the means.

[1] https://calmatters.org/commentary/2022/12/how-did-confidenti...

> and there's plenty of restrictions on who should be able to have guns which are seemingly reasonable

Is it the "people" as a group of singular individuals, or the "people" as a group. I almost wish the founders had set up the same structure that Switzerland had, instead of making it so ambiguous. Because as is it seems any restriction may be unconstitutional. Why should felons or those declared to be non compos mentis be specially excepted?

> Without going too far down the slippery slope, which other rights are you willing to compromise on with the least generous interpretation?

It's been a few years since I've really thought about this and I can't recall them to mind at this time. I'm distracted by other things in life at the moment.

> Or would you rather prefer the strongest interpretation that maintains the most personal protections at the risk of a safety over freedom?

One person's right is another person's limit. I'm generally in favor of the Scandinavian/Californian right for the public to pass through, and even use, certain property regardless of ownership. But as a bleeding-heart vegetarian I'd be enraged if I ever manage to own land, and a hunter passed onto my property to kill animals who I know by name.

I personally will probably never own a gun because historically I know I probably would have, at minimum, brandished it out of anger. I value my own freedom, and the safety of others, too much to own a gun. And from what I've read in news articles it seems a bunch of other people should do the same. But they don't. You can try to train morality, but you can't force others to use it.

The government acting the way it does is an instance of power corrupting. And the powerful not caring about the imposition others must deal with. It, too, is a balancing act.

I want to edit to add:

> but in my estimation if you consider it a right (which not everyone does clearly) you should defend it because there's no shortage of governments wishing to remove rights from its people.

The few times I am aware of that the right to bear arms has been pushed against the US government wanting to remove guns, a lot of people have died, and not on the government's side (thinking Ruby Ridge and Waco).

>Is it the "people" as a group of singular individuals, or the "people" as a group. I almost wish the founders had set up the same structure that Switzerland had, instead of making it so ambiguous.

Aye, it's pretty astounding how language can be so ambiguous that it can be an issue hundreds of years later.

>Because as is it seems any restriction may be unconstitutional. Why shouldn't felons or those declared to be non compos mentis be specially excepted?

Definitely a conflict point I have, I'm far from well educated enough to know the nuance there, but in many cases that felons for instance lose their voting rights as well (which I don't particularly agree with) so there is somewhat of a standard there of restricting some rights even after they've been released.

I don't think I quite go that far, but there are some people who truly believe that any restriction is unconstitutional vs "shall not be infringed".

Ultimately there's got to be a balance somewhere, but I'd prefer the government have to prove that it can justifiably take away someone's rights, rather than being based on mere suspicion that they may do something in the future based on possibly non-violent past behavior (drug possession charges are often felonies for instance for drugs that many states have decriminalized).

>I personally will probably never own a gun because historically I know I probably would have, at minimum, brandished it out of anger. I value my own freedom, and the safety of others, too much to own a gun. And from what I've read in news articles it seems a bunch of other people should do the same. But they don't. You can try to train morality, but you can't force others to use it.

Aye, there's certainly issues with a lot of people having guns and not everyone is going to morally prudent or safe. (or even if they were 99% of the time, that 1% can turn out quite bad)

Perhaps it is truly is a pipe dream, but often the prospective is that if society were to improve (whatever that truly means in the context of mental health, economic security, morality) violence in general (and relatedly gun violence) would reduce as well and that's truly the root cause of many issues. But that's being fairly optimistic on human behavior.

Personally, I think I'm plenty well suited to handle it, but I'm certain many who aren't feel the same and very much aren't.

>The government acting the way it does is an instance of power corrupting. And the powerful not caring about the imposition others must deal with. It, too, is a balancing act.

In theory it leads to somewhat of an equilibrium between both extremes, but of course nobody want's to find themself on the outer edge of that

> In theory it leads to somewhat of an equilibrium between both extremes, but of course nobody want's to find themself on the outer edge of that

Especially if, like most of the people who commit crimes, they feel they are justified.

> And it's a "well regulated militia", not a free for all.

I think it's intended to be closer to the latter than the former.

The text of the second amendment is: "A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed".

If as an analogue you said, "A well stocked Library being necessary to the education of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Books, shall not be infringed", would you support the idea that only accredited librarians could have books?

Besides, the "militia" includes every able-bodied male between 17 and 45.

As I said below, this really depends on whether "the people" was intended as singular, or plural.

In the bill of rights itself we have two very similar amendments (the 1st and 2nd) that are phrased differently despite being about universal rights. And unfortunately the 1st has often enough been interpreted by the courts as a collective right, not a singular right, and that can't all hang on the collective meaning of the word "assemble". "or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances"

> Besides, the "militia" includes every able-bodied male between 17 and 45.

Under current federal statute, but this can easily be changed.

Ask a Republican what's more important: all civil rights or gun ownership?

I'm just kidding, there's no need to ask rhetorical questions.

In the “cancel culture” debate Republicans seem to have discovered the First Amendment but of course they are just as excited to ban books they don’t like as the transsexual maximalists.
The material in question will get your channel flagged and demonetized on YouTube.

This rhetoric is akin to redefining "worker rights" to mean being payed $500/hour with benefits, and then proclaiming some corporation doesn't believe in workers rights if they don't go along with whatever preposterous fantasy you have.

> The material in question will get your channel flagged and demonetized on YouTube.

You are claiming that ALL books Republicans have banned contain material that... fails the YouTube TOS, and... this is a gotcha to you?

First of all, Republicans cried about Dr Seuss' publishing company pulling their own books, do you remember that? [0] They said this was "cancelling childhood" and other hilarious shit.

Then, now, they:

* defund libraries [1]

* burn books that the government deems contain "inappropriate things" (definitely not a fascist move) [2]

* try to make it illegal for teachers to teach about slavery being morally incorrect [3]

Your strawman is ridiculous, and you should feel bad.

[0]: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/dr-seuss-c...

[1]: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/librarians-say-a-misso...

[2]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/04/27/tennessee...

[3]: https://msmagazine.com/2021/08/02/texas-republicans-critical...

> Your strawman is ridiculous, and you should feel bad.

I'm pretty sure that this kind of statement is against the site guidelines. Take this kind of posting somewhere else.

The rest of your post was OK. Why include this paragraph?

I don't treat bad-faith arguments with respect, why else?
Well, site guidelines call for assuming good faith. So if that's how you're going to operate, HN isn't the site for you to do it on.

But say you're right. Say it is in bad faith. Do you really expect "and you should feel bad" to have any effect on someone operating in bad faith? For readers who are not the person you're replying to, do you expect it to make them agree with you more? What do you actually think posting something like that is going to achieve?

Fair questions.

> Do you really expect "and you should feel bad" to have any effect on someone operating in bad faith?

Of course not. In fact, I expect there to be nothing to do to dispel conservatism and its brand of bad faith. The framing is actually wrong - I wish not to have any effect on anyone, besides telling them I see thru them.

I enjoy doing that.

> For readers who are not the person you're replying to, do you expect it to make them agree with you more?

I expect some people would be entertained, and others, as yourself, displeased.

> What do you actually think posting something like that is going to achieve?

What do you think posting anything is going to achieve? I'm interested in why you do it, given this framing. For me, online interaction offers a chance for discourse, to learn what others think, to hear rebuttals to your mistakes, and to chuckle at the occasional low blow I wouldn't throw to someone I really know.

I think we're discussing two different things.

The books I'm referring to are extremely sexual and graphic in nature. And if the content of those books isn't appropriate for YouTube, I don't see any problem with a local government banning that material from schools.

That doesn't mean I also believe anything else from team red or team blue. I don't. I find them to be equally repulsive.

> The books I'm referring to are extremely sexual and graphic in nature. And if the content of those books isn't appropriate for YouTube, I don't see any problem with a local government banning that material from schools.

Sure, of course pornographic materials don't belong in schools. But this is clearly not the case at all, and is being used as a strawman to drive all sorts of issues, just like I enumerated with sources for you.

Do you care to enumerate the sources which can actually show instances of pornographic materials being banned from schools that previously contained them, i.e. not just for show? That would be meaningful. Currently, despite your assertion of enlightened centrism, you talk a lot like a Republican

I'm on Fort Collins internet right now - branded 'Connexion'. I have 1 gigabit per second symmetric, for $70/mo. It's more stable & reliable than Comcast's was, and the time I had to call tech support, I had somebody who clearly knew details of how DHCP & IPs worked and was able to collaborate with some investigation on my end.

Rollout took a few years to get to me as they ran fiber. But it was a steady pace, doing a neighborhood at a time.

Get yourself some local broadband. It works well. Comcast could have run fiber through the whole city, but they never did. And they charged 2x or more for their slower cable, with worse service and worse reliability.

We've been getting WISP rollouts and it's causing comcast to offer some seriously good deals. I still prefer my indie ISP. $40/mo 100/100 guaranteed, up to gigabit symmetric.
Man you really can't ask for better at $40/mo. That's fantastic, I'd want to keep that too!
Starry gave me a discount for 100/100 @ 30/mo after I asked them if they had anything less than their 200/200 @ 50/mo. They are bankrupt now though
TING[0] is another company offering fast fiber in CO, but it's only been rolled out to limited areas right now. I'm in downtown Denver and enjoy 1 gigabit symmetric fiber for $70/month ('unlimited' bandwidth, no port restrictions, etc) through CenturyLink. The landscape is improving here gradually, and I'm as happy as anyone to be able to purchase a fat dumb pipe from not-Comcast.

[0] - https://ting.com/internet

>the time I had to call tech support, I had somebody who clearly knew details of how DHCP & IPs worked

It would be really cool if tech support wasn't considered a dead-end / low-value job. Competent tech support makes a huge difference, but it seems like the pay offered for the role means competent people look elsewhere.

I'm not american so I don't understand how a state like Colorado is so relatively cool/progressive these days based on its geographic location compared to the others (especially some of the least cool ones). Any cultural reason?
Rich city people like skiing.
I'm not sure that explains the difference between Colorado and Wyoming.
Boulder and Denver have a diverse white-collar economy for one thing.
there is a significant difference between skiing at vail and skiing at jackson hole. we have the tourist-friendly mountains basically.
Even granting that (and that it's natural rather than path dependent) it seems a weak explanation for the cultural differences.
A lot of people in Colorado go outside on a regular basis to hike or ski or ride bikes.
Historically progressive compared to its neighbors in the past few decades, huge influx of money and progressive voters recently, all conservative voters have havens in Colorado Springs and some mountain towns so they don’t heavily mobilize in blue areas. CO gets buckets of tourism money, industry (tech, space, research), and likely secondary affects from having a massive airport. Voted in a governor who started and sold tech startups, is gay, and good at moving through legislation.

Prior to California/etc diaspora it was diaspora from the surround states. Wyoming/Kansas/etc all have more conservative values so the progressive young adults often moved to CO.

(Pure speculation)

Old School aerospace company Glenn L. Nartin put in a factory circa 1955, which started drawing non-farm, educated population. I think Colorado's liberal base started then.
Yes, Martin is now Lockheed-Martin. Other tech companies included IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, Level3, EchoStar, DISH, and others.
Way back when I was in grad school there was a fair bit of "tech" (a lot of it storage hardware) in the greater Denver area and the computer companies definitely pitched the skiing and general outdoor lifestyle as a reason to come work for them there.
The 36 corridor between Denver and Boulder was home to a ton of storage tech startups in the first dotcom boom. There’s still a street called “Tape Drive”.
yeah! I used to work at that StorageTek location, before they sold to Sun and then Oracle.

Conoco bought the land like 10 years back and demolished the old offices for a "clean energy lab" IIRC , though that never happened and now Tape Drive (and Disk Drive, on the western side of the campus) just deadend into a large empty field.

The fact that those offices are gone feels like a weird message about tech, but i don't know what it is.

It’s the closest real mountains to the east coast, so it catches all the outdoorsy & liberal types that want to move west but stay connected back east.
Eh, it's far enough west that you're not really connected to the east any different than if you had moved all the way to the west coast. Driving from Denver to Atlanta for instance is over 20 hours of driving. It's more to New York, Boston, or DC.

Piratically, you just fly if you go back to the east coast for some reason, just like if you were on the west coast.

The population is centered around decently sized cities: https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/CO#map

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_municipalities_in_Colo...

And it's only fairly recently: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_ele...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_senators...

When you have a state like Utah next door it might pull a large portion of the religiously Republican.

I don't live in, or near, Colorado though.

Colorado used to be (maybe still is) known for the high percentage of "gun toting liberals". There has been a big focus on technology to drive growth along the front range, so many of the people moving in to the state did so to chase jobs that required higher education levels.
It's striated, but the Denver metro more or less outweighs the rest of the state, and it hasn't been gerrymandered to shit. For instance, Lauren Boebert is also from Colorado, just not from Denver.

But on top of that, a good chunk of the republicans are honest to god libertarians and can be reasoned with (though that doesn't always include those they elect, like Boebert).

> good chunk of the republicans are honest to god libertarians

This is key: Colorado has far more libertarian-conservatives than social-conservatives. It comes from the Western ideal of "pull yourself up by your own bootstraps." Libertarians are "classical liberals" and value individualism, so they do not push for government-sponsored restrictions. The conservatives in many other states are socially-conservative and legislate to preserve their social values and cozy business interests.

> it comes from the Western ideal of "pull yourself up by your own bootstraps."

I’m sure that was a great line of thought when the government was just giving away land to people.

More precisely giving away native land to white people.
There's certainly a libertarian vibe, but I wouldn't say it's far more than the standard Republican party stuff.

In Boebert country you'll see plenty of less philosophical politics. "I identify as non-bidenary" stickers, yard signs about how Biden enjoys anal sex with illegal immigrants, that kind of thing.

Colorado polling suggests two thirds of Republicans and a third of "Independents" approved of the Dobbs decision restricting abortion. Half of Republicans and a third of "Independents" believe Biden didn't win the election.

Source: https://www.colorado.edu/lab/aprl/sites/default/files/attach...

The younger people (< 45) in CO are largely transplants. Many moved because of the outdoor life, pot legalization and because they visit friends and enjoy the culture. I think that younger influence plays a big role offsetting the traditionally conservative farmland.

Pedantically, though, the votes haven't been strictly progressive, more lowercase-L libertarian. Often the state votes to increase freedoms instead of traditional progressive/conservative lines.

Overall, i think the CO population is more drug-friendly than the average liberal US voting pool. Denver feels relatively moderate, politically, as we have so many influences from where people came from (east coast, california, texas). We have one of the most liberal (Boulder) and conservative (CO Springs) cities in the US. The things that the population collectively agrees upon is often the freedom-y bits.

The short answer is basically "cities are liberal" and Colorado has a large city unlike the rest of the surrounding states.

The next question is why Denver is in Colorado and not anywhere else? The answer is that, from the beginning, Colorado had some geographic advantages and the leaders of the state pushed for intentional growth. As the state grew based on geographic advantages, the state was able to push for government contracts to get things like the National Energy Research Lab. The gov't contracts drew an educated population which drove the creation of a pretty big university system, and it all became self-reinforcing.

The surrounding states just don't have a big city like Denver. Utah is an exception with SLC but Utah has its own idiosyncrasies.

There's more to Colorado than "cities are liberal". The CO general assembly has big Dem majorities in the house and senate, along with a Dem Governor. This means they can legislate stuff which has voter impact but might not look sexy on the campaign trail. They can pass laws without having to worry about conservative/reactionary Republicans (or even blue dog Dems) saying no for no other reason than "just because".

They wouldn't have such a big statewide majority if it was just because of Denver. That case is more like PA, which has 2 big cities, and while it has a Dem governor, it has a republican majority in the state senate and no majority in the house. This microcosm of Capitol Hill leads to very little legislation being passed, even for stuff the voters want & stuff that would really benefit the state.

> There's more to Colorado than "cities are liberal". The CO general assembly has big Dem majorities in the house and senate, along with a Dem Governor.

Sure, but the Dem majorities are exactly because the cities are liberal.

https://www.zipdatamaps.com/politics/state-level/districts/m...

https://www.zipdatamaps.com/politics/state-level/districts/m...

Outside of the cities, the state is almost as red as Wyoming.

Pennsylvania looks very similar to Colorado actually: https://www.zipdatamaps.com/politics/state-level/districts/m...

You raise an interesting point though. My guess for PA is that their population is spread out enough that you can create more credible districts in the rural areas because almost all the land is livable whereas Colorado sort of self-gerrymanders because despite its size there are decent chunks of the state that are unlivable (plus all the national parks, etc).

It's like that old xkcd comic about heat maps - a map of democratic voters is basically just population density heat map.

The interesting question isn't "why is Colorado blue?" - we know the answer, it's because of the cities. The real interesting question is "why did Colorado develop so many cities when no one else in the intermountain west did?"

> The real interesting question is "why did Colorado develop so many cities when no one else in the intermountain west did?"

Depends on who you ask.

The answer I liked was that CO had a good blend of farmable land and minable mountains which gave it a slight edge over the other Rocky states so early on it was just slightly bigger. And then when it came time for the USG to start establishing a bunch of west-located offices it was a winner take-all situation.

Pedantic side note: Intermountain west isn't really the right term. None of Colorado's cities are in the intermountain west. (I'm sure you know this, but for the others Colorado's cities are right before the Rocky Mountains. Intermountain refers to between the Rockies and the Sierras)
New Mexico is neighboring and also generally a blue state for quite some time. It is similarly lopsided in terms of population concentration in the central city, but I think the phenomenon is older than this in both states. Colorado and New Mexico both have a history of leaning pretty libertarian in a classical sense which I think lead to a lot of the progressive policy you see today. It might be attributable to the fact that both are Rocky Mountain states that aren't all that easy to settle and so have a history of a fiercely independent population. In modern times that shifted towards a sort of cultural capital status that has attracted a lot of younger people. It is perhaps also a factor that both states are relatively multicultural compared to other US states in the region (this applies to AZ and TX as well to some extent, so clearly there are multiple things going on).

A common go-to example of New Mexico's libertarian tradition was the legalization of same-sex marriage in this very Catholic state by a supreme court ruling, after some county clerks started issuing same-sex marriage licenses on their own initiative because they didn't think the law prohibited it. This kind of thing is sometimes viewed as apathy but is more charitably seen as part of a general attitude towards permissiveness.

> It is perhaps also a factor that both states are relatively multicultural compared to other US states in the region (this applies to AZ and TX as well to some extent, so clearly there are multiple things going on).

Arizona is basically New Mexico, except it became a retirement destination (like a western version of Florida), which shifted its demographics older and whiter (and therefore more conservative). Texas is probably a little more unique since it is both massive and at the crossroads of several geographical and cultural regions.

Some less than fully formed thoughts, but what I think:

I'd say Colorado is (at least) 3 different states in a trenchcoat.

1. Cities mostly clustered together. The state is sort of weird geographically. Giant open plains to the east, and big ass scary mountains to the west. Lots of cities formed along the boundary between them, forming what is now called the 'Front Range'. Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, Fort Collins, Longmont are all along here. Most of the population lives along this long corridor.

2. Rural farms and ranches. Both on the plains, and in the mountains, and the Western Slope (an area sorta coming out of the mountains towards the far west end of the state). This is fairly conservative, matching what other rural people in neighboring states. Include poorer mountain towns here, which are often farming focused.

3. Rich mountain towns. Skiing, or other attractions. Aspen, Vail, Breckenridge, Steamboat Springs, etc. The areas are very attractive due to natural beauty, but typically have geographical or weather reasons they can't really grow huge. That leaves richer and richer people driving out others. Many of these end up with a 'theme park' feel to them. Rich people have a condo that gets used a few times a year, and rented out another few times, but no real residency.

Generally though, the common theme through all of those is a love of the outdoors. Even those who want to drill aggressively for oil are out hunting and 4-wheeling. Granola hippies are out hiking, skiing, and backpacking. But practically everybody has at least a passing interest in the outdoors.

As for the comparison to other states that have swung super-conservative in recent years, I'd guess that it's to some degree that a more liberal western state had to exist somewhere, and it ended up as Colorado. If you want to move west, smoke pot and ski or hike all day, you go where others are already doing that. Other than accidents of history, I don't see any reason Wyoming couldn't have been shifted that direction. Colorado and Wyoming are very similar states geographically, and early-on economically. We both have ranching, farming, oil, mining. It'd be interesting to really dig in and figure out why one went one way, and the other a different way.

> It'd be interesting to really dig in and figure out why one went one way, and the other a different way.

My guess would be airport access. Denver is a major hub and getting non-stops to many other cities is conveniently easy. Wyoming doesn't have the same ease of access

Plus we have a demon horse at the airport. Really spices things up.
Don't forget all of the long people-movers that makes it a great airport to catch Pokemon (in Pokemon GO)
for those not in the know, look up Bluecifer - the statue literally murdered it's creator.
Well DIA is a major hub because of the population of the Front Range and Colorado's historical popularity for skiing. DIA is (relatively speaking) not that old an airport. It replaced a closer-in (and more convenient to Denver) smaller airport. And when DIA was built, it made sense to build it on a huge expanse of flat land well east of the city.
Sort of. Stapleton airport was already a significant hub before Denver's population boom. The funding for DIA happened because Stapleton in the late 80s was already a major hub for several carriers and it's constrained size was causing a lot of scheduling headaches for the carriers and the FAA itself.
Salt Lake City also has a major airport. (It's a Delta hub, and it connects to everywhere.) That, um, didn't make SLC into Denver.
I've spent some time in SLC but not in Denver. Are they really that different? If you enjoy outdoor recreation but don't care for weed or booze, your life may look pretty similar between the two places. SLC (at least city proper) is also relatively socially permissive, having elected an openly gay mayor in 2016.
>Are they really that different? If you enjoy outdoor recreation but don't care for weed or booze

Well, the skiing out of SLC is closer and better :-)

More seriously though, you're still living in an environment that's very closely aligned with a specific church. Which depending on your circumstances may be difficult to pretend just doesn't exist. Some people are fine with it. But it's a factor.

SLC feels like a very modest downtown city, where-as Denver's urban core feels much more significant. And there's major East-West and Southern low-rise urban corridors out of Denver, that feel active, where-as SLC to me felt far more suburban very quickly. Denver also has a bunch of intense pockets around it, with major tech hubs Northwest and south of Denver. I admittedly haven't spent much time in SLC but I did travel around a bit trying to get a feel for the area.

SLC felt far sleepier & suburban, to me. With incredible mountains right there.

Utah is unique in that the Mormon church essentially runs everything there. Lived there for years, and it's no secret. You get the occasional gerrymandered district or SLC mayor who are less conservative.
Oh, I know all that. I'm just saying that the airport, by itself, isn't the reason Denver is different.
> Colorado and Wyoming are very similar states geographically

I think the weather is noticeably less friendly in Wyoming than Colorado. There's three degrees of latitude between Denver and Casper, for example.

I moved to CO from the bay area a couple of years ago.

I couldn't tell you what created the initial imbalance, but it feels like at this point what sustains it is a simple positive-feedback loop. To generalize, when relatively liberal, educated, wealthy people from the coasts want a different lifestyle (work-life balance, better outdoor access, less density, etc.) they move to CO because that where others like them have moved, which further bolsters that reputation.

From what I know, it's kind of like Austin in that the its reputation as a progressive outpost in TX just attracts more of those people.

How places evolve seem like a kind of an interesting study in how branding can become reality.

I'm a data point towards that feedback loop. My partner and I moved to Colorado from a Southern state 4 years ago. We wanted to live somewhere in the West, and chose Colorado because:

* Mountains!

* Great legal protections for gender minorities, especially Boulder County

* Good tech scene to job hunt locally

We weren't part of that initial shift, but we're definitely part of the acceleration. We've met plenty of other transplants with similar stories.

I'm surprised nobody has mentioned this- they were one of the first states to legalize mj. I think this very quickly drove a huge influx of younger, more open-minded people and a lot of cultural change around the metro areas, especially Denver and Boulder.
The dynamics being discussed existed long before that. In any case, I'm pretty sure that very few people moved to Colorado specifically because of mj legalization as opposed to the other forces that made mj legalization possible there.
Culturally Colorado has been a haven for individualism and is the birthplace of the Libertarian party. Lots of do it yourselfers from the history of mining and cowboy heritage. It has always been a true purple state due to Denver being progressive and Colorado Springs being conservative.

But now with every Californian moving here because it’s cheaper, costs have gotten out of control and they are already voting for the very same policies that ruined the state they fled. It’s not “cool” at all.

In addition to what other comments have said. The huge proliferation of national parks and mind blowing beauty tends to attract people who are into those things.

This also reduces the amount of private land, making rural living more difficult and expensive. Conservatives tend to live in rural areas which weighs the political landscape towards liberals when 43% of the land is publicly owned. Compare that to Texas which is 4.2% publicly owned.

Outside of culture war issues, most all of the 50 states are pretty much the same politically. You'll see backwards policy on tech (and other things) just as much in California as you would Mississippi.
colorado is a resort, most of those other states live or die by resource extraction. if we didn't happen have an amenity that was especially attractive to rich liberals (and geographically discriminating against the poor & working class) then co's politics would be no different than arizona's.
Now that Colorado has removed state preemption laws, what is stopping ISPs from lobbying and preempting state level laws at the local level across the whole state.
Local voters. If ISPs want to preempt the state laws at the local level they're going to have to make it worthwhile. Fat chance that.
Looks like they’re going to have to face the thing they fear most: a competitive market, Gasp!
If I understand the situation correctly, the law effectively just imposed a meaningless formality because all it took was a local ballot measure to override it, and as a practical matter it would also take at least one ballot measure to authorize the bonds/taxes to fund a network, so it just meant that voters needed to approve two ballot measures instead of one.
Two ballot measures instead of one is a good step, but it also imposes a step that incumbent ISPs must face to get back to the status quo prior to this law.
States should stick to running a state patrol, maybe a university or two and a court system. Otherwise, stay out of peoples way. Don't collect huge bribes from cable providers to limit competition.
It's great to see Colorado taking steps to promote competition and innovation in the field of Internet service. By repealing the law that made it harder for cities to offer their own Internet service, they're giving communities more options and putting the power back in the hands of the people.

For too long, the Internet service industry has been dominated by a few big players who prioritize profits over providing quality service to customers. This has resulted in high prices, slow speeds, and limited options for many people, particularly in rural areas.

By allowing cities to offer their own Internet service, Colorado is opening up the market and creating more opportunities for smaller, local providers to enter the field. This can help drive down prices, improve service quality, and give consumers more choice and control over their Internet experience.

Hopefully, other states will follow Colorado's lead and take steps to promote a more competitive and innovative Internet service industry. This is an important step towards ensuring that everyone has access to fast, reliable, and affordable Internet service, regardless of where they live.

Found this interesting:

> Residents voted to opt out of the state restriction 122 out of 123 times, with the lone defeat coming in Longmont in 2009 after an industry lobbying campaign.

HackerNewUser's expectation:

Municipal Broadband means that a community gets together, digs their own trenches, pulls their own fiber, and creates a completely new, modern, independent local fiber network that charges enough to run at Cost + Future Investment.

Reality:

City Council puts out a bid for construction. Comcast buys the bid. They tell the city "We've already got this super duper hifi modern network we installed in 1834. You'll save a ton of money if you just piggyback that." All residents now get subscribed to Comcastic service. And if they can't pull that off, the "City's traffic" is routed over "Comcast existing superdeuper network infrastructure", which basically means the same thing. Do you really think the entrenched local monopolies are going to let these projects succeed?

The problem is, most municipalities simply aren't sophisticated enough to prevent the 2nd scenario from happening. I'm 100% for communities running these projects, but there's only been a handful of success stories. The key to success is keeping the local monopolies out at all costs and make sure you get fresh, independent infrastructure pulled, not leased from one of these asshats.

I wouldn't say that there's a lack of success stories, there's a lack of policies like this making it through for communities to attempt it in the first place, thanks to lobbyists.
Where are you getting your reality from?

Even here in NC in an "unsophisticated" municipality (as far as tech is concerned), the situation is precisely reversed. The municipality started the project for stringing fiber during the period where the FCC overturned the state law banning muni broadband. And they lease that out to an ISP with a contract requiring delivery of symmetric connectivity.

The online reviews for that ISP are the pits; however, in this municipality that ISP hired the team that had been running the muni wifi program that started during that FCC-allows-muni-broadband period. I've been getting 300/300 for months; my ire is now wholly directed at the crappy state of wifi on my linux machines! :(

Long story short-- I'd steer clear of taking an upshot about muni broadband in the U.S. unless it's from a user reporting what speeds they are actually getting on a business or residential endpoint on a muni broadband plan, measured over at least a few months.

Colorado just seems to be making leaps and bounds on so many progressive issues. Now if they could just make that same progress on housing and urbanism.
Good news, but the Supreme Court deciding to override the FCC and declare fiber to be exempted from Local-Loop-Unbundling requirements is still a travesty.

The Supreme Court sides with Verizon, whose argument was effectively, sure, there are laws about sharing the physical infrastructure. But we want to make a lot more money & might not do fiber unless we get a physical monopoly over this utility. The Supreme Court gave them their monopoly.

There should be multiple ISPs competing to offer you high-speed service. Each would have to build it's own physical network, without Local Loop Unbundling, which gets harder & harder the more infrastructure is already put down. Before fiber, DSL for example allowed competition, created a huge number of competitive ISPs. But the Supreme Court killed that competitiveness, & seemingly nothing can ever be done to claw back this physical monopoly that was handed out to the giant corporate entities. Fuck us.