I think I would rather live in New Hampshire because it is not landlocked, has more people, and it is an important state for presidential elections. Although Ben And Jerry's Ice Cream is from Vermont.
As someone who was born and lives in New Hampshire... Let’s settle our differences and thank god we don’t live in Mass Edit: One year later from my original comment. For reasons beyond my control I have ended up moving to Mass... I have now confirmed first hand that everything said about Massholes in the comments is true. Please send your prayers as I am slowly transformed into the very thing I feared. Everyday I continually plan my shopping trip to NH and I often find myself driving like an idiot. I even can’t help but think about vacationing in NH only to disrupt the locks. I believe it’s to late for me to be saved. Goodbye NH.. (slowly sees license plate changing from NH to Mass)
Wow you must live in a different world or have a real low education it's in one of the first English colonies wow some people you must live in new york or something similar
Christopher French dude I’m literally from Vermont. I was simply saying it was surprising to hear my state mentioned in a youtube video when it is usually ignored. Also vermont was not one of the first English colonies. It used to be part of New York, then became its own country before it joined the union as the 14th state.
@Dylan 2007 I live in vermont and sometimes I end up telling people in discord about it and some of them dont even know it exists. I’m talking about other people who live in America.....
@@rawsaucerobert nope, some people actually measure in miles and tell you about it. Like, who looks at the odometer? But we all look at the time, right!?
Kyrgyz Jeff: Vermont has a lot of marble. There's still actually an active quarry in Rutland where they have a museum and working sculptors. Most of the marble you see in federal buildings and monuments in Washington DC comes from Vermont. Including busts of all the Presidents.
Warriors and Stranger Things Are Bae They are more from the Boston area probably. Guns are highly restricted there and an armed society is a polite society. Western Massachusetts is mostly rural(ish) or springfield (where illegal guns are easy to get). An armed society tends to be politer.
Vermont became the first to abolish slavery in 1777, while it was still independent, before it joined the United States as the 14th state in 1791. These state jurisdictions thus enacted the first abolition laws in the Americas. Vermont had also made sure to give African American men the right to vote. Pretty good addition to this list I'd say lol.
NH native here. We're better for certain, but those Vermonters aren't too shabby either ;) They're pretty good neighbors, but you *do* need to look out for those crazy Mainers!
Stefan Milo Actually after seeing Oregon and the political divisiveness I decided that Vermont was going to be my home years ago at that time it was politically cohesive unlike Oregon
Stefan Milo , vermont and oregon are two strong progressive states, but oregon is nice too , why moving to vermont if ypu have portland and springfield!
Yeah but don't smoke weed or grow your own, they will arrest you. They don't even have normal bars, how free is that. I have also been pulled over multiple times and never been ticketed, just harassed. My good friend was hit on his motorcycle by a man who was clearly intoxicated but the towny police gave him a hall pass and threatens to arrest me because I called them on it. Every state and country, Canada that borders NH weed is legal. Live Free or Die is just some nonsense saying someone came up with. Vermont is much more free as is most of New England.
That's literally how I finally remembered the different between the two. However, I like to look at the world like this: vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/althistory/images/0/0a/Possible_Sideways_Earth_map.png/revision/latest?cb=20140819061626
Am I the only one that thinks it is highly ironic that the region that is most renowned, politically as the bastion of leftism, has a strong in group preference?
MrTwistawrench: Yup. There are several New Hampshire state liquor stores that are in highway rest areas. I find it funny that considering all their blather about the virtues of private enterprise, the state government runs a monopoly on the sale of alcohol other than wine and beer.
SnowFire:. They're also the only state that doesn't require you to carry liability insurance on your car. And a lot of people don't. And then they drive down into Massachusetts, cause crashes, and then the other driver, who was not at fault, ends up having to pay for the repairs to their own car. Everybody always whines about the illegal immigrants driving without insurance. I've never had a problem with them. On the other hand I have had two cars totaled when they were hit by a New Hampshire drivers who did not have insurance. And since they were old cars I didn't have collision insurance. So, I was left without a car. And had to scrape up enough money to buy another one. That's a really big deal when you're a college student, who needs your car to commute to school and work. And then they blather on about personal responsibility while driving around without making sure that they are able to properly compensate someone to whomthey cause harm. They have no ability or intention of doing so. Even if you manage to win in court, it's basically impossible to collect damages.
NH actually has a good reason not to pay our reps: we want them to be productive members of society and have jobs and not just do normal politician stuff and not really contribute anything like people in the federal house of reps.
My hometown in Enosburg Falls, Vermont. Personally, in my opinion, it sucks here. Nothing happens and it’s always ridiculously cold in the winter, and sometimes too too hot in the summer.
@@Tyler-qj8ts I live in St. J, its fine here with a movie theater and some ok restaurants... Also one of the best high schools in the country. Ultimately, Vermont in general is more of a retirement state then one for the youth.
I grew up in New Hampshire and have always loved Vermont. Maine and Massachusetts are also great. I've spent less time in Rhode Island and Connecticut, but they seem cool too. The provincialism gets pretty real in New England, which is silly because they're much more similar than they are different. It can be expensive, but it's a great part of the world to live in.
@@beejohn1016 Its not, but we sure wish it were! LOL Rhode island is the red headed step child of New England , that we tried to give up for adoption, but nobody wanted!
You didn’t mention how NH has a “Stand Your Ground” Law and VT has a “Duty To Retreat Law”, but that could fit in the category of politics mentioned in the video
Vermont is debatably the most left wing state in the union, while New Hampshire is the epicentre of New England, midly liberal, fiscally conservative, Republicanism.
If someone breaks in my house there's no way in hell I'm retreating. Idc what the law is, I do not have a duty to allow someone to waltz into my home and take whatever they want.
legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/section/13/053/02305 I suggest you do some research before commenting on social spaces. 16 year old individuals are allowed to "constitutionally carry", there are no NFA restrictions, and no permits required for purchase, you just need to be 21.
Legal weed is expensive. It's decriminalized here and cops don't usually bother an adult with less than a "personal use" amount.... 3/4 oz by law. Unless you have a scale, little baggies and a wad of cash your fine. I do wish we could cultivate.
Agreed. I live in mass and hate it here. Everyone is rude, prices and taxes are insane, it’s too close to everything. I live in Rutland. What once was a nice small farm town you can now find drug needles in the park. There are home break ins, murders, I don’t even want to go on. Idiot drivers even here. There’s been about 20 accidents in the past 6 years in front of my house. 2 of which someone died, 3 of which a car flipped over and landed on our front lawn.
@@WaltzwithAI If you want to keep NH nice you need for vote for left wing candidates, progressive only. No conservatives, no moderates, no libertarians. This applies to all 50 states.
NH does have a sales tax, but it's limited to prepared food and lodgings, ie skinning the tourists and leaf peepers. That's why there's so few Wal Marts in VT. "Monters use NH's. On the weekends, the Wally World parking lot in Littleton is nothing but VT license plates. Fundamental difference: VT: Come see how pretty we are. Please spend some money NH: Welcome to NH. Leave your money. Go away.
Grace Skerp: ever notice that two of the three nicest cities in all of New Hampshire are on the Vermont border? Keene and Hanover. They're are also two of the most liberal. Third place goes to Portsmouth, which of course is on border with Maine... On the other hand, Manchester is god-awful tacky, dirty, and filled with nothing but strip malls, big box stores and car dealerships.
I'd say it's more because Hanover and Keene are both college towns. Dartmouth pre-dates the Revolution and in the US anything that pre-dates that incident is ancient. Both towns have a productive purpose and diversity. Plus Hanover has a significant medical center. Manchester on the other now is just a tax haven and bedroom for Mass. It's a depressing sight all those abandoned red brick factories along the Merrimack. *Those were the days my friend; we thought they'd never end... Portsmouth? Maybe because it sits on our 17 miles of sea shore? Point of pride or keeps us from becoming Vermont East - the other New England land locked state? ;)
Ah ha ha ha ha...Grace, so true! Up until 3 years ago, Bennington Vermont had the reputation of having the smallest Walmart in Walmart's chain. Now they have a superstore. It certainly needed it.
Pywaket Pilot,if you think those are the nicest cities in NH, you don't know NH. The best cities in NH are Berlin and Claremont. Laconia is a distant third.
I live in Vermont it’s nice here but the reason why the population is mostly older people is because once people here graduate high school they move out of state because there is not much to do here other than nature stuff
I did a hike on Mt. Killington in Rutland on Saturday, so I drove through a decent amount of Vermont.. Beautiful state, but man does it look boring.. I was even telling my friend, the only thing to do here is hike
One thing not mentioned is how the Connecticut river border is unique. Most river borders between states are divided down the middle of the river but the Vermont/New Hampshire border at the Connecticut river is marked at the river bank on the Vermont side meaning that New Hampshire “owns” all of the Connecticut river where it borders Vermont. When you cross a bridge from New Hampshire to Vermont, you are not in Vermont until you reach the other side of the bridge.
NH makes the most sense when compared to Vermont AND Maine. Maine is very conservative, Vermont is very liberal. NH is the perfect balance of both and is very protective of personal liberties. I LOVE NH. Moved there about 7 years ago and couldn't imagine living anywhere else
A an NH resident, who has lived in VT, I can pretty fairly that NH fully embodies the state motto of “Live free or die” far more than VT. It’s a relationship to tourism that allows business owners to thrive while providing the consumer an unforgettable experience, all the while the 9% prepared food tax funds our government. Outside the economy NH is extremely lax, with some of the loosest firearms laws in the nation (THE loosest in New England), the lack of a seatbelt law for those over 18, and a slew of other lax regulations. It’s a beautiful state, and the cold keeps the flatlanders away for 8 months of the year.
NH has better tourism industry because y’all let flatlanders in. As left and Vermont may be we don’t want any flatlanders anywhere near here. We’ll be cordial if we see you but secretly wish for an 8 month winter to drive you away
Jon Stewart: Don't forget "Famous Potatoes!". As the great George Carlin said, "I think that the truth lies somewhere in between, hopefully closer to famous potatoes."
Oddly enough, they don't necessarily live up to that motto. Back in the 1970s there was a person who covered that up on his license plate because he was, as I recall, a Quaker, and he felt that he was being forced to say something he did not believe. The case ended up going all the way to the Supreme Court, who found in his favor, arguing that no citizen should be required by the government to express somethig they did not believe, and in fact was in direct violation of the both their freedom of speech and freedom of religion. I'm pretty sure the decision was actually 9-0, as it was a pretty blatant attack on some things pretty clearly in the Bill of Rights. Of course, given 10 years, they managed to forget that and went after another person. That one didn't make it all the way to the Supreme Court, only to Federal District Court who quoted the ruling from the 70s.
I used to live in NH, moved to VT because of the cheaper cost of living and higher quality of interaction. Based of my experiences VT jobs pay better because even if you don't have a degree, there is less competition so your skills are more valuable. I'm pleased with my move, I just miss the ocean every so often.
@@snorfallupagus6014 ignorant response, but no. I owned a 3 bedroom 2 bath property on 10 acres just north of Montpelier, taxes went through the roof in 2021 as did oil so it was too expensive to even heat our house and we decided there was nothing keeping us there and sold our house.
I lived in Manchester for 6 years before moving to Seattle. I do miss a number things about New Hampshire. Specifically I miss the fall colors and Hampton Beach.
@@joeplanter7959 Hard to say because it was 2007. I left Manchester to come to Seattle. Honestly both places have their ups and downs. Employment security and Manchester is far less than Seattle but now it much cheaper (not the case in 07')
And economically it is more diverse and modern than Vermont. Vermont is mainly an agricultural and tourist based economy, meaning there are less jobs and less people needed.
As a native to New Hampshire I can there are plenty of people from both Mass and Vermont who commute to New Hampshire. According to a survey down by NH around 30,000 people from Massachusetts works in Nh and 18,000 from Maine
It's notable that the two southern/eastern counties in New Hampshire (Hillsborough and Rockingham Counties) combine for over half of New Hampshire's population. By themselves, those two counties have a higher population than the entire state of Vermont.
Strafford county, New Hampshire, beautiful place and perfect location, 1 hour from Boston, 45 minutes from the ocean, an hour from the mountains, and 20 minutes from Maine.
Visiting (vacationing) in Vermont and living here is two totally different things. People visit and comment (like yesterday) and say wow what a beautiful place and they're right but you can't make a living off of scenic views and hiking. I've lived here for 17 years from suburban Philadelphia. Careful, don't get caught up in your dreams about Vermont being some wonderland. If you come you better be educated and or have some real money in your pocket. Good jobs are hard to come by. There is barely any population growth. Graduates move away and don't come back. This video is accurate but don't fantasize about coming up here and living in some tree house. Just a warning that's all.
Hello, I'm planning to move to Vermont from NYC. Employment is not a problem. Am I in for a "culture shock" when it comes to socializing? How friendly are Vermonters to Flatlanders? Any advice is welcome. Many thanks
@@uberbabe585 People are usually pretty friendly. Racism isn't that bad but it's here for sure. Just watch out for the slow drivers I guess. Lot of them are afraid of yellow lights and tend to go below the speed limits at times.
New Hampshire is the only state in the union that can declare war per it's Constitution.... New Hampshire legislature has the greatest ratio of representatives to citizens in the country, go representative democracy! New Hampshire maple syrup is waaay better, due to our fancy NH maple tree isotopes... New Hampshire has Mt Washington, Vermont does not. New Hampshire, Vermont (and Maine) are places where time is not measured in days or months, but in the passing of seasons. Surprisingly, I have noticed the natives of New Hampshire have no accent. The people of New Hampshire outlasted The Old Man of the Mountain, which fell 05/03/03... (Although, there were no actual witnesses to his fall, and there are persistent rumors he is just on a long vacation visiting relatives on Easter Island). Life is better in the "Shire" ! Ask any Hobbit ! What do we have in common? We both don't like Massachusetts... !
The biggest difference is Boston. One-third of people in NH live in the Boston metro area and two-thirds live in the Boston combine statical area. The reason NH politics is more libertarian is people move to NH to get out of MA. The reason NH is wealthier and more populace is people can work in Boston. The reason we have more industry was mill owners from Boston. That's why NH and VT were very similar before the creation of suburbs and are still very similar once you leave Greater Boston.
I literally live on the Connecticut River and see Vermont every morning. I commute through Vermont every day and I have to say, I LOVE New Hampshire. Haha
If we’re going the route of states with similar shapes and culture that lean to the left, why not try states with similar shapes and culture that lean to the right? Such as... North Dakota and South Dakota Alabama and Mississippi Kansas and Nebraska
I like all three of those. Since I live in Kansas, though, I have a hard time choosing if I'd compare my state to Nebraska or Missouri. There's so much violent history between Kansas and Missouri.
I don't know if 'left' or 'right' really works in the traditional sense in either place, Rural New England ( and both states have very rural cultures ) is very different from the rest of the country in that every town is run by direct democracy, and has been for centuries. All the business of a town is debated and voted on by all of the participating electorate in a big room on a cold night in March. Everyone who wants to talk does, and every expenditure is voted on. Everyone knows Roberts Rules of Order. Anyone can propose legislation from the floor. Party doesn't really enter into it as much as it does in larger states. It makes for a very practical and co operative political culture.
TASproductions at least in new Hampshire case, there is a vast majority of Republicans and libertarians moving here, that's why new hampshire was a purple state in 2016, and was only a few hundred vote difference between the candidates
Andy Tonge Brat kinda sucks but the surrounding towns are super nice. Any big city in vt sucks but also can’t think of an ice nh town for the life of me
@@WTFisDrifting in what possible way? Upstate NY is beautiful, but New Hampshires mountains blow away anything on the east coast, including the Smokey mountains
I spent part of my growing up years in NH, and my father is a native who still lives there. The term "flatlander" is also used in NH for anyone not from NH (or VT or ME). They also have some unpleasant names for people from MA too. My area there is not far from the Vermont border (Sullivan County, Newport), and I have been passing through back roads of both VT and NH for over 50 years, know both states very well. One interesting thing, from going to school in both NH and NY, is when colonial history is taught, textbooks in NH all show VT as part of NH, and ones in NY show it as part of NY. So neither state really "recognizes" the disputed claim of the other. When VT became a state, part of Southwestern NH seceded from NH and joined the new state of VT, only to be put back in NH by President Washington who decided that the Connecticut River would be the border between the two for the length of the state. So for a few months, part of NH had become part of VT. The original Capitol of VT was Windsor which literally sits on the Connecticut river and has one of the longest covered bridges in North America connecting it to NH. .
Also if you were to draw an arc in NH of 60 miles from the ocean and erase that part of the state, the rest of NH is actually more rural than VT. Most of the population live within 60 miles of the ocean.
I've never heard anyone in New Hampshire use the term Flatlander, except for people not originally from NH referring to themselves as flatlander. I always assumed it was more of a Maine and Vermont saying
I live in New Hampshire. Iv'e spent years hunting and hiking. A blessing and a curse is our weather. In the summer in can into the 90's but in the winter we can get a foot of snow in a day. Living on the VT NH border as well as near Mass dialogue differences are common. My opinion; out of stater's should stop hunting our deer, it hurts the population.
"stop hunting our deer"... 1) state parks belong to the entire U.S as they're funded by every American. 2) you run contrary to what the game oversight committees say and plan for... deer populations are decently managed but there is a general over abundance of deer that have little natural predators... they're encouraging larger cull numbers - you're obviously not a hunter and you obviously know nothing about Vermont deer management objectives.
If you're a hiker, It's New Hampshire that's the best. Not just better than Vermont, best on the east coast. The White Mountains are not only beautiful, but most peaks are above tree line and can be very dangerous at any time of the year. The views are spectacular.
Politically speaking VT began shifting to the left in 1950s. It had always had liberals within the GOP but it also had consevatives though more of the old right variety. The decline in power of the proctor family and the influx of New Yorkers ended the viability of such conservatives and gave the democrats life in the state for the first time in 100 years. The Republicans recovered but slowly declined losing a Senate seat to Pat Leahy in 1974, the Governorship several times the House seat in 1990 and the Presidential election in 1992. With the state moving left and the gop right they lost their last Senate seat in 2001 when jeffords went indy. and then retired opening the door for Sanders. In 2008 it became the most Democratic state in the country. The state actually trended towards the GOP in 2016 bc Hillary was a bad fit for the state and Trumps trade message but she still got 56%.
+Susie Francy I would say it started leaning left in the 60s via progressive Republicans but as polarization increased it became Dem leaning in the late 1980s masked of course by the gop landslides and safe D by 2000.
This is almost all good except for the last sentence. There was no GOP trend in 2016. Trump did worse than either Romney in 2012 or McCain 2008. Clinton did underperform though, in no small part because more than 5% of voters wrote in Bernie. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2008 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2012 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2016
@ David... A mostly accurate assessment btw, I would say VT began to turn the corner with respect to the " old school " conservatives with the advent of the hippy movement in the early part of the 60's commonly known as " granola crunchers and/or tree huggers ". Surprisingly, many of them were educated & entered local & state politics as well as their respective offspring. The real slide did indeed start in the earlier part of the 70's. From the 1980's on, the GOP in VT has become a thing of the past. We have the longest serving Senator in Patrick Leahy, ( term limits anyone? ) A socialist mayor of Burlington that is now a Senator. We have a current Republican governor in Democrat sheep's clothing. Both houses of VT under complete control by the Democratic Party incl. the LT Gov. VT is a Tax & Spend state. This is the Liberal Democratic Party philosophy running rampant in Vermont currently, sadly... :-(
+William Farr The caveat here though and the reason I placed it somewhat earlier is because the successful Reublicans post 1958, were either liberal or far,left like Prouty. Prior to that there were some conservative voices. As for democrat in sheeps clothing, there is an article I recently read that talked about how vt GOP spent like drunken socialists during the 30s.
While Chey is busy sippin mojitos and making sand castles at lake Winnipesaukee, I'm riding moose through the treacherous trails of Mt. Washington, while boiling my own piss just to stay alive.
If you have a family with children or are planning to both states are excellent, great skiing and snowboarding most schools have a program in elementary that take them every Friday after school. The Springs and Summers are perfect not too hot or humid ( for the most part ) And the Fall may actually be my favorite when all the leaves turn beautiful colors. If I was a billionaire I would still live here Southern NH is an amazingly wonderful place with good people.
Great video! You didn't seem to mention that NH has among the greatest firearms cultures in the US! We have no registries, permits, restrictions, or background checks (though FFL's here obey federal law and administer the NICS check). This results in NH being the safest state in the nation by almost every single measure of violence. Criminals don't mess with us too much because they know how likely it is that we're armed. This would historically be a similarity since Vermont also had never really had any gun laws and is also among the safest states in the US. Unfortunately, Governor Murphy recently signed a law placing lots of restrictions on firearms.
Okay hit me with more. I'm basically wanting to move from NY to NH as a gun law refugee. What regulations are there in NH aside from federal? Magazine capacity bans, folding stocks, etc.?
SEZ PUL nothing NH is constitutional carry too I think there’s a red flag bill that got pushed in the parkland hysteria aside from that live free or die dude
Actually, one of the most beautiful regions in New English is called the "Upper Connecticut River Valley," or just the "Upper Valley." That regions straddles both sides of the river; my family lived on both sides. It's as if the two sides of the river there have more interaction with each other than they do with their own respective states. Really, it's the best of both worlds.
@@RocketDaveA My family lived in that school district. My mother lived in Hanover, and my brother and his family lived in Norwich. His kids went to elementary school in Norwich (I don't know about middle school), and then went to Hanover High School.
Yep, that was New Hampshires dairy farm region after the sea past started getting built up. The two states are very interconnected. Even the main line rail jumps from one side of the river to the other lol.
I was born and raised in New Hampshire and I spend a lot of time in Vermont usually for work. Both are great states and are very similar. NH doesn’t have a sales tax while VT does. NH has a slightly larger population; Vermont is the second least populated state in the US. NH I feel has more of a balance of rural, suburban and “city” life. When I’m in Vermont, it feels like it’s mostly rural and than bam you’re in Burlington. Both have beautiful natural beauty and a lot of outdoor opportunities like hiking and skiing. It’s illegal to have billboards in VT! It’s easier to get around NH than VT I think. The major highway in NH (93) goes through the middle of the state from top to bottom so it’s easy to get around. Vermont has 2 major highways (89 and 91) 89 goes horizontally through the state at an angle from the Hanover border of NH up through Burlington VT and up north to the Canadian Border. 91 traces the edge of the state bordering NH and the CT River. Sure you get travel up the side of the state ok, but when you when to get somewhere inside the state, expect a fair amount of driving (but it has lovely views). NH I think has better cell coverage than VT. (VT has gotten better over the years) VT, unlike NH, has charging stations for electric cars which is cool. VT also has more farmers markets and really great fresh food. NH has pockets of them, but nothing compared to VT. I love both states :)
If you come to our great state, do not turn it into a cess pool of human shit and high taxes like y'all did in California. In New Hampshire, we are free.
This comparison is remiss in leaving out all mention of the Seabrook nuclear power plant In New Hampshire and the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, both of which are closed or being phased out. That's a similarity, but, the greatest difference between the states is the fact that heavily developed Boston suburbia exists in Nashua, New Hampshire. Vermont has no such spillover from the megalopolis, and that's the real reason N.H.'s population is much higher and its economy so different.
Bernie Sanders is not "from" Vermont, he lives "in" Vermont. I'm not from Missouri but I live in Missouri. Every time I open my mouth, everyone asks where I'm from. (Eastern Massachusetts.) I'd guess Bernie is from Brooklyn.
I'm a Vermont resident who visits NH probably 75 times per year. I can honestly say that I don't consider a NH resident an out of stater not do I feel like one when I'm in NH.
I was literally yelling YES YES YES YES YES!!!!!!!! when I saw that you made another state comparison video. Thank you so much for making my day Mr. Beat!
My fellow New Englanders. Let us not fight amongst ourselves. Our six states should stand united against New York, New Jersey and the rest of the country! Be brave, comrades!
New York, NJ, Pennsylvania, Maryland & Delaware should be considered part of New England in the modern day. The entire northeast should be called New England.
@@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty it is clear you aren’t a part of New England, because literally every New Englander that doesn’t like in Mass or CT hates all the other states and their flatlanders.
@@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty Hey buddy, you're lucky we keep Connecticut in the club. We sure as hell aren't adding anymore Yankee fans to New England.
04:15 Someone who has lived in both states for many years- I can say that the real political difference is that NH is more classically democratic, maybe even closer to center (with modern politics). Vermont has their population hubs in places like Burlington where most people are very far left.
A guy from my state(Ohio) said he simply bought a plane ticket and packed his bags. Within 24 hours of landing, he had a job, a roof over his head, and a feasible budget. Now that may be just one more example of classic buckeye ingenuity, but I suspect it also has to do with New Hampshire being an awesome and livable state.
The 231mph on Mt Washington, was the last number recorded before the weather station shack and its large chains holding it down, blew away... Also coldest temperature on Earth was there.
Even as a native New Hampshire resident, it's pretty neat to see places I've actually been to shown (Manchester and the Merrimack Outlet Mall). Love my state!
I lived in VT for the 1st 69 years of my life and have just moved to NH when I retired in January. The reasons were: No state income tax on Social Security and 401-K/IRA plans; lower proper taxes (I was paying $4,800 in VT and now, for the equivalent priced home, I'm paying $2,700); Electric Bill is 10 cent per kw as opposed to 10 cents up to 240 kw than 24 cents; roads are materially better (saving wear and tear on the vehicle and less time traveling); No Sales Tax; Gas is less (Now, $2.46 pg vs $2.79 pg) and fuel oil is less; prices of goods and services are less by approximately 20%; higher paying vs minimum wage jobs being offered; employment is available to all at a more livable wage; less drug addiction and selling of illegal drugs; state courts less discriminate towards fathers regarding custody and visitation of their children when divorcing;; better hunting and fishing; better hiking; and welcome manufacturing businesses vs projecting manufacturing businesses as negative to the welfare of the citizens. When I lived in VT, I rarely saw a NH plate on a car. Now in NH, about 25% of the plates are VT after working hours and weekends, due to shopping. In VT. I used to have to travel to NH to purchase goods, due to higher prices of goods and the distance needing to travel. Along the boarder between the two states, NH has about 95% of the retail business. Half of the VT residents travel to NH to purchase goods, especially large ticket items like appliances, outdoor equipment and recreational machinery. VT is trying to penalized people for doing this but people find ways around being caught like paying cash or having someone in NH by the goods for them. VT's politics is like that of Cuba, a 3rd world communist state. Democrats in NH believe in Capitalism. Democrats in VT believe in Socialism. The population of VT is decreasing every year. The VT House of Representatives has 42% of the non-Republicans born in NH state! Are you getting the picture now?
Your statement of many VT'ers going to NH to go shopping reminded me of a situation that happened in the mid '70's. NH has liquor stores close to it borders of the neighboring states. It makes quite a lot of revenue from tourists stopping to load up on booze. I lived in Keene, NH and I was sitting in a car waiting in the parking lot of the state liquor store. There were 2 or 3 cars parked out front of the store with CT plates and they were loading up with case after case of liquor. (CT had high taxes on liquor, so folks would drive up, load up and maybe make a little profit back home.) I noticed there was a car with CT plates sitting there with 2 guys in suits who never left the car. A few minutes later a NH state policeman drove in and went up to the 2 guys in suits. After about 2 minutes they drove off in a big hurry. I got out and went to the state cop and politely asked him who those 2 guys were. He told me they were CT state cops. They were taking the license plate numbers off the customers cars and would send them back to CT to have those folks stopped. It seems the NH Governer at the time, Mel Thompson, didn't like that too much so he ordered the state police to run the CT police out! LOL!
They will pay your moving expenses. You don't just get a check. And you have to already have a job where you can work remotely. No one actually read the article when that made national news, so everyone thinks you just get $10,000!
As an NH native this vid made me proud to be from a place that isnt completely fucked like commiefornia. The liberties you can enjoy up north is truly a spectacle in of itself not to mention national parks, food, landmarks, the history as well such an amazing place. too bad I'm in florida now :/
I've heard that the appalacian mountains were formed a long time ago when ancient continents came together to form pangaea, and were once as tall as the himalayas are today. I've also heard that the mountains of Norway and Scotland are part of the appalacians as well as are the laurentians and mountains of Newfoundland in Canada.
I chose Vermont and your right I’m called the flat lander at work . The Vermonters will keep reminding you of it as well.. NOTE you flatlanders like me . Just dont go around telling people you moved here from there .. they really don’t like outsider. The other thing is Vermonters stick with Vermonters. The outsiders will find each other it’s odd . But I really love it here I’m glad I’m here
Gator Guy Flatlander’s lol I moved here from New York, I’m originally from Canada. I’m still new to Vermont! As long as people are kind and good, I don’t care where they come from. Sending positive vibes to everyone!
NH native here. I read the comments and just wanted to say I love NH mountains, VT pastures, ME shorelines, MA humor, CT charm.... I could go on and on. In a nutshell, let's not be dicks and talk shit about other states. We're better than that... Live Free or Die...Bienvenue.... C'mon we just shout 'welcome'!!!!!! ❤ and p.s.- we all love weed
I've lived in NH for my entire life, It's super nice if a bit quiet. Moving to Mass. for college this fall, I'll miss NH but at least I'll still be close.
I don't know if it's still the case, but for many many years it was cheaper for a resident of New Hampshire to come to Massachusetts and pay out of state tuition rates at the University of Massachusetts, than it was to go to the University of New Hampshire and pay in-state tuition rates. The state is so very stingy, they terribly underfund their schools and universities, and have some of the highest tuition costs in the country.
I go to college in southern Vermont, and I go to the Walmart in Hinsdale NH all the time. It's weird how different the culture changes from Brattleboro, Vermont to Hinsdale lmao. You see Bernie signs in Brattleboro, and then Trump signs in Hinsdale.
You should have compared the University of Vermont to the University of New Hampshire. They are both expensive state universities but UNH is generally rated higher and is the safest in the country.
@@eddievonpapen6306 NH still has Dartmouth, which is both a better school in general, with a better medical school than anythingVermont has to offer. UNH used to be located in the same town as Dartmouth, so that could have something to do with a medical school never being established.
@@eddievonpapen6306 New Hampshire has several large stand alone hospitals that have been around for well over a hundred years, whereas Vermont kind of required a state subsidized medical facility if they wanted something top tier. Otherwise the whole state would have likely just become the domain of Dartmouth Hitchcock. UNH was also originally based in the same town as Dartmouth, which already had a world-class medical school and facility, so maybe that has something to do with a medical school never being established.
We call them Flatlanders in NH too. At least the people I knew always did. Also NH is the most heavily forested state in the nation with the most trees per capeta
Having been to both states, there are so many good things about each. The states both remind me of pizza slices, and Vermont is sort of like an upside down pizza while New Hampshire is like a right-side up one. It's like a Pizza State Yin-Yang type of thing. I love it
I grew up in Vermont and found it to be more expensive than New Hampshire. Not paying tax on sales or state tax on earnings is where it helps out. Yes property taxes and registration taxes may seem high but they are over all still cheaper than Vermont.
As an ex-Vermonter, I would recommend visiting in Vermont, not living there. Visit during the spring when it's not humid as heck and you're not dodging leaf peepers in the fall!
@@porcupinester im 50 and have lived in NH my whole life.for the past 15 yrs ive worked in vt.theres work to be had in vt if u just look for it.and as far as living there its very quiet and peaceful.that makes it a great place to live.
New Hampshire actually began as a landlocked state. Before the colony became a state, from the coast to Exeter, (The revolutionary state capitol), and along a nondescript line out to the town of Milford, the land was then part of of the original Massachusetts Bay Colony, along with the entire state of Maine. Vermont to is and always has been, a left-leaning marxist-communist state. The people they decide to allow to move there are so looney tunes with their communes and kumbayah attitudes, that New Hampshirites don't tend to associate with their fruity ideas!
As a New Hampshirite I approve this video in advance! Edit: The skin thing is completely true. In school, I was often the only Asian in my class. Also if you don't want high taxes, don't move to Portsmouth, NH. The property taxes will eat you alive
I've always lived in New Hampshire but have been to Vermont plenty of times, both beautiful states. New Hampshire is definitely more chill though, like you can legally drive without a seatbelt over 18 here. But Vermont people are over all pretty chill, and they make damn good maple syrup...
I used to live in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada (just north of the border) and we would sometimes go skiing in Jay Peak. Always a fun experience, very welcoming people. Some employees would even answer us in french! Stowe and Killington were also very nice ski resorts. We are jealous of your ski mountains.
While in NH you could mention the Atlantic Ocean, lighthouses, sailing, boating, lobstering, tuna fishing, beaches, Isles of Shoals and coastal towns of Portsmouth, Rye, New Castle and North Hampton. The handsome colonial architecture and gardens not to be missed.
Which state is better? Vermont or New Hampshire? What did I leave out but should have mentioned about either state?
NH has the largest state legislature in the USA. For some reason, we New Hampshirites feel the need for 424 legislators.
Defnaitly New Hampshire
I'm from Vt and I'd say new Hampshire jk Vermont a lot better
I think I would rather live in New Hampshire because it is not landlocked, has more people, and it is an important state for presidential elections. Although Ben And Jerry's Ice Cream is from Vermont.
Oh Donna.
As someone who was born and lives in New Hampshire... Let’s settle our differences and thank god we don’t live in Mass
Edit: One year later from my original comment. For reasons beyond my control I have ended up moving to Mass... I have now confirmed first hand that everything said about Massholes in the comments is true. Please send your prayers as I am slowly transformed into the very thing I feared. Everyday I continually plan my shopping trip to NH and I often find myself driving like an idiot. I even can’t help but think about vacationing in NH only to disrupt the locks. I believe it’s to late for me to be saved. Goodbye NH.. (slowly sees license plate changing from NH to Mass)
Connor Kelley I second that
still stuck in Mass but I got family up in NH, can't wait to escape this hellhole to go literally one state north to heaven lmao
Nothing worse than a masshole
I'm from Vermont, but I can definitely agree with that lol
Western mass isn’t so bad
This is probably the first time I’ve seen a video that acknowledges the existence of Vermont.
Wow you must live in a different world or have a real low education it's in one of the first English colonies wow some people you must live in new york or something similar
Christopher French dude I’m literally from Vermont. I was simply saying it was surprising to hear my state mentioned in a youtube video when it is usually ignored. Also vermont was not one of the first English colonies. It used to be part of New York, then became its own country before it joined the union as the 14th state.
I agree! I was born in New Hampshire and now live in VT and never hear Vermont in ANYTHING.
@@Dylan-wi6lp I know. Where are you from? Vermont. Is that in Canada? Um, no, close, try again.
@Dylan 2007 I live in vermont and sometimes I end up telling people in discord about it and some of them dont even know it exists. I’m talking about other people who live in America.....
We don't measure distance in miles. My buddy's house is 20 minutes east, my work is 5 minutes away and it's only 3 hours to Canada.
Lol ive always lived here in nh- do other people usually measure in miles? XD
@@learnart2gether apparently. Who knew?
Connecticut native here & I also do it by time!
Is that not a normal thing? I thought everyone measured distance in time haha
@@rawsaucerobert nope, some people actually measure in miles and tell you about it. Like, who looks at the odometer? But we all look at the time, right!?
As a Vermonter i’m just glad someone acknowledges our existence
agreed
Thank gosh
Why Vermont has always been the most independent state in America
Vermonts a cool place only been once tho, ive gone to maine and nh much more
@@jacobbutters8818 I was born and raised in Vermont it is nice but I left 25 yrs ago
People need to stop acknowledging that New Hampshire and Vermont exists I like the quiet like the low crime rate
Your racist
@@duckcluck123 And I guess we found the racist.
@@duckcluck123 completely agree, people calling you racist are mindless NPCs who are programmed to react that way and can't think for themselves :)
John Linsky Saying that the best part about them is the fact that they are mostly white is racist.
@@drowldr Its not racist to prefer to be around your own, or to notice differences in crime statistics. Denying reality leads to more suffering.
Vermont has a lot of ex-New Yorkers. New Hampshire has a lot of Ex-Massachusetts residents. Geology is quite different too.
New Hampshire is where all the granite comes from for the Civil War memorials, not to sure what the comments ore is for Vermont though.
I don't get it in NH the Massachusetts people are very rude... I don't understand why.
Kyrgyz Jeff: Vermont has a lot of marble. There's still actually an active quarry in Rutland where they have a museum and working sculptors. Most of the marble you see in federal buildings and monuments in Washington DC comes from Vermont. Including busts of all the Presidents.
Because they have the money to go to NH, buy huge land and houses, and lord it over the locals.
Warriors and Stranger Things Are Bae
They are more from the Boston area probably. Guns are highly restricted there and an armed society is a polite society.
Western Massachusetts is mostly rural(ish) or springfield (where illegal guns are easy to get). An armed society tends to be politer.
You forgot to mention 1 thing about New Hampshire: Most people come here just to buy fireworks.
Every time I see a Mass. plate I say "Thanks for driving through the toll! Don't forget to stop at the liquor store on your way home!"
Or buy LITERALLY EVERYTHING because sales tax
I only step foot into that state for no sales tax, cheaper booze and cigarettes, and fireworks.
And we appreciate your business!
Yea do business with us and go home. Sounds perfect
Vermont became the first to abolish slavery in 1777, while it was still independent, before it joined the United States as the 14th state in 1791. These state jurisdictions thus enacted the first abolition laws in the Americas. Vermont had also made sure to give African American men the right to vote. Pretty good addition to this list I'd say lol.
Slavery wasn't even a thing in Vermont, that's probably why.
@@greyk610 Was it in NH?
well that makes me feel better about this crappy place
simply.alexia sounds like a racist New Yorker who has never travelled outside the burroughs of NYC.
You poor thing. I'm so sorry to hear that.
@@richardworkman5416 i live in vermont & i’m far from racist. lol. i’m happy vermont eas one of the first places to abolish slavery.
VT if you're a stoner, NH if you're a drinker
what if you're both?
Jon W There are plenty of border towns and Massachusetts exists.
Life long resident of NH and a stoner. Lots of stoners in NH...
We're both of those plus heroin. I bet we're also one of the highest for depression.
Pretty much sums it up
NH native here. We're better for certain, but those Vermonters aren't too shabby either ;) They're pretty good neighbors, but you *do* need to look out for those crazy Mainers!
Oak Knob Farm No it’s those Massholes
Ya guy
Oak Knob Farm lol I'm a NH too!
I live in the southeast, so we get both Maine-iacs and Massholes over here. I have to be careful what I say, however, my wife is from Massachusetts ;)
@ Wiccan Moon: Howdy, neighbor!
People here in Oregon LOVE Vermont. There's a small obsession with the idea of moving there and living off grid.
It does seem there are so many similarities between the two, in terms of culture.
Mr. Beat That's what I hear. Bernie Sanders sure is popular over here in Portland.
Stefan Milo
Actually after seeing Oregon and the political divisiveness I decided that Vermont was going to be my home years ago at that time it was politically cohesive unlike Oregon
sitdowndogbreath you're right about that. I've only lived in Oregon for 3 years but I was very surprised by how divided it is.
Stefan Milo , vermont and oregon are two strong progressive states, but oregon is nice too , why moving to vermont if ypu have portland and springfield!
NH is also the only state in the country where you don't have to wear a seatbelt when you're over 18.
*Live Free Or Die Intensifies*
Or a motorcycle helmet.
Yeah but don't smoke weed or grow your own, they will arrest you. They don't even have normal bars, how free is that. I have also been pulled over multiple times and never been ticketed, just harassed. My good friend was hit on his motorcycle by a man who was clearly intoxicated but the towny police gave him a hall pass and threatens to arrest me because I called them on it. Every state and country, Canada that borders NH weed is legal. Live Free or Die is just some nonsense saying someone came up with. Vermont is much more free as is most of New England.
Live free, and most likely die while doing it
Live Free *And* Die
No seatbelts you say? This is what I call *TRUE FREEDOM*
If you ever have trouble remembering which state is which - Vermont is shaped like a V (at least when oriented correctly).
That's literally how I finally remembered the different between the two. However, I like to look at the world like this: vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/althistory/images/0/0a/Possible_Sideways_Earth_map.png/revision/latest?cb=20140819061626
Aren't they both V ish?
New Hampshire is more A ish. Or upside V ish.
Vermont is also on the left, physically, as well as politically....
KB is errwurr
All northern New Englanders call outsiders, "Flatlanders "
Because the three northern New England states are mostly hills and mountains just like West Virginia.
Robert Preskop They sure do. I lived in New Hampshire for twenty years. Mountains everywhere.
No they don't.
Flatlanders is a term also used by folks in Colorado and Utah
Am I the only one that thinks it is highly ironic that the region that is most renowned, politically as the bastion of leftism, has a strong in group preference?
New Hampshire is the only state without a seat belt law for people over 18 and has state run liquor stores
Liquor stores on the highway!
MrTwistawrench: Yup. There are several New Hampshire state liquor stores that are in highway rest areas. I find it funny that considering all their blather about the virtues of private enterprise, the state government runs a monopoly on the sale of alcohol other than wine and beer.
SnowFire:. They're also the only state that doesn't require you to carry liability insurance on your car. And a lot of people don't. And then they drive down into Massachusetts, cause crashes, and then the other driver, who was not at fault, ends up having to pay for the repairs to their own car. Everybody always whines about the illegal immigrants driving without insurance. I've never had a problem with them. On the other hand I have had two cars totaled when they were hit by a New Hampshire drivers who did not have insurance. And since they were old cars I didn't have collision insurance. So, I was left without a car. And had to scrape up enough money to buy another one. That's a really big deal when you're a college student, who needs your car to commute to school and work.
And then they blather on about personal responsibility while driving around without making sure that they are able to properly compensate someone to whomthey cause harm. They have no ability or intention of doing so. Even if you manage to win in court, it's basically impossible to collect damages.
Live free or die
SnowFire state run liquor stores that sounds like socialism.
NH actually has a good reason not to pay our reps: we want them to be productive members of society and have jobs and not just do normal politician stuff and not really contribute anything like people in the federal house of reps.
90% of state reps in NH are retired people who can afford to do just that. So doesn't really work out anyway lol
We also have the largest state rep in the entire country.
Its the largest because its a bunch of rich people in the state that can afford to not be paid anything.
@@kaylutz5824 my town's state rep is a middle school guidance councilor. I believe one councilor is a hunter or farmer or something.
@@chilkootsailor492 and how close are they to concord?
When your hometown gets a shoutout for having a low cost of living and you're working two jobs to pay rent
Well that just sounds like the rest of the country. It's what they call "The American Dream." /s
My hometown in Enosburg Falls, Vermont. Personally, in my opinion, it sucks here. Nothing happens and it’s always ridiculously cold in the winter, and sometimes too too hot in the summer.
I was living in new York city for long time, now I am living in new Hampshire..wishing go back to new York city.
Nothing here. No jobs opportunity.,
@@Tyler-qj8ts I live in St. J, its fine here with a movie theater and some ok restaurants... Also one of the best high schools in the country. Ultimately, Vermont in general is more of a retirement state then one for the youth.
@@miguelinamencia3710 Theres plenty of jobs. What line of work do you do?
I grew up in New Hampshire and have always loved Vermont. Maine and Massachusetts are also great. I've spent less time in Rhode Island and Connecticut, but they seem cool too. The provincialism gets pretty real in New England, which is silly because they're much more similar than they are different. It can be expensive, but it's a great part of the world to live in.
True that, great to hear your perspective. I think provincialism is an issue everywhere really.
Rhode island is the only one that's different ...lol it's not even an island ...haha
New England as a whole is actually pretty interesting.
@@beejohn1016 Its not, but we sure wish it were! LOL Rhode island is the red headed step child of New England , that we tried to give up for adoption, but nobody wanted!
@@inconnu4961 Red-headed kids are adorable. Don't say mean things.
You didn’t mention how NH has a “Stand Your Ground” Law and VT has a “Duty To Retreat Law”, but that could fit in the category of politics mentioned in the video
Vermont is debatably the most left wing state in the union, while New Hampshire is the epicentre of New England, midly liberal, fiscally conservative, Republicanism.
If someone breaks in my house there's no way in hell I'm retreating.
Idc what the law is, I do not have a duty to allow someone to waltz into my home and take whatever they want.
legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/section/13/053/02305 I suggest you do some research before commenting on social spaces. 16 year old individuals are allowed to "constitutionally carry", there are no NFA restrictions, and no permits required for purchase, you just need to be 21.
@Kevdawg Sutton III% Pro Gun-Rights Activist It's not illegal to possess higher capacity magazines in the state of VT.
Vermont does not require a permit for concealed carry though.
Californians: I wish California had lower crime rates and no air pollution 😢
Me: *Laughs in New Hampshire*
@Brandon Taylor you spelt California wrong
Your so lucky 😭
Coal covered hillbilly Stop making me jealous 😭
i moved from nh to ca. love the weather here, nothing else...
Legal weed is expensive. It's decriminalized here and cops don't usually bother an adult with less than a "personal use" amount.... 3/4 oz by law. Unless you have a scale, little baggies and a wad of cash your fine. I do wish we could cultivate.
Also, New Hampshire has the death penalty. Vermont does not
Lee Harvey Oswald true
The death penalty got repealed in New Hampshire on May 30th 2019
Mat 727 New Hampshire has one person on death row but they haven't had an execution since 1937
Not anymore
NH had hanging as a death penalty until it was abolished outright. Adultery is also a crime
Vermont, New Hampshire, either one of them is far better than Massholechusetts
Agreed. I live in mass and hate it here. Everyone is rude, prices and taxes are insane, it’s too close to everything. I live in Rutland. What once was a nice small farm town you can now find drug needles in the park. There are home break ins, murders, I don’t even want to go on. Idiot drivers even here. There’s been about 20 accidents in the past 6 years in front of my house. 2 of which someone died, 3 of which a car flipped over and landed on our front lawn.
@@jonathantanasi2557 Well move to the Hill towns in West. mass! You have all the benefits of living near civilization without the zoo-like atmosphere!
Massive-two-shits
Unless you want to make money.
I live in northeast MA almost on the NH border and I wish I lived in NH not that its unsafe or anything, it just feels really bleak.
Because of this video my wife and I did some research on New Hampshire. Found an awesome job and moved out of Illinois. Love New Hampshire !
Please don't vote for the same kind of people that run Illinois, we would like to keep NH nice.
Aw, I hate Illinois laws and policies but love everything else. I am pretty jelly of you tho.
@@WaltzwithAI If you want to keep NH nice you need for vote for left wing candidates, progressive only. No conservatives, no moderates, no libertarians. This applies to all 50 states.
Anyone else live in New Hampshire?
Belknap county
I do it’s trash. There’s nothing fun to do here. I’m in Laconia area.
Rockingham County
Yeah but live in a small farm like town so dont really know what the rest is like
Kevin Ahearn me
NH does have a sales tax, but it's limited to prepared food and lodgings, ie skinning the tourists and leaf peepers. That's why there's so few Wal Marts in VT. "Monters use NH's. On the weekends, the Wally World parking lot in Littleton is nothing but VT license plates.
Fundamental difference:
VT: Come see how pretty we are. Please spend some money
NH: Welcome to NH. Leave your money. Go away.
Grace Skerp: ever notice that two of the three nicest cities in all of New Hampshire are on the Vermont border? Keene and Hanover. They're are also two of the most liberal. Third place goes to Portsmouth, which of course is on border with Maine...
On the other hand, Manchester is god-awful tacky, dirty, and filled with nothing but strip malls, big box stores and car dealerships.
I'd say it's more because Hanover and Keene are both college towns. Dartmouth pre-dates the Revolution and in the US anything that pre-dates that incident is ancient. Both towns have a productive purpose and diversity. Plus Hanover has a significant medical center.
Manchester on the other now is just a tax haven and bedroom for Mass. It's a depressing sight all those abandoned red brick factories along the Merrimack. *Those were the days my friend; we thought they'd never end...
Portsmouth? Maybe because it sits on our 17 miles of sea shore? Point of pride or keeps us from becoming Vermont East - the other New England land locked state? ;)
Thank you, james c.
Ah ha ha ha ha...Grace, so true! Up until 3 years ago, Bennington Vermont had the reputation of having the smallest Walmart in Walmart's chain. Now they have a superstore. It certainly needed it.
Pywaket Pilot,if you think those are the nicest cities in NH, you don't know NH. The best cities in NH are Berlin and Claremont. Laconia is a distant third.
I live in Vermont it’s nice here but the reason why the population is mostly older people is because once people here graduate high school they move out of state because there is not much to do here other than nature stuff
Yup. Once you get out of college, it's all downhill. Job market is a joke too. Kind of a depressing state to live in.
Is it a good place to visit
@@erikarommel so it's relatively chill and safe right?
ᎮOSEIƊON FC it’s the safest place in the country as far as crime is concerned
I did a hike on Mt. Killington in Rutland on Saturday, so I drove through a decent amount of Vermont.. Beautiful state, but man does it look boring.. I was even telling my friend, the only thing to do here is hike
One thing not mentioned is how the Connecticut river border is unique. Most river borders between states are divided down the middle of the river but the Vermont/New Hampshire border at the Connecticut river is marked at the river bank on the Vermont side meaning that New Hampshire “owns” all of the Connecticut river where it borders Vermont. When you cross a bridge from New Hampshire to Vermont, you are not in Vermont until you reach the other side of the bridge.
Not to be a tool but what does that mean?
@@johnlozauskas778 New Hampshire is responsible for the maintenance of all the bridges.
Maryland owns all the Potomac river Virginia has none.
NH makes the most sense when compared to Vermont AND Maine. Maine is very conservative, Vermont is very liberal. NH is the perfect balance of both and is very protective of personal liberties.
I LOVE NH. Moved there about 7 years ago and couldn't imagine living anywhere else
How do you deal with the dark frozen winter?
I wouldn’t say Maine is “very conservative”, if anything it’s about as conservative as NH
NH is awesome it’s way more relaxed than MA
Elizabeth we snuggle a bunny....lol
Maine is actually pretty comparable to NH as far as laws go but they tax a lot more
A an NH resident, who has lived in VT, I can pretty fairly that NH fully embodies the state motto of “Live free or die” far more than VT. It’s a relationship to tourism that allows business owners to thrive while providing the consumer an unforgettable experience, all the while the 9% prepared food tax funds our government. Outside the economy NH is extremely lax, with some of the loosest firearms laws in the nation (THE loosest in New England), the lack of a seatbelt law for those over 18, and a slew of other lax regulations. It’s a beautiful state, and the cold keeps the flatlanders away for 8 months of the year.
Well, they come to ski.
Live free or die is a joke. You can’t even tint your car windows in NH.
@@mike-uw6wt that's a federal law. State has no control over that.
@@mike-uw6wt Do you know how effortless it is to get a tint waiver from your PCP?
NH has better tourism industry because y’all let flatlanders in. As left and Vermont may be we don’t want any flatlanders anywhere near here. We’ll be cordial if we see you but secretly wish for an 8 month winter to drive you away
Live free or die New Hampshire 👍👍
Wes I’m worried about
a state that mentions death on the license plate!-George Carlin
Jon Stewart: Don't forget "Famous Potatoes!". As the great George Carlin said, "I think that the truth lies somewhere in between, hopefully closer to famous potatoes."
Oddly enough, they don't necessarily live up to that motto. Back in the 1970s there was a person who covered that up on his license plate because he was, as I recall, a Quaker, and he felt that he was being forced to say something he did not believe. The case ended up going all the way to the Supreme Court, who found in his favor, arguing that no citizen should be required by the government to express somethig they did not believe, and in fact was in direct violation of the both their freedom of speech and freedom of religion. I'm pretty sure the decision was actually 9-0, as it was a pretty blatant attack on some things pretty clearly in the Bill of Rights.
Of course, given 10 years, they managed to forget that and went after another person. That one didn't make it all the way to the Supreme Court, only to Federal District Court who quoted the ruling from the 70s.
Wes YA!!!
Im worried you guys are gotta bring an angry mob for being a puertorican moving to NH is true you hate anyone who not a white guy.
Every year I travel from my home in Manchester england to see my relatives in Manchester NH
Manchester 😬
@@cici-tb4ml which one haha
@@Joe-gg4nq lmaoo NH, just visited and it's a nice city, but theres a lot if drugs and a lot of panhandlers
@Purple Haze Do you fly... United?
@@thankfulfool too right haha
I'm probably moving to New Hampshire once I get out of the Army.
I read your name as Alexander Fortnite.
What has happened to me?
Why not VT?
If u do move to Berlin homes are cheap their
Fatoosh because there’s no jobs within 150 miles
@@stephens9462 that's true
Virginia... and West Virginia.
Yes, this is because of Fallout 76.
Yes, I want this done.
I used to live in NH, moved to VT because of the cheaper cost of living and higher quality of interaction. Based of my experiences VT jobs pay better because even if you don't have a degree, there is less competition so your skills are more valuable. I'm pleased with my move, I just miss the ocean every so often.
Let me guess - you are a low income, non-property owner.
@@snorfallupagus6014 ignorant response, but no. I owned a 3 bedroom 2 bath property on 10 acres just north of Montpelier, taxes went through the roof in 2021 as did oil so it was too expensive to even heat our house and we decided there was nothing keeping us there and sold our house.
I lived in Manchester for 6 years before moving to Seattle. I do miss a number things about New Hampshire. Specifically I miss the fall colors and Hampton Beach.
And low crime rates😂
Hampton beach of all beaches? Lmao
I’m from Seattle and thinking about moving to New Hampshire. How did you like Manchester?
@@joeplanter7959 Hard to say because it was 2007. I left Manchester to come to Seattle. Honestly both places have their ups and downs. Employment security and Manchester is far less than Seattle but now it much cheaper (not the case in 07')
Vermont actually means green mountain in French
Chandler Kane Rlly? Wow, I didn't know that. Thank you for informing me and giving me something interesting.
Ver=green. /mont=Mtn ...Merci
Blanc Mont. // White Mtn.
Vert Montaigne
It actually means get off my lawn in French.
It seems to me that new hempshire is bigger in population is due to spill over from greater Boston.
That's a really good point. Manchester's just a one hour drive from Boston, after all.
And economically it is more diverse and modern than Vermont. Vermont is mainly an agricultural and tourist based economy, meaning there are less jobs and less people needed.
As a native to New Hampshire I can there are plenty of people from both Mass and Vermont who commute to New Hampshire. According to a survey down by NH around 30,000 people from Massachusetts works in Nh and 18,000 from Maine
It's because of that "spill over" that New Hampshire is now a blue state instead of the conservative bastion it used to be.
It's notable that the two southern/eastern counties in New Hampshire (Hillsborough and Rockingham Counties) combine for over half of New Hampshire's population. By themselves, those two counties have a higher population than the entire state of Vermont.
“Lighter skin” lol just say that they’re white af 😂
@Sir Knight Errant How is that racist? You need to stop playing the race card over everything.
Sir Knight Errant calm down dude.
Sir Knight Errant “darker skin” lol just say they black asf
Sir Knight Errant there i reversed it still not offensive
Sir Knight Errant what’s wrong with pointing out that someone is pale or dark?
What did I learn: New Hampshire has an Atlantic coast...for 18 miles.
It's really pretty. Just avoid Hampton Beach and you'll love it.
@@iShavedYesterday hey now I grew up going to Hampton Beach yes its shit now but at least its there
And we have a 100-mile coastline with lake Champlain
@@nohateoneday yeah but we have lake wineypasuckey :(
Don't suppose the coast cares!
Strafford county, New Hampshire, beautiful place and perfect location, 1 hour from Boston, 45 minutes from the ocean, an hour from the mountains, and 20 minutes from Maine.
You had me untill the last one lol.
I’m also in Strafford county!
@@notslimjim9613 Dover, you?
Visiting (vacationing) in Vermont and living here is two totally different things. People visit and comment (like yesterday) and say wow what a beautiful place and they're right but you can't make a living off of scenic views and hiking. I've lived here for 17 years from suburban Philadelphia. Careful, don't get caught up in your dreams about Vermont being some wonderland. If you come you better be educated and or have some real money in your pocket. Good jobs are hard to come by. There is barely any population growth. Graduates move away and don't come back. This video is accurate but don't fantasize about coming up here and living in some tree house. Just a warning that's all.
yeah im about to go to collage and i totally plan on moving the hell outta this place XD
Hello, I'm planning to move to Vermont from NYC. Employment is not a problem. Am I in for a "culture shock" when it comes to socializing? How friendly are Vermonters to Flatlanders? Any advice is welcome. Many thanks
@@maxwellperry1903 I'm stuck here. Pretty sure I'm gonna die in this state but I don't want to.
@@uberbabe585 People are usually pretty friendly. Racism isn't that bad but it's here for sure. Just watch out for the slow drivers I guess. Lot of them are afraid of yellow lights and tend to go below the speed limits at times.
@@uberbabe585 Vermont is full of racists & is boring as fuck! Populated by inbred assholes who are cold, cruel, and insensitive!
“Live Free or Die!” Love my state
The only place in New England where the spirit of the Revolution still lives
So if I choose to not live free, then I die?
Onion juice exactly 😎
Onion juice no you move to Vermont
Haha yah move to Vermont if you don't get. 603 for life. Everybody owns guns here
The photos of the Connecticut River are from atop Mt. Sugarloaf in Sunderland, a small town in Western Massachusetts.
Total great video !!! Thanks, Mr. Beat!
as a maine native, i have to take new hampshire’s side.
U guys are a breed of your own I'll leave it at that 🤣🤣🤣
As a New Hampshire native, i have to thank you XD
They’re speaking literally
@@shaneshane8482 :O? who is?
@@learnart2gether - the author of the comment (: Maine is right beside New Hampshire, so they literally have to take New Hampshire’s side
New Hampshire is the only state in the union that can declare war per it's Constitution....
New Hampshire legislature has the greatest ratio of representatives to citizens in the country, go representative democracy!
New Hampshire maple syrup is waaay better, due to our fancy NH maple tree isotopes...
New Hampshire has Mt Washington, Vermont does not.
New Hampshire, Vermont (and Maine) are places where time is not measured in days or months, but in the passing of seasons.
Surprisingly, I have noticed the natives of New Hampshire have no accent.
The people of New Hampshire outlasted The Old Man of the Mountain, which fell 05/03/03...
(Although, there were no actual witnesses to his fall, and there are persistent rumors he is just on a long vacation visiting relatives on Easter Island).
Life is better in the "Shire" !
Ask any Hobbit !
What do we have in common?
We both don't like Massachusetts... !
Fuckin masshole drivers.
Native Vermonter here from the number one maple syrup producing county in the state. I beg to differ on that comment...lol
I'm from Vermont, our syrup is the best.
Maine syrup sets the bar, y'all can debate for silver
John Bemery and the lowest per capital cost of government in the US!
The biggest difference is Boston. One-third of people in NH live in the Boston metro area and two-thirds live in the Boston combine statical area. The reason NH politics is more libertarian is people move to NH to get out of MA. The reason NH is wealthier and more populace is people can work in Boston. The reason we have more industry was mill owners from Boston. That's why NH and VT were very similar before the creation of suburbs and are still very similar once you leave Greater Boston.
I literally live on the Connecticut River and see Vermont every morning. I commute through Vermont every day and I have to say, I LOVE New Hampshire. Haha
If we’re going the route of states with similar shapes and culture that lean to the left, why not try states with similar shapes and culture that lean to the right? Such as...
North Dakota and South Dakota
Alabama and Mississippi
Kansas and Nebraska
I like all three of those. Since I live in Kansas, though, I have a hard time choosing if I'd compare my state to Nebraska or Missouri. There's so much violent history between Kansas and Missouri.
Wyoming and Colorado!
I don't know if 'left' or 'right' really works in the traditional sense in either place, Rural New England ( and both states have very rural cultures ) is very different from the rest of the country in that every town is run by direct democracy, and has been for centuries. All the business of a town is debated and voted on by all of the participating electorate in a big room on a cold night in March. Everyone who wants to talk does, and every expenditure is voted on. Everyone knows Roberts Rules of Order. Anyone can propose legislation from the floor. Party doesn't really enter into it as much as it does in larger states. It makes for a very practical and co operative political culture.
TASproductions at least in new Hampshire case, there is a vast majority of Republicans and libertarians moving here, that's why new hampshire was a purple state in 2016, and was only a few hundred vote difference between the candidates
A few others
Kentucky vs Tennessee
California vs Texas
Carolinas
Wyoming vs Colorado
Louisiana vs Arkansas
Pennsylvania vs New York
After moving to NH and travelling to the Brattleboro area for work....I gotta say I MUCH prefer New Hampshire.
Travel to northern Vermont or the Burlonton area. It'll change your mind!
that's because Brattleboro literally sucks lol trust me I know
Yeah Brattleboro is the worst... In fact a lot of the "bigger" places in southern VT are trash. Brattleboro, Rutland, White River, etc
Nicholas Howe yeah southern VT just kinda sucks imo.
Andy Tonge Brat kinda sucks but the surrounding towns are super nice. Any big city in vt sucks but also can’t think of an ice nh town for the life of me
I’ll be retiring in 14 years from upstate NY and NH looks perfect!!
Funny because driving through up state Ny and Pa I always thought of NH but better.
@@WTFisDrifting in what possible way? Upstate NY is beautiful, but New Hampshires mountains blow away anything on the east coast, including the Smokey mountains
I spent part of my growing up years in NH, and my father is a native who still lives there. The term "flatlander" is also used in NH for anyone not from NH (or VT or ME). They also have some unpleasant names for people from MA too. My area there is not far from the Vermont border (Sullivan County, Newport), and I have been passing through back roads of both VT and NH for over 50 years, know both states very well.
One interesting thing, from going to school in both NH and NY, is when colonial history is taught, textbooks in NH all show VT as part of NH, and ones in NY show it as part of NY. So neither state really "recognizes" the disputed claim of the other. When VT became a state, part of Southwestern NH seceded from NH and joined the new state of VT, only to be put back in NH by President Washington who decided that the Connecticut River would be the border between the two for the length of the state. So for a few months, part of NH had become part of VT. The original Capitol of VT was Windsor which literally sits on the Connecticut river and has one of the longest covered bridges in North America connecting it to NH. .
Also if you were to draw an arc in NH of 60 miles from the ocean and erase that part of the state, the rest of NH is actually more rural than VT. Most of the population live within 60 miles of the ocean.
Not fond of the Claremont/Newport area. Kind of a shitty area.
Claremont sucks, but in Newport all the druggies keep to themselves. I'll ealk down South Main St. in the middle of the night without a worry.
I've never heard anyone in New Hampshire use the term Flatlander, except for people not originally from NH referring to themselves as flatlander. I always assumed it was more of a Maine and Vermont saying
I live in New Hampshire. Iv'e spent years hunting and hiking. A blessing and a curse is our weather. In the summer in can into the 90's but in the winter we can get a foot of snow in a day. Living on the VT NH border as well as near Mass dialogue differences are common. My opinion; out of stater's should stop hunting our deer, it hurts the population.
"stop hunting our deer"... 1) state parks belong to the entire U.S as they're funded by every American. 2) you run contrary to what the game oversight committees say and plan for... deer populations are decently managed but there is a general over abundance of deer that have little natural predators... they're encouraging larger cull numbers - you're obviously not a hunter and you obviously know nothing about Vermont deer management objectives.
I live in Washington New Hampshire the highest town center in state we've had snow on Mother's Day for the last 2 years
How can you hand the "more rugged terrain" distinction to Vermont? NH has 48 peaks over 4000 feet compared to VT's 5.
Yeah NH is rugged AF as soon as you go above the lakes region. The white mountains are nuts
Agreed. Especially NH's White Mtns....much more rugged than the Greens we have in VT.
@Ammon Herrera: Now you're the one making a mountain out of a molehill.
@Ammon Herrera
No one wants to live in your shitty desert.
They can't wait to flee.
@@lockandloadlikehell Desert? Could be Alaska
If you're a hiker, It's New Hampshire that's the best. Not just better than Vermont, best on the east coast. The White Mountains are not only beautiful, but most peaks are above tree line and can be very dangerous at any time of the year. The views are spectacular.
Politically speaking VT began shifting to the left in 1950s. It had always had liberals within the GOP but it also had consevatives though more of the old right variety. The decline in power of the proctor family and the influx of New Yorkers ended the viability of such conservatives and gave the democrats life in the state for the first time in 100 years. The Republicans recovered but slowly declined losing a Senate seat to Pat Leahy in 1974, the Governorship several times the House seat in 1990 and the Presidential election in 1992. With the state moving left and the gop right they lost their last Senate seat in 2001 when jeffords went indy. and then retired opening the door for Sanders. In 2008 it became the most Democratic state in the country. The state actually trended towards the GOP in 2016 bc Hillary was a bad fit for the state and Trumps trade message but she still got 56%.
+Susie Francy I would say it started leaning left in the 60s via progressive Republicans but as polarization increased it became Dem leaning in the late 1980s masked of course by the gop landslides and safe D by 2000.
+David As and example Republican Winston Prouty was more leftwing the many of todays Dem Senators.
This is almost all good except for the last sentence. There was no GOP trend in 2016. Trump did worse than either Romney in 2012 or McCain 2008. Clinton did underperform though, in no small part because more than 5% of voters wrote in Bernie. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2008
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2012
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Vermont,_2016
@ David... A mostly accurate assessment btw, I would say VT began to turn the corner with respect to the " old school " conservatives with the advent of the hippy movement in the early part of the 60's commonly known as " granola crunchers and/or tree huggers ". Surprisingly, many of them were educated & entered local & state politics as well as their respective offspring. The real slide did indeed start in the earlier part of the 70's. From the 1980's on, the GOP in VT has become a thing of the past. We have the longest serving Senator in Patrick Leahy, ( term limits anyone? ) A socialist mayor of Burlington that is now a Senator. We have a current Republican governor in Democrat sheep's clothing. Both houses of VT under complete control by the Democratic Party incl. the LT Gov. VT is a Tax & Spend state. This is the Liberal Democratic Party philosophy running rampant in Vermont currently, sadly... :-(
+William Farr The caveat here though and the reason I placed it somewhat earlier is because the successful Reublicans post 1958, were either liberal or far,left like Prouty. Prior to that there were some conservative voices. As for democrat in sheeps clothing, there is an article I recently read that talked about how vt GOP spent like drunken socialists during the 30s.
I love that they showed the sandbar from the lakes region for New Hampshire. It’s my favorite region in NH
Lake Winnisquam
I'm a white mountain boy.
While Chey is busy sippin mojitos and making sand castles at lake Winnipesaukee, I'm riding moose through the treacherous trails of Mt. Washington, while boiling my own piss just to stay alive.
@@MultiCrusher2 That's where I grew up, the Winnisquam post office was actually in Belmont!
I'm Canadian so I have to love them both equally.
Bernie Sanders is from NYC. He is a flatlander. Not a local of Vermont.
He calls himself an "Independent Politician" while voting Democratic 95% of the time.
If you have a family with children or are planning to both states are excellent, great skiing and snowboarding most schools have a program in elementary that take them every Friday after school. The Springs and Summers are perfect not too hot or humid ( for the most part ) And the Fall may actually be my favorite when all the leaves turn beautiful colors. If I was a billionaire I would still live here Southern NH is an amazingly wonderful place with good people.
Great video!
You didn't seem to mention that NH has among the greatest firearms cultures in the US!
We have no registries, permits, restrictions, or background checks (though FFL's here obey federal law and administer the NICS check). This results in NH being the safest state in the nation by almost every single measure of violence. Criminals don't mess with us too much because they know how likely it is that we're armed.
This would historically be a similarity since Vermont also had never really had any gun laws and is also among the safest states in the US. Unfortunately, Governor Murphy recently signed a law placing lots of restrictions on firearms.
Okay hit me with more. I'm basically wanting to move from NY to NH as a gun law refugee. What regulations are there in NH aside from federal? Magazine capacity bans, folding stocks, etc.?
SEZ PUL nothing NH is constitutional carry too I think there’s a red flag bill that got pushed in the parkland hysteria aside from that live free or die dude
@@vinkybean that red flag law is a red flag in itself
@@sezpul9972 when you said magazine capacity bans and folding stock stuff i actually laughed. No concealed carry licence either.
AOtello46_2 No concealed carry license in Vermont either and VT is a Constitutional Carry State as well.
Actually, one of the most beautiful regions in New English is called the "Upper Connecticut River Valley," or just the "Upper Valley." That regions straddles both sides of the river; my family lived on both sides. It's as if the two sides of the river there have more interaction with each other than they do with their own respective states. Really, it's the best of both worlds.
I agree. I live in Hanover, NH and we even share a school district with Norwich, VT.
@@RocketDaveA My family lived in that school district. My mother lived in Hanover, and my brother and his family lived in Norwich. His kids went to elementary school in Norwich (I don't know about middle school), and then went to Hanover High School.
@@gerberjoanne266 Hanover has a middle school (6 - 8 grade), and Norwich kids go there starting in 7th grade.
I wouldn't call West Lebanon or White River beautiful. Especially White River, the epitome of creepy shitholes.
Yep, that was New Hampshires dairy farm region after the sea past started getting built up. The two states are very interconnected. Even the main line rail jumps from one side of the river to the other lol.
I was born and raised in New Hampshire and I spend a lot of time in Vermont usually for work. Both are great states and are very similar. NH doesn’t have a sales tax while VT does. NH has a slightly larger population; Vermont is the second least populated state in the US. NH I feel has more of a balance of rural, suburban and “city” life. When I’m in Vermont, it feels like it’s mostly rural and than bam you’re in Burlington. Both have beautiful natural beauty and a lot of outdoor opportunities like hiking and skiing. It’s illegal to have billboards in VT! It’s easier to get around NH than VT I think. The major highway in NH (93) goes through the middle of the state from top to bottom so it’s easy to get around. Vermont has 2 major highways (89 and 91) 89 goes horizontally through the state at an angle from the Hanover border of NH up through Burlington VT and up north to the Canadian Border. 91 traces the edge of the state bordering NH and the CT River. Sure you get travel up the side of the state ok, but when you when to get somewhere inside the state, expect a fair amount of driving (but it has lovely views). NH I think has better cell coverage than VT. (VT has gotten better over the years) VT, unlike NH, has charging stations for electric cars which is cool. VT also has more farmers markets and really great fresh food. NH has pockets of them, but nothing compared to VT. I love both states :)
I live in California but would love to live in New Hampshire
Danny Fenty we moved to NH 14yrs ago from CA and have never looked back! We love it here!
We'd love to see u come by! :) nh is a very lovely place
If you come to our great state, do not turn it into a cess pool of human shit and high taxes like y'all did in California. In New Hampshire, we are free.
I live in New Hampshire and would like to move to California
JOIN US. JOIN US.
This comparison is remiss in leaving out all mention of the Seabrook nuclear power plant In New Hampshire and the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, both of which are closed or being phased out. That's a similarity, but, the greatest difference between the states is the fact that heavily developed Boston suburbia exists in Nashua, New Hampshire. Vermont has no such spillover from the megalopolis, and that's the real reason N.H.'s population is much higher and its economy so different.
Great info! I appreciate you sharing that.
Thank you, Mr. Beat. I was afraid my wording might sound scolding of you. Not my intention. I enjoyed this comparison!
Advise to any tourists stay away from Seabrook. It is really drug infested and trashy.
Tyler Smith: Hampton beach is pretty trashy as well. It's one of the tackiest beaches I've ever been to, and I've been to Miami and Coney Island...
+Pywaket Pilot Lmaoo soooo true.
Bernie Sanders is not "from" Vermont, he lives "in" Vermont. I'm not from Missouri but I live in Missouri. Every time I open my mouth, everyone asks where I'm from. (Eastern Massachusetts.) I'd guess Bernie is from Brooklyn.
I'm a Vermont resident who visits NH probably 75 times per year. I can honestly say that I don't consider a NH resident an out of stater not do I feel like one when I'm in NH.
Well you are
@proud American nh all the way we also have white pines/
I was literally yelling YES YES YES YES YES!!!!!!!! when I saw that you made another state comparison video. Thank you so much for making my day Mr. Beat!
haha that's so awesome. Well glad you like the series. Guess I need to make more of them!
One big thing you missed about New Hampshire is the beaches, very touristy and is a big advantage over a land locked state of Vermont
*Coughing
“MAINE”
My fellow New Englanders. Let us not fight amongst ourselves. Our six states should stand united against New York, New Jersey and the rest of the country! Be brave, comrades!
Forget Mass, RI, and CT
New York, NJ, Pennsylvania, Maryland & Delaware should be considered part of New England in the modern day. The entire northeast should be called New England.
@@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty it is clear you aren’t a part of New England, because literally every New Englander that doesn’t like in Mass or CT hates all the other states and their flatlanders.
@@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty Hey buddy, you're lucky we keep Connecticut in the club. We sure as hell aren't adding anymore Yankee fans to New England.
Comrades, you must be from Vermont
04:15 Someone who has lived in both states for many years- I can say that the real political difference is that NH is more classically democratic, maybe even closer to center (with modern politics). Vermont has their population hubs in places like Burlington where most people are very far left.
Met a friend from NH. The most amazing person ever. I’m from California my thoughts to NH.
Not my first choice but as a resident of Manchester NH I can confirm the reasonable rent
🤣🙌
A guy from my state(Ohio) said he simply bought a plane ticket and packed his bags. Within 24 hours of landing, he had a job, a roof over his head, and a feasible budget. Now that may be just one more example of classic buckeye ingenuity, but I suspect it also has to do with New Hampshire being an awesome and livable state.
@@dh7164 dont tempt me with a good time.
Manchester is 50 miles from Boston. Housing is much less than eastern Massachusetts. Like half the cost. No income or sales tax.
@@dh7164 so there are good payed jobs and good universities and overall safety? Which town exactly?
The 231mph on Mt Washington, was the last number recorded before the weather station shack and its large chains holding it down, blew away...
Also coldest temperature on Earth was there.
Even as a native New Hampshire resident, it's pretty neat to see places I've actually been to shown (Manchester and the Merrimack Outlet Mall). Love my state!
Yes, yes, Vermont is the one that's upside down, but we all hate Massholes.
How about "holes"like their 2 u.s. senators. Bah
I have a question is Vermont and new Hampshire expensive.
@@creativedream7395 Property tax in NH is a bitch and a half, but otherwise it's not bad.
Jonathan Stiles I will take as a sign that it’s expensive
Bruh you look way more upside down than us
I lived in VT for the 1st 69 years of my life and have just moved to NH when I retired in January. The reasons were: No state income tax on Social Security and 401-K/IRA plans; lower proper taxes (I was paying $4,800 in VT and now, for the equivalent priced home, I'm paying $2,700); Electric Bill is 10 cent per kw as opposed to 10 cents up to 240 kw than 24 cents; roads are materially better (saving wear and tear on the vehicle and less time traveling); No Sales Tax; Gas is less (Now, $2.46 pg vs $2.79 pg) and fuel oil is less; prices of goods and services are less by approximately 20%; higher paying vs minimum wage jobs being offered; employment is available to all at a more livable wage; less drug addiction and selling of illegal drugs; state courts less discriminate towards fathers regarding custody and visitation of their children when divorcing;; better hunting and fishing; better hiking; and welcome manufacturing businesses vs projecting manufacturing businesses as negative to the welfare of the citizens. When I lived in VT, I rarely saw a NH plate on a car. Now in NH, about 25% of the plates are VT after working hours and weekends, due to shopping. In VT. I used to have to travel to NH to purchase goods, due to higher prices of goods and the distance needing to travel. Along the boarder between the two states, NH has about 95% of the retail business. Half of the VT residents travel to NH to purchase goods, especially large ticket items like appliances, outdoor equipment and recreational machinery. VT is trying to penalized people for doing this but people find ways around being caught like paying cash or having someone in NH by the goods for them. VT's politics is like that of Cuba, a 3rd world communist state. Democrats in NH believe in Capitalism. Democrats in VT believe in Socialism. The population of VT is decreasing every year. The VT House of Representatives has 42% of the non-Republicans born in NH state! Are you getting the picture now?
Your statement of many VT'ers going to NH to go shopping reminded me of a situation that happened in the mid '70's. NH has liquor stores close to it borders of the neighboring states. It makes quite a lot of revenue from tourists stopping to load up on booze. I lived in Keene, NH and I was sitting in a car waiting in the parking lot of the state liquor store. There were 2 or 3 cars parked out front of the store with CT plates and they were loading up with case after case of liquor. (CT had high taxes on liquor, so folks would drive up, load up and maybe make a little profit back home.) I noticed there was a car with CT plates sitting there with 2 guys in suits who never left the car. A few minutes later a NH state policeman drove in and went up to the 2 guys in suits. After about 2 minutes they drove off in a big hurry. I got out and went to the state cop and politely asked him who those 2 guys were. He told me they were CT state cops. They were taking the license plate numbers off the customers cars and would send them back to CT to have those folks stopped. It seems the NH Governer at the time, Mel Thompson, didn't like that too much so he ordered the state police to run the CT police out! LOL!
Damn pops nothing gets by you! True yankee! ❤
Are you serious?!? Vermont will PAY people who move there and work from home? I'm on my way! lol
Philip Cannon me too! Lol
They will pay your moving expenses. You don't just get a check. And you have to already have a job where you can work remotely. No one actually read the article when that made national news, so everyone thinks you just get $10,000!
U have to take Job & way of living. Their broke. Worst economy. Future growth - 4.5. Worst in U.S..
Oh, and did they mention that VT is decades behind on internet availability? You'd better like satellite dishes. And google "mud season"...
As an NH native this vid made me proud to be from a place that isnt completely fucked like commiefornia. The liberties you can enjoy up north is truly a spectacle in of itself not to mention national parks, food, landmarks, the history as well such an amazing place.
too bad I'm in florida now :/
You’re lucky. You have Ron Desantis
I've heard that the appalacian mountains were formed a long time ago when ancient continents came together to form pangaea, and were once as tall as the himalayas are today. I've also heard that the mountains of Norway and Scotland are part of the appalacians as well as are the laurentians and mountains of Newfoundland in Canada.
cool
You are correct (Geology teacher)
I chose Vermont and your right I’m called the flat lander at work . The Vermonters will keep reminding you of it as well.. NOTE you flatlanders like me . Just dont go around telling people you moved here from there .. they really don’t like outsider. The other thing is Vermonters stick with Vermonters. The outsiders will find each other it’s odd . But I really love it here I’m glad I’m here
Growing up in the White Mountains, people would call folks from Mass. flatlanders as well!
MrDroenix anything south of Vermont is flatland country as they say
Hey Gator Guy...oh so true! See my comment for this video about an obituary of a flatlander from 1978!
I can second the flatlanders attitude in VT is a sign of inbreeding.
Gator Guy Flatlander’s lol I moved here from New York, I’m originally from Canada. I’m still new to Vermont! As long as people are kind and good, I don’t care where they come from. Sending positive vibes to everyone!
North Dakota vs South Dakota and Germany vs Austria.
Surprisingly the first time I got the Germany vs. Austria suggestion.
NH native here. I read the comments and just wanted to say I love NH mountains, VT pastures, ME shorelines, MA humor, CT charm.... I could go on and on.
In a nutshell, let's not be dicks and talk shit about other states. We're better than that... Live Free or Die...Bienvenue.... C'mon we just shout 'welcome'!!!!!! ❤ and p.s.- we all love weed
But everyone still forgets poor little RI 😛
CT has nothing to do with those states. CT is in the NY/NJ/CT tri-state.
@data_recovery not true
But where is the fun in that? Thats like a family NOT making fun of each other! Bore me to death why dontcha! LOL
I've lived in NH for my entire life, It's super nice if a bit quiet. Moving to Mass. for college this fall, I'll miss NH but at least I'll still be close.
Well glad you caught the video! Yeah, another advantage of NH is that it is closer to Boston, which is nice because it's A LOT cheaper.
Very true, my bf travels to Andover ma, we live outside manchester
I don't know if it's still the case, but for many many years it was cheaper for a resident of New Hampshire to come to Massachusetts and pay out of state tuition rates at the University of Massachusetts, than it was to go to the University of New Hampshire and pay in-state tuition rates. The state is so very stingy, they terribly underfund their schools and universities, and have some of the highest tuition costs in the country.
NHchicky : For work or school?
That is still the case. Actually, I believe that the University of New Hampshire has the highest in-state tuition in the USA, currently.
I live in Connecticut and I plan on moving to New Hampshire as soon as I graduate. Live Free Or Die!
I go to college in southern Vermont, and I go to the Walmart in Hinsdale NH all the time. It's weird how different the culture changes from Brattleboro, Vermont to Hinsdale lmao. You see Bernie signs in Brattleboro, and then Trump signs in Hinsdale.
That's EXACTLY right and how the culture changes from Brattleboro to Hinsdale.
Met a girl from Vermont. She was sweet. Her family raised show horses. I probably should have stayed with her.
You should have compared the University of Vermont to the University of New Hampshire. They are both expensive state universities but UNH is generally rated higher and is the safest in the country.
UNH doesn’t even have a medical school and isn’t rated higher scholastically.
@@eddievonpapen6306 NH still has Dartmouth, which is both a better school in general, with a better medical school than anythingVermont has to offer. UNH used to be located in the same town as Dartmouth, so that could have something to do with a medical school never being established.
@@eddievonpapen6306 New Hampshire has several large stand alone hospitals that have been around for well over a hundred years, whereas Vermont kind of required a state subsidized medical facility if they wanted something top tier. Otherwise the whole state would have likely just become the domain of Dartmouth Hitchcock. UNH was also originally based in the same town as Dartmouth, which already had a world-class medical school and facility, so maybe that has something to do with a medical school never being established.
We call them Flatlanders in NH too. At least the people I knew always did. Also NH is the most heavily forested state in the nation with the most trees per capeta
No way, has to be Maine.
NH Min. wage is 7.25 but any city in the south can't hire people for less than 10 because of competitive wages :O
Ma. min. wage is $12 hr.
You won’t make that little here unless you are a kid
Having been to both states, there are so many good things about each. The states both remind me of pizza slices, and Vermont is sort of like an upside down pizza while New Hampshire is like a right-side up one. It's like a Pizza State Yin-Yang type of thing. I love it
I grew up in Vermont and found it to be more expensive than New Hampshire. Not paying tax on sales or state tax on earnings is where it helps out. Yes property taxes and registration taxes may seem high but they are over all still cheaper than Vermont.
Greg Durkee wanna complain about expensive cost of living? Come here to California. CA’s cost of living makes VT look cheap
I'm from NH and I have been to both states and I can say NH is the better state. We have the white mountains, the coatline and funspot
Gotta be honest, Vermont sounds cooler to me. I don't know if I could live there though. The entire state is like 1/5th the population of my city.
As an ex-Vermonter, I would recommend visiting in Vermont, not living there. Visit during the spring when it's not humid as heck and you're not dodging leaf peepers in the fall!
@@porcupinester im 50 and have lived in NH my whole life.for the past 15 yrs ive worked in vt.theres work to be had in vt if u just look for it.and as far as living there its very quiet and peaceful.that makes it a great place to live.
This is a place to settle down when you’re old
Don't come here if you're a liberal of any stripe. It's liberal/socialist flatlanders who moved here and ruined us.
Literally RI has more of a population than North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, Alaska, and maybe Wyoming
New Hampshire actually began as a landlocked state. Before the colony became a state, from the coast to Exeter, (The revolutionary state capitol), and along a nondescript line out to the town of Milford, the land was then part of of the original Massachusetts Bay Colony, along with the entire state of Maine.
Vermont to is and always has been, a left-leaning marxist-communist state. The people they decide to allow to move there are so looney tunes with their communes and kumbayah attitudes, that New Hampshirites don't tend to associate with their fruity ideas!
As a New Hampshirite I approve this video in advance!
Edit: The skin thing is completely true. In school, I was often the only Asian in my class. Also if you don't want high taxes, don't move to Portsmouth, NH. The property taxes will eat you alive
truf
I've always lived in New Hampshire but have been to Vermont plenty of times, both beautiful states. New Hampshire is definitely more chill though, like you can legally drive without a seatbelt over 18 here. But Vermont people are over all pretty chill, and they make damn good maple syrup...
I used to live in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada (just north of the border) and we would sometimes go skiing in Jay Peak. Always a fun experience, very welcoming people. Some employees would even answer us in french! Stowe and Killington were also very nice ski resorts. We are jealous of your ski mountains.
While in NH you could mention the Atlantic Ocean, lighthouses, sailing, boating, lobstering, tuna fishing, beaches, Isles of Shoals and coastal towns of Portsmouth, Rye, New Castle and North Hampton. The handsome colonial architecture and gardens not to be missed.
this is the first time someone has ever brought up north hampton on the internet, very under rated town.