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Thread: Gays in Detroit

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  1. #1

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bham1982 View Post
    I don't think that Ferndale is [[or ever really was) a super heavily gay community, but I do think it's kind of the closest thing to a nexus for the demographic, given that they have the community center, and a number of gay-friendly gathering places.

    Ferndale/Pleasant Ridge has lots of nice older homes, and generally crappy schools. This will attract many childless couples, many of whom are presumably gay. If I may stereotype, gays seem to prefer to renovate a nice older house, rather than buy some tract home.

    I'm sure the same thing is going on in other communities with the nice houses/iffy schools thing [[University District, EEV, maybe Rosedale Park, maybe Lathrup Village).
    I disagree with many of your points - and yes, you are stereotyping.
    Believe it or not, Gay people have children too and even those of us that do not recognize the value of successful schools.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by leapfrog View Post
    I disagree with many of your points - and yes, you are stereotyping.
    Believe it or not, Gay people have children too and even those of us that do not recognize the value of successful schools.
    I am stereotyping, but it is true that gay couples are generally childless.

    And, when you don't have children, locational decisions change. When I bought my house, the school district was the primary consideration, because I plan on having children.

    If I never wanted to have children, I would be much less invested in local school quality issues.

  3. #3

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    Interesting thread. I grew up in the Detroit area but left long ago for Chicago, San Francisco, and now Portland where I am settled long term. Here there is no "gayborhood" and the city is better for it: the gay population is highly integrated and doesn't need a separate area of the city to call its own. Detroit and SE Michigan have a long way to go. Sadly, I'll probably never live there again in spite of family connections and my own sense of nostalgia.

  4. #4

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hans64 View Post
    Interesting thread. I grew up in the Detroit area but left long ago for Chicago, San Francisco, and now Portland where I am settled long term. Here there is no "gayborhood" and the city is better for it: the gay population is highly integrated and doesn't need a separate area of the city to call its own. Detroit and SE Michigan have a long way to go. Sadly, I'll probably never live there again in spite of family connections and my own sense of nostalgia.
    I don't blame you for settling in Portland. It was on the top of my list for relocation spots, however, due to health reasons, I moved to the Southwest. I found Portland to be everything you mentioned and more.

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